concerns Atwood - Brunswick News Publishing

Transcription

concerns Atwood - Brunswick News Publishing
1A PROCESS
MONDAY
Frederica headed
to state title game
Learn about history
of U.S. Air Force
Sports, 8A
Mini page
The Voice of the Coast
Brett Steilen
www.TheBrunswickNews.com
Volume 112, Number 200
MAY 5, 2014
39¢ or less home delivery • 75¢ newsstand
IN THE NATION
GLYNN COUNTY
IN THE WORLD
WASHINGTON: Studies show American teachers in
BRUNSWICK: Rep. Alex Atwood says he is
NIGERIA: Government officials are working to free
public schools are not as diverse as students, 7A
concerned buffer regulations will prove harmful, 1A
276 girls held captive by Islamic extremists, 7A
Coast preps for turtle nesting season
DAYBREAK
Biologist says nest numbers could be down in 2014
Your day in Brunswick
and the Golden Isles
The weather
By MICHAEL HALL
HIGH
The Brunswick News
89
LOW
64
Clear skies make
for beautiful day
Today will be sunny with
no clouds in the sky. There
will be a high in the upper
80s and a low in the mid 60s
A wind will blow from the
south at 3 to 6 mph and will
pick up speed this evening
at around 8 mph. Tonight
will boast clear skies as well.
Tides and five-day forecast,
back of this section
Worth doing
Mark Dodd has a not-so-secret formula he hopes will win the annual competition among fellow biologists and sea turtle nesting monitors to most accurately
guess the number of sea turtle nests they
will find this year along Georgia’s coast.
He waited until all other predictions
were in and averaged them out to get his
final guess.
The number he estimates: 2,241.
While the informal and just-for-fun
competition is not a scientific endeavor,
Dodd said if he had to make a real pre-
diction for how turtle nesting season will
go this year, his guess might not be too
far off base.
“We expect to see a small decrease
from last year, but still hopefully over
2,000 nests,” said Dodd, a biologist with
the state Department of Natural Resources Nongame Conservation Section.
He and other scientists and monitors
are tempering their predictions for this
year after setting a record in 2013 with
2,290 nests in Georgia. That was the
fourth year in a row the number of nests
found in coastal Georgia increased,
something Dodd said is unlikely to continue based on historical data.
While there have been no nests spotted yet, Dodd said he expects to see
some soon.
“Any day now I’m expecting a call
from one of our projects reporting a
nest,” Dodd said. “It’s a fun time of
year.”
For the past several weeks, he has
been coordinating with project leaders
up and down the coast and training others to get ready for what is annually a
summer-long effort to keep track of how
many mother turtles come to shore to
make their nests in the sand.
Please see TURTLES, 5A
LOST IN THE SHUFFLE Buffer
change
concerns
Atwood
St. Simons Library
displaying exhibit
The varied works of David
Milliman are on display at the
St. Simons Island Public Library, 530 Beachview Drive.
The exhibit featuring sculptures, conte crayon drawings,
illustrations and watercolors
can be seen from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. today at the library.
Isles representative
sends letter about
wrested vegetation
Worth knowing
By KELLY QUIMBY
Stephen Moreno IV
The Brunswick News
YMCA honors
volunteer for service
Stephen Moreno IV was
named chairman of the
Golden Isles YMCA’s Annual
Giving Campaign, which
exceeded its fundraising
amount for the year by $4,000
under his direction. Coastal
People, 3A
Talk about
Police officials see
rise in drug abuse
Drug use is a dead end
street, but police are saying they’ve seen as rise in
prescription drug abuse in
Glynn County. Children are
the future, and parents can
help make sure their children
know about living a healthy
lifestyle without substance
abuse. Editorial, 6A
Get involved
County residents
can get recycling
Residents of unincorporated Glynn County can sign
up for curbside recycling any
time they want. Just go online
to www.glynncounty.org and
select “recycling.”
Inside The News
2 sections/22 pages
Advice 2B
Lotteries 3A
Classified 5B News 7A, 11A
Comics 4B
Obituaries 4A
Crossword 4B Sports 8-10A
Editorial 6A
State 3A
Graham 6A
Sudoku 4B
Local 2,3A
Television 3B
6
56525 10471
The Brunswick News/File
Mark Dodd of the Georgia Department of Natural
Resources said he expects a small decrease in
the number of sea turtle nests this year.
8
The Glynn County Courthouse
Michael Hall/The Brunswick News
Candidates for Superior Court Judge’s spot say
race is as important as any on primary ballot
By KELLY QUIMBY
The Brunswick News
The race for one of the five Superior
Court judgeships in the Brunswick
Judicial Circuit is not the most incendiary on the May 20 primary ballot,
but it is still of great importance to the
residents of the five counties served,
the two candidates for the bench say.
Glynn County Superior Court Judge
Roger Lane, appointed to the bench
by Gov. Nathan Deal, is facing Mary
Helen Moses, an attorney, in the May
20 nonpartisan election.
The judge who’s elected will work
with four other judges in Glynn, Appling, Camden, Jeff Davis and Wayne
counties, making decisions that influence more than just parties in a case,
Moses said.
“The Superior Court judge can
make a decision that will literally
affect thousands of
people and can do it
by him or herself,”
Moses said.
Lane said Superior
Court has the sole responsibility of hearing
felony cases with senRoger
tences ranging from a
Lane
year in prison to capital punishment.
The Superior Court
also oversees civil
cases, including divorce and child custody proceedings.
Superior Court is
the top trial court in
Mary Helen
the state, Lane said,
Moses
and its judges are expected to apply the law fairly.
“If we aren’t getting skilled judges
who can apply the rules of evidence in
the courtroom, then it winds up costing the taxpayers,” Lane said. “We
will still have some (cases) that are
reversed...(by) the Courts of Appeals.
But the more experience you have in
trying cases, the more familiarity you
have with the rules that apply. It makes
the system more efficient, and you cut
down on the reversal rate.”
Reversals cost money, Lane said, as
does a slow judicial system that leaves
people in jail or litigating for years.
Moses said the Brunswick circuit
should work on speeding up its cases more. Take for example the East
Beach Party House, she said, a civil
case involving the owners of an East
Beach rental property and the Glynn
County government. When it was first
brought to Superior Court last year,
the case took seven months to reach an
A recent change to the standard for measuring
marsh buffers in Georgia has the attention of a
member of Glynn County’s state delegation.
In a letter to Judson Turner, director of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources’ Environmental Protection Division, Rep. Alex Atwood,
R-St. Simons Island, wrote he is concerned that a
new standard for measuring marsh buffers could
be harmful to Coastal Georgia’s salt mashes.
Atwood sent the letter to Turner on Friday.
On April 22, Turner issued a memo that rescinded a decade-old policy for measuring marsh buffers. Citing controversy surrounding the old policy
in recent years, Turner implemented a new policy,
one that does not require a buffer where there is no
“wrested vegetation.”
Turner contends his new policy is in accordance
with the Georgia Erosion and Sedimentation Act.
Atwood, however, wants to know what that
means to the marsh, which plays a significant role
in the life cycles of 70 percent of the fish commercially harvested in Georgia. He said the state’s
300,000 acres of salt marsh, which accounts for
one-third of the marsh on the entire East Coast, is a
multi-million dollar economic engine that includes
Please see ATWOOD, 5A
Please see JUDGES, 5A
School system: ‘Senior houses’
issue lies between parents, child
The Brunswick News
The superintendent of the Glynn
County School System says the public
high schools do what they can to remind students, particularly seniors, of
the perils of alcohol and drug abuse.
But, Howard Mann says, “the issue
of senior houses rests squarely in the
home, between the parents and the
child.”
Mann’s comments follow the passage of a resolution by the Glynn
County Commission at its meeting
Thursday asking the school system to
do what it can to keep seniors from
renting houses or hotel rooms on the
beach during graduation week. Commissioners contend the so called “senior houses” are gathering places for
celebrating high school seniors that
can turn into environments conducive
to alcohol or drug abuse.
The commission is especially concerned following the death of a Glynn
Academy senior during graduation
week in 2013. The cause of the student’s death was alcohol poisoning.
Glynn Academy seniors graduate on May 23 and Brunswick High
School seniors on May 24.
Please see SCHOOLS, 5A
Call 265-1104 for convenient home delivery
The Brunswick News/File
Rep. Alex Atwood, R-St. Simons Island, sent a
letter to Judson Turner, director of the Georgia
Department of Natural Resources’ Environmental Protection Division, about the recent change
to the wrested vegetation rule.
2A PROCESS
Monday
May 5, 2014
The Brunswick News
[Ug
ViXXm
$ 3 63
Local & State
2A
ST. SIMONS ELEMENTARY TRACKAPALOOZA
FAST NEWS
Board to consider
change orders on jail
CHEAPEST
reported price in
THE GOLDEN ISLES
at press time.
Go to
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for the latest prices.
CRIMEScene
Man tries
to steal food
from store
Among reports filed with
police:
Thefts
• Business in the 100
block of Altama Connector,
Glynn County: A man was
arrested for allegedly stealing
$132 worth of food items April
27. The man allegedly attempted to conceal the items and
leave the store.
• 600 block of Harry
Driggers Boulevard, Glynn
County: A man reported the
theft of his wallet April 26.
The $25 wallet was left in his
unlocked vehicle.
• 1700 block of Townsend
Street, Glynn County: A
woman reported the theft of
her blue bike April 26. The
$300 beach cruiser was left
on the woman’s front porch
unsecured.
• 1000 block of Sea Island
Road, St. Simons Island: A
man reported the theft of two
bicycles and two child ridealong trailers April 25. Each
piece of equipment is worth
$300. The bikes were left secured in a parking spot.
• Business in the 100
block of Altama Connector,
Glynn County: A man was
arrested for allegedly stealing
two boxes of teeth whitening
strips April 25. The total value
of the items is $109.
Assaults
• 3400 block of Habersham Street, Glynn County:
A man reported being punched
in the head multiple times April
25. The man and his girlfriend,
who witnessed the alleged incident, stated the male suspect
entered the residence uninvited
and began punching the man
in the head causing visible
bruises.
• 100 block of Shangri
La Avenue, Glynn County: A
woman reported her juvenile
son was assaulted by his aunt
April 25. The juvenile male alleges his aunt hit him multiple
times and threw an object at
him.
Problem With Person
• 100 block of Riverside
Road, Glynn County: A man
was arrested April 25 for allegedly beating on the front door
of his mother’s residence and
trying to gain entry without her
consent. The mother stated her
son was drunk and she didn’t
want him inside the residence.
— Martin Rand III
The Brunswick News
Michael Hall/The Brunswick News photos
The St. Simons Elementary dolphin mascot leads a group of pre-k and kindergarten students around the track Friday for the first
lap of the fourth annual Trackapalooza event at the school.
Runnin’ wild for a good cause
Fundraiser promotes
exercise, staying fit
School may have already dismissed for the
weekend on Friday evening, but that didn’t
stop the playground and track outside St. Simons Elementary from buzzing with activity.
The fourth annual Trackapalooza event
brought out droves of children and their families – most of them dressed in brightly colored
tie-dyed T-shirts – gathered to raise money
and to get the children involved a little exercise at the same time.
The goal at this year’s PTA event was to
raise $25,000 in hopes of re-opening the
school’s Ocean Lab that was closed due to
funding cuts.
In the three years the event has taken place,
the school has raised more than $35,000.
At this year’s trackapalooza, Pirates of the
Spanish Main painted faces, School Resource
Officer Bob May tied balloons and several
Jaylee Lavender, a kindergartner at St. Simons Elementary,
pops out of the tubular slide on the playground as two other
children play with her Friday at the school’s Trackapalooza
event.
area musicians – Kellie Parr, Mason Waters
and The Groove Allstars, Pier Pressure and
Squirt Gun – all played music for the families
in attendance.
There was plenty of food as well with fresh
fried shrimp served by Coastal Cuisine and
Sunset Slush.
But the main event was hoards of children
running around the short track outside the
school to celebrate staying fit and to raise
money for a good cause.
— Michael Hall
Jack Lombardo,
a first-grader at
St. Simons Elementary, climbs
to the top of
the swing set
Friday during
the fourth annual Trackapalooza event at
the school. In
addition to the
laps students
ran around the
track, there
was a playground, face
painting, a
balloon artist
and music to
entertain the
families.
Members of the Glynn
County Finance Committee
will be asked to recommend
the approval of three more
change orders in the construction of the new detention center.
The committee will meet
at 1 p.m. Tuesday in the third
floor conference room of the
Harold Pate Building.
Change order No. 27, for
$3,293, is for adding cabinets
to a break room and change
order No. 28, for $32,875, is
for adding concrete curbs at
parking spaces in the detention center parking lot and
for gravel.
The third change order is
for a landscaping change for
$2,300.
The change orders will
have to be approved by the
full commission.
Commissioner Mary Hunt
chairs the finance committee.
City to meet for work
session Wednesday
The Brunswick City Commission will meet Wednesday at Old City Hall, 1229
Newcastle St., at 5 p.m. for
a work session and at 6 p.m.
for its regularly scheduled
session.
During the work session,
the commission will receive
another presentation on plans
by the General Services
Administration to close the
portion of Egmont Street that
borders the Frank M. Scarlett
Federal Building in downtown Brunswick. Closing the
one-block portion is part of a
project to beef up security of
federal offices.
Commissioners also will
review the city’s policy for
installing speed humps.
At the regular session,
commissioners will be asked
to establish a tax allocation
district and to approve fireworks for Fourth of July.
CORRECTIONS
The News does not like to
make mistakes, but if we do,
we will correct factual errors in
this column.
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Fifth-grader Bobby Camacho is chosen in the raffle as the winner of an electric scooter.
Third-grader Nakirra Johnson gets a “kitty cat” painted on her
face Friday in the gym at St. Simons Elementary. Below, clockwise from far left, Cece Kersey, Molly Keyes, Lilly Roberts,
Landri Bennett and Callie James dance in a circle while Kellie
Parr performs on stage.
265-2222
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GRADUATES
Let them know how proud you are! Family and friends can honor
that special graduate with a personal message that will be published
in The Brunswick News on Thursday, May 22nd.
Get on the Business Page
Send us the names of
employees promoted, new
management hires, professional awards received or
monetary contributions made
to the community for inclusion
on the Business Page, to be
published in The News beginning in late May.
Photos of individuals are
accepted.
Email [email protected] or drop off info
at The Brunswick News, 3011
Altama Ave., or mail to The
Business Page, The Brunswick
News, P.O. Box 1557, Brunswick, GA 31521.
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3A
The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014 3A
Local & State
COASTALPEOPLE
Specializing in Personal Injury and All Types of Civil Litigation
by Martin Rand III
YMCA exceeds goal under volunteer
of it.”
One of the biggest reasons
for Moreno’s pleasure in being
given the certificate is because
the Y is only two years removed from being the YWCA
and joining the YMCA of
Coastal Georgia, which has 10
other YMCA branches under
its umbrella.
“We were like No. 3 or 4
in percentage-to-goal out of
the 10 other YMCAs in the
region,” he said. “That’s great
Your News contacts:
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and circulation: 265-8320
• St. Simons Island office:
638-7601
• News fax: 280-0926
• News e-mail: news@
thebrunswicknews.com
OFFICES
• 3011 Altama Ave., Brunswick, GA 31520
• 1701 Frederica Rd., St.
Simons Island, GA 31522
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• Buddy Hughes, local news
editor: 265-8320, ext. 312
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• Bethany Leggett, Lifestyle editor, for bridal,
clubs, churches or awards:
265-8320, ext. 316
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• Dave Jordan, Sports editor: 265-8320, ext. 319
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• If you think a story contains an error or to comment
on The News, call Hank
Rowland, managing editor:
265-8320, ext. 344
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individuals wishing to place
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Winifred Williams, advertising
representative: 265-8320,
ext. 304
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Outside Glynn
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➊ GAINESVILLE: Officials
at Lake Lanier say upgraded
maps have given them a better
insight into the depths of the manmade lake and what objects may
be resting far beneath its surface.
A firm that was contracted by
the Army Corps of Engineers
used high-speed sonar and light
detection to examine peaks and
valleys of the land beneath Lake
Lanier.
The Corps’ park ranger at Buford Dam, Russell Lundstrum is
working to update the maps and
says the upgraded versions are
helpful in water safety initiatives
and help officials detect low-water
hazards. Lundstrum says the
maps have also been helpful in recovery efforts and have informed
emergency responders of the type
of underwater environment they
may be entering during a search.
➋ ATHENS: Faculty members
at Georgia’s largest university
say they want discrimination
against employees for gender
identity banned more explicitly —
on par with race, sex and religion.
Supporters say the change is a
small one and doesn’t create new
protection but speaks volumes
about the University of Georgia
community both to current and
potential students or faculty. They
also say it brings the Athens
campus, about 60 miles northeast of Atlanta, in line with other
universities.
Opponents say the change
protects sexual behavior, which
shouldn’t be on the same level as
sex or religion.
A UGA spokeswoman says
president Jere Morehead hasn’t
reviewed the faculty council’s
recommendation that gender identity be made a specific protected
category. Morehead must sign the
recommendation for it to become
effective.
➊ GAINESVILLE: A northeast Georgia man is accused of
NARFE
Golden Isles Chapter of National Active Retired Federal
Employees Association
WWW.NARFE.ORG
NARFE
is a Non-Profit Organization that represents
current and retired federal employees.
Meets the first Wednesday of the Month
at
11:30 A.M. at The Golden Corral
“Current federal employees are encouraged to attend this meeting.”
For more information, please email:
[email protected] or
call 912-269-5996
InSTATE
South
Carolina
➊
➌
a public place.
The FBI and the Department
of Homeland Security are partnering with Atlanta police and
representatives from state and
local law enforcement, fire and
emergency medical services for
the drill.
J. Britt Johnson, who heads the
FBI’s Atlanta field office, says the
exercise will highlight the importance of readiness and partnerships between law enforcement
agencies and first responders.
➋
➍
➍ AUGUSTA: Three hospi-
✰
Florida
Numbers on stories correspond
to map locations. The star
locates Brunswick.
killing his 70-year-old grandmother.
Hall County sheriff’s deputies responded to a home in the
Gainesville area around 2:30
p.m. Friday in response to a report of a woman being assaulted.
Hall County sheriff’s deputy
John Marshall said paramedics
transported Lula Bell Howard
to Northeast Georgia Medical
Center, where she later died.
Sheriff’s officials say Howard’s
grandson was later arrested and
charged with her death.
The grandson – 32-year-old
Ronnie Quqomeki Rucker of
Gainesville – was booked into
the Hall County jail and was
awaiting his first court appearance. It wasn’t known early
Saturday whether Rucker has an
attorney.
No details about a possible motive were released late Friday.
➌ ATLANTA: Law enforcement agencies plan to hold
a terrorism response drill at
Atlanta’s Lenox Square Mall.
The exercise is set to begin at 5
p.m. Sunday. It’s meant to simulate a complex terrorist attack in
tals are seeking to build a new
facility in growing Columbia
County.
University Hospital has taken a
step in that effort by filing a letter
of intent with state officials seeking to build a 100-bed hospital. It
would cost roughly $144 million.
University Hospital is one of
three networks hoping to build
a new facility in fast-growing
Columbia County.
Doctors Hospital and Georgia
Regents Health System also submitted proposals to the county
commission.
County officials plan to partner
with whichever hospital gets the
required certification from state
officials.
— Associated Press
Lottery picks
Winning numbers Saturday in
Georgia were Georgia FIVE Midday, 9-3-5-4-4; Cash 3 Midday,
5-5-2; Cash 4 Midday, 2-7-1-4;
Georgia FIVE Evening, 0-9-8-5-3;
Cash 3 Evening, 2-6-2-0; Fantasy
5, 6-12-21-29-34.
Winning numbers Saturday
in Florida were Cash 3 Midday, 7-1-7; Play 4 Midday,
8-0-7-8; Cash 3 Evening,
9-1-8; Play 4 Evening, 9-0-0-3;
Fantasy 5, 14-19-20-22-35;
Powerball, 5-15-16-46-49,
Powerball: 26; Lotto with XTRA,
9-17-19-27-31-43.
GSRA
Golden Isles Chapter of Georgia State
Retirees Association
ANNUAL FISH FRY COOK-OUT
for all
Retired & Active ERS/TRS Employees
Thursday May 8th, 2014 @ 12:00 noon
HICKORY BLUFF MARINA
506 Monck St. • Brunswick • 912-265-5063 www.killianandboyd.com
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The Brunswick News
The Golden Isles YMCA asked Stephen Moreno IV to head the
YMCA’s Annual Giving Campaign. He received a certificate for
helping the organization exceed its fundraising goal for the year.
Lake’s new maps prove helpful
READERGuide
1 month
3 months
6 months
1 year
because this is only the second
year that we’ve done this as
the YMCA.”
Although he keeps the certificate in his office, a modest
Moreno credits the YMCA’s
staff as being the biggest
reason for the success of the
campaign.
“The biggest thing this
year was the staff at the Y,”
he said. “They actually can
donate their (work) hours.
They can say they were going
to work for 10 hours for free
throughout this year and they
donated (the pay).”
Moreno was born in
Brunswick, but at the age of
10 moved with his family to
Americus. He returned to the
Golden Isles four years ago to
be closer to his family, including his mother.
When he isn’t volunteering
at the YMCA, Moreno works
as a mortgage officer for
Brand Mortgage, 621 Ocean
Boulevard, St. Simons Island.
• Coastal People appears
Mondays. Contact Martin
Rand III at [email protected], on Facebook
or at 265-8320, ext. 324 to
suggest a person for a column.
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Wishes
Happy Birthday
to Our Friends
Dr. Myers
Dr. Hartnett
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Norma Hartnett. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 7
Ronald Harper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 7
Kemani Miles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 11
Jeff Buerstatte . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Timothy Howell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Ben Spalding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Mark Wade . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Melvin Galloway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Paige Gober . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Janet Hon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Charles King . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Edward Liles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Jason Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Mya Perkins. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Evan Ratliff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Suzanne Screws . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Andrew Bazemore . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Patricia Birdsong . . . . . . . . . . . . . May
Tom Erickson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 7
Helene Kuntzsch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 7
Donald Pittman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 7
Abby Bartlett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 8
Michael Brantley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 8
Steve Gamble . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 8
Kaitlyn Herndon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 8
Loretta Jackson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 8
Lenward Asbell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 9
Alyson Beasley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 9
David Chambers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 9
Ronda Durham . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 9
Patricia Hauer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 9
Guyrice Thomas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 9
Gerrard Hanly. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 10
Nicole Lovett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 11
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Stephen Moreno IV doesn’t
have a very cluttered work
desk. On it you’ll find the
usual desktop computer, a calculator, a spiral notebook and
a couple of pens and pencils.
But with one glance to the
left, you’ll see something
not common on everyone’s
work desk and an object that
Moreno has had for only two
months.
There on the 30-year-old’s
desk, enclosed in a black
frame, is a certificate from
the Golden Isles YMCA for
his leadership in helping the
nonprofit organization exceed
its fundraising goal for the
year.
Moreno, a YMCA volunteer,
was asked to be the chairman
of the YMCA’s Annual Giving
Campaign. The goal of the
campaign was $53,000.
With Moreno at the helm of
the committee, the organization raised $57,066.
“We were overjoyed to
have reached that goal, but to
surpass it was a huge accomplishment for the staff and the
community,” said Moreno.
“It’s been an honor to serve on
the committee and to be a part
• Do not hire an Attorney before meeting
that Attorney and researching his or her
qualifications.
• Listed; SuperLawyers
• National Trial Lawyer Association Top 100
lawyers in Georgia
• LegalLeaders Top Attorneys
• Bar Register of Preeminent Attorneys
• Atlanta Magazine Top Attorneys in Georgia
GA. Reg. CU400320
109 Key Drive • Brunswick, GA 31520
(912) 265-3419
4A
4A The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014
State
Security boosted in wake
of new Georgia gun law
By MARCUS E. HOWARD
Associated Press
SAVANNAH — Visitors to
the Old Courthouse on Wright
Square will soon have to pass
through a metal detector installed
in response to Georgia’s expanded
gun law that takes effect July 1.
The metal detector placed on
April 24 in the front entrance of
the building was borrowed at no
cost from the Chatham County
Courthouse on Montgomery
Street. Officials are considering
buying new equipment to beef up
security at other county facilities
as well.
“It deals with the new gun bill
the governor signed into law,”
said Assistant County Manager
Michael Kaigler. “We’re going to
start screening individuals who
come into the buildings.”
On April 17, Savannah aldermen approved the purchase of
a metal detector and two X-ray
scanners for $53,987, in addition
to two turnstiles for $7,750, to be
installed at Savannah City Hall.
The city, too, has been testing a
metal detector on loan from the
county courthouse.
However, the city’s security
enhancements were in the works
long before Gov. Nathan Deal
signed House Bill 60 into law on
April 23.
“Improving security at public
buildings has been a project we’ve
been working on for several years
now,” said city spokesman Bret
Bell. “It started with adding security guards to our public buildings
about five years ago, and then we
added surveillance cameras to
our buildings.”
In December, a 61-year-old
Tybee Island man was arrested
after authorities said he brought
a loaded gun to a City Council
meeting. Tybee Island currently
John Rawlston/AP
Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal speaks in Ellijay on April 23 prior to a
signing ceremony for House Bill 60, legislation expanding where
people with licenses to carry can bring their guns.
does not have a metal detector
at city hall, but a police officer is
now stationed at meetings.
Meanwhile, local businesses
are also making preparations for
what’s to come.
Patrons of Pinkie Master’s
Lounge, one of Savannah’s bestknown watering holes, should be
prepared to keep their weapons
out of the establishment, says
owner Guy Kirk.
“I don’t care how smart you
are, alcohol changes peoples’
attitudes,” said Kirk, who on
Wednesday put up “absolutely
no firearms on property” signs.
“I don’t care if you’re a cop. It
changes your mind.”
Among other provisions of the
Safe Carry Protection Act — labeled the “guns everywhere” bill
by opponents — licensed carriers, under some circumstances,
will be allowed to take their firearms into bars, churches, schools
and airports. But private property
owners may declare their premises off-limits to guns, and firearms
will remain prohibited inside
government buildings that screen
for weapons.
Violators, according to the law,
cannot be arrested or fined more
than $100 if they have a valid permit.
“This legislation will protect
the constitutional rights of Georgians who have gone through a
background check to legally obtain a Georgia Weapons Carry
License,” Deal said in a statement
when he signed the bill. “Roughly
500,000 Georgia citizens have a
permit of this kind, which is approximately 5 percent of our population.”
Passage of the sweeping legislation gained national attention.
But a number of groups, including police, municipal and religious organizations, opposed the
legislation on various grounds.
“This bill solves nothing, and
it only creates the potential for
more gun violence, not less, to
say nothing of increasing political
polarization in Georgia,” Episcopal Bishop Scott Anson Benhase
of the Diocese of Georgia said in
a March joint statement with his
Atlanta counterpart.
Tax returns offer snapshot of
Ga. congressional candidates
By CHRISTINA A. CASSIDY
Associated Press
ATLANTA — In just over two
weeks, voters will decide among
crowded fields of Republicans
and Democrats vying for Georgia’s open U.S. Senate seat. To
gain insights into the candidates’
personal finances, The Associated
Press requested access to the last
10 years of tax returns of each of
the top candidates who are leading
in fundraising and polls ahead of
the May 20 primary.
Republicans Karen Handel, Phil
Gingrey and David Perdue each
provided access to at least a portion of their tax returns. Republican Jack Kingston plans to release
his but has yet to do so. A spokesman for Democrat Michelle Nunn
says she plans to release information beyond her candidate’s financial disclosure.
The following is a summary of
each candidate’s finances based on
those disclosures and tax returns
where available:
PAUL BROUN (R)
Broun’s campaign spokeswoman said the congressman from
Athens had filed detail annual financial disclosures since being elected. His
last five, from
calendar years
2008 through
2012, are available
online.
Broun and his
wife listed asPaul Broun
sets in 2012 valued at between
about $127,000 and $480,000.
That included two condos in Naples, Florida, that Broun inherited
that year. The two rental properties generated between $7,502 and
$20,000 in income that year.
Their sole liability was a home
mortgage between $250,001
and $500,000. Also included in
Broun’s filings is an April 2013
report that shows he purchased
shares worth between $15,001
and $50,000 each of CSX Corp.,
Berkshire Hathaway and Norfolk
Southern. Broun amended his
2008-2011 reports to list a personal, interest-bearing loan he made
to his congressional campaign
account between $100,001 and
$250,000.
JACK KINGSTON (R)
Kingston’s campaign spokesman said the Savannah congressman and his wife plan to release
their tax returns. Kingston’s last five
personal financial disclosures
filed with the
House, from
2008 through
2012, are availonline.
Jack Kingston able
Those disclosures reveal that
Kingston and his wife have ownership interest in a handful of rental
properties in the Savannah area as
well as numerous investment and
retirement accounts.
In 2012, their listed assets were
valued at between $1.8 million
and $4 million. Their only liability was a mortgage on a second
home in Alexandria, Virginia,
between $250,000 and $500,000.
In addition, Kingston and his
wife reported receiving between
$130,000 and $288,000 in investment income.
MICHELLE NUNN (D)
Nunn’s campaign spokesman
said Nunn has filed a detailed personal financial disclosure and has
plans to make
additional financial information available soon. Her
financial disclosure with the
Senate covers
2012-2013 and
Michelle Nunn shows Nunn
received a salary of about
$270,000 in 2012 and $214,000
in 2013 as CEO of Points of Light
Foundation. Nunn has since taken
a leave of absence to focus on her
campaign.
Nunn and her husband listed assets over that time period as valued between $1.2 million and $3
million, concentrated largely in
investment funds and individual
stock in companies including Bank
of America, Cisco Systems and
Coca-Cola. Nunn’s husband, Ron
Martin, works in real estate, and
the couple listed several parcels of
land in Glynn County among their
assets. Their home mortgage was
estimated at between $250,000
and $500,000, with an additional
home equity line of credit ranging
between $100,000 and $250,000.
They also reported receiving between $5,000 and $26,600 in investment income over that period.
KAREN HANDEL (R)
Handel, a former Georgia Secretary of State, released five years
of her and her husband’s complete
federal tax returns. In 2013,
Handel and her
husband reported $305,600 in
total income,
claiming nearly $34,000 in
itemized deKaren Handel ductions. The
income came
from a variety
of sources, including various companies owned by the couple and
$107,000 in IRA distributions.
The couple paid about $80,000 in
federal taxes, or about 26 percent
of their total income. The previous year, Handel and her husband
paid $16,000 in taxes, or about
12 percent of their total income
of $133,500. They claimed about
$26,000 in itemized deductions
that year.
Handel also filed a personal
financial disclosure as a Senate
candidate, which covers 2012.
Handel reported assets valued at
between $518,000 and $1.36 million, largely concentrated in several investment accounts. Handel
and her husband also listed credit
card debt between $15,000 and
$50,000 with no mortgage.
DAVID PERDUE (R)
Perdue, the former CEO of Dollar General and Reebok, released
10 years of his and his wife’s complete federal
tax returns. In
2012, the most
recent
one
available, the
couple reported
total income of
about $693,500
from a combination of board
David Perdue
compensation,
dividends and
capital gains. They claimed about
$306,885 in itemized deductions
and paid nearly $119,000 in taxes,
or about 17 percent of their total
income.
Obituaries
Jerry McCullough
Jerry Dean McCullough, 68,
of Brunswick, passed away
May 3, 2014, at his residence.
Funeral services will be held
at 11 a.m. Tuesday, May 6, 2014,
at Chapman Funeral Chapel
with the Rev. Mike Landrum
officiating. The family will be
receiving friends at the funeral
home one hour prior to service
time. Burial will follow at 2:30
p.m. in the Hebron Cemetery
in Cobbtown.
Keith Mixon, Kelly Mixon,
Ricky McCullough, Ronnie
Medlock, Jason Aterberry and
Randy Gay will serve as active
pallbearers.
Jerry was born Jan. 19, 1946,
in Stillmore, Ga., to Sammie
and Ida Wiggins McCullough.
He had lived in Brunswick
since 1966 and was a member
of Bible Baptist Church and
the Brunswick Bible Class.
He had been employed with
Glynn County Parks and Recreation until illness prevented
him from working. He enjoyed
fishing and spending time with
his family, especially his three
buckaroo’s, Rosco, Bubba and
Baby.
Jerry was preceded in death
by his parents; his wife, Diann
McCullough; and a brother,
Fred McCullough.
He is survived by a brother,
Dewitt McCullough of Portal;
three sisters, Shirley Beasley
and Betty Beasley, both of
Metter, and Faye Mixon (Bernard) of Shellman Bluff; several nieces and nephews; and his
neighbors and angels of mercy,
Harriet and George Walker.
In lieu of flowers, the family
has requested memorial donations to Bible Baptist Church
Missions, 500 Harry Driggers
Blvd., Brunswick, GA 31525.
Chapman Funeral Chapel
and Crematory is in charge of
the arrangements.
Family-placed obituary
The Brunswick News May 5, 2014
Tom Edry 706-306-8694
ATTENTION! ATTENTION!
WATER OUTAGE NOTICE
A water outage for St. Simons Island has
been scheduled for May 7, 2014 between
the hours of 9:30 AM to 1:30 PM, to make
needed repairs on fire hydrant. Areas affected
are Demere Oaks, Dellwood, Sheraton, May
Joe, Live Oak and surrounding areas. We
apologize for any inconvenience this may
cause.
Thank you,
JWSC.
ATTENTION! ATTENTION!
The water is scheduled to be off periodically from 9AM-2PM
on Tuesday 5/6/14, to make necessary repairs-there will be
low-pressure. Areas affected are the Glynn Plaza (entire Plaza),
2500 block Cherry Street, 2500 block Woodland Way, 2400
block Pinewood Street, Tara Arms Apartments and surrounding
areas. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.
Thank you
JWSC
David Bearden
David Rowdy Bearden, 45, of
Waynesville, died suddenly early
Saturday morning at Southeast
Georgia Health System in Brunswick.
A memorial service will be
held at a later date.
Arrangements are with Frye
Funeral Home, Nahunta.
Sympathy may be expressed
by signing the online registry at
www.fryefh.com.
The Brunswick News May 5, 2014
Area deaths
Willie Thomas, of Brunswick,
died Saturday at St. Vincent’s
Hospital, Jacksonville, Fla.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced later by Hall, Jones
and Brown Funeral Home.
Deaths elsewhere
CHICAGO — Gary Becker, a
University of Chicago professor
who received the Nobel Prize in
economic sciences and is credited
with pioneering the approach to
economics as the study of human
behavior, died Saturday at age 83.
Becker was cited for applying
economic analysis to a wide range
of human behavior and interactions. The economics and sociology professor studied issues such
as marriage and divorce, crime
and punishment, addiction and
household decisions.
Before Becker began publishing his ideas in the late 1950s,
most academics considered habit
and often emotion or irrationality
as the primary factors in human
behavior such as having children
or committing crimes.
— Associated Press
About obituaries
Obituaries for individuals with
direct connections to The News
circulation area of Glynn, Brantley, Camden and McIntosh counties, and containing similar types
of information, are published
free as community news. Family-placed obituaries, which may
contain additional information or
tributes, are paid.
An American flag
with an obituary indicates a veteran of the
United States military.
If you have questions about
practices The News follows for
obituaries, please call Alan Broz
at 265-8320.
Send obituary submissions to
[email protected].
The deadline is 3 p.m. daily.
Help us celebrate
our new location!
201 Gloucester St.
Across from the library!
Wine & Snacks every First Friday
264-1177
Jeffrey R. Berry
Attorney at Law
PERSONAL INJURY
Workers Comp • Auto Accidents • All Other Types of Injuries
Social Security Disability Benefits
FAMILY LAW & CRIMINAL LAW
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Call for a competitive fee quote on any legal matter
1618 Ellis Street, Brunswick 2671144
Mon.-Fri. 9 AM-5 PM BY APPOINTMENT
All Major Credit Cards Accepted
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
The Charlton County Board of Commissioners will be accepting
applications for the following positions:
EMT:
High School Diploma or GED required. Georgia EMT - 1 or
EMT - A certification’ required. Maintain current American Heart
Association-Healthcare BLS Provider Card. Must hold or obtain
a valid Georgia’s Driver’s License and maintain an acceptable
MVR according to departmental standards once employed, must
be insured by the departmental provider at the standard rate.
Applicant must demonstrate knowledge of basic life support
protocols, principles of emergency ambulance operations and
principles as defined by national, state and regional standards.
Paramedic:
High School Diploma or GED required. Georgia EMT
Paramedic certification required. Maintain current American
Heart Association-Healthcare BLS and ACLS Provider card. Must
hold or obtain a valid Georgia’s Driver’s License and maintain
an acceptable MVR according to departmental standards once
employed, must be insurable by the departmental provider at the
standard rate. Applicant must demonstrate knowledge of basic
life support protocols, advanced life support protocols, principles
of emergency ambulance operations and principles as defined by
national, state and regional standards.
Applications may be obtained from the Charlton County
Commissioner’s office, 68 Kingsland Dr., Suite B, Folkston, GA.
Positions will remain open until filled. Charlton County is an EOE
and has adopted a non-discrimination policy
regarding hiring of the handicapped.
5A PROCESS
The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014 5A
Page One, Part 2
Turtles:
Nests should
arrive soon
Twins reunite after 78 years
Associated Press
Continued from 1A
Dodd knows the nests will appear soon because already this spring three dead turtles have been found
along the coast, one a massive 350-pound female that
would have laid eggs.
“The turtles haven’t started nesting yet, but they do
start moving into our waters this time of year,” Dodd
said. “But you hate it when you lose adults who can
reproduce.”
The female and the one male that were found dead
showed evidence of being struck by boats. Another
male looked like it died from disease.
Boat strikes tend to be the biggest threat to sea turtles as nesting season begins because the weather is
warming and drawing more boaters to the water for
recreation.
Dodd said if boaters slow down on the water and
pay attention, they can help reduce the number of
turtles lost.
Ensuring a healthy nesting season also relies on
people forgoing the use of lights on the beaches at
night because they may disturb nesting turtles. If
lights are necessary, Dodd suggested using reddish
tinted lights.
You can help
Georgia Department of Natural Resources
biologists urge the public to assist in conserving
loggerheads and other sea turtles. The following are some tips on what you can do to help
protect sea turtles:
• Do not use lights on the beach at night.
• Never disturb a sea turtle that is crawling to
The Brunswick News/File
Mark Dodd, biologist for the Georgia Department
of Natural Resources, shows loggerhead sea
turtle eggs collected for DNA samples to track
nesting females and their offspring.
Beachgoers who happen to see a turtle nesting at
night should keep a safe distance away to ensure successful nesting, Dodd said.
• Reporter Michael Hall writes about public
safety, environment and other local topics. Contact
him at mhall@the brunswicknews.com, on Facebook or at 265-8320, ext. 320.
or from the sea.
• Once a sea turtle has begun nesting, observe it only from a distance.
• Do not shine lights in a sea turtle’s eyes or
take flash photography.
• Do not touch or disturb nests or hatchlings.
• Report a dead or injured turtle or turtle
harassment to 800-2-SAVE-ME. Include the tag
color and number if one is visible.
Atwood: Buffers protect marsh
Continued from 1A
tourism, fishing and recreation.
He said a buffer is critical in
protecting the marsh ecosystem
from potentially pollutant-contaminated runoff from driveways,
roads, parking lots, roofs and other impervious surfaces.
“The very nature of Georgia’s
saltwater marsh is that there typically is no wrested vegetation at
the marsh/upland interface,” Atwood wrote. “Wrested vegetation
is vegetation that is pulled away
by the force of moving water ...
However, water typically does
not flow with enough force on a
regular basis in a marsh setting to
result in wrested vegetation at the
marsh/upland interface.”
Atwood told The News Friday
the purpose of his letter to Turner
is to ensure that the original intent of the Georgia legislature’s
Erosion and Sedimentation Act is
followed.
That act requires a 25-foot buffer for all state waters, including
marshlands, Atwood said.
“I want to be sure that (25-foot
buffer) continues,” Atwood said.
“If the (EPD) director has concerns, if he feels the act is ambiguous or not spelled out to the
degree that it should be spelled
out, then I certainly want to be
available to him to be sure it follows the legislation in the future.
I remain concerned about this,
but I also want to be sure that our
buffer is enforced in an equal and
fair manner.”
• Reporter Kelly Quimby
writes about government and
other local topics. Contact her
at kquimby@thebrunswicknews.
com, or at 265-8320, ext. 321.
Judges: Cutting back on time
Continued from 1A
order. In late April new motions
were filed, but no new hearing
date has been yet set.
Lane said the circuit has made
some strides in cutting back the
time it takes to try a case. Each
week, one of the five judges is
assigned to work the “fast track,”
hearing cases and setting bonds
to reduce the local jail population.
The judges have teamed up to
tackle this issue, Lane said, and
it’s beginning to show results.
Both candidates agree that beyond moving cases through the
courts, more transparency in the
Brunswick circuit is needed.
Moses said the Brunswick circuit still relies solely on paper
and ink to notify attorneys of
calendar changes or set dates for
hearings. The website, she said,
is less than informative.
“Our (judicial circuit) is about
the least informative of any other
circuit. They could publish their
calendar and docket,” she said.
“There’s nothing transparent.
The judges have a tremendous
authority and a lack of accountability, and there’s really no way
to hold them accountable except
at the polls.”
Statewide, the Georgia Council of Superior Court Judges has
identified the use of new technologies as an issue that needs
to be addressed during the next
year, Lane said. The council of
290 Superior Court judges is
working to digitize its filing system, he said, and provide better
public access to court records.
Lane said he hopes to have
Glynn County’s records digitized this year.
An issue unique to the Brunswick Judicial Circuit is maintaining a judiciary that is respected
by its citizens, said Lane, who
was appointed in 2012 to fill a
bench vacated by former Superior Court Judge Amanda Wil-
liams.
“A good judiciary is vital to
the community,” Lane said. “If
you’ve got a judiciary that is respected and looked up to by the
citizens, then it reflects on the
whole community. When you
get into the situation that the
court got into, the community
loses respect for the judiciary.
If you have a judiciary that’s
involved in controversy, whether real or not, it reflects on the
community.”
Moses ran unsuccessfully
against Williams for the Superior Court judgeship in 2010.
Looking back on what unfolded
the following year, Moses said, a
lot of the controversy could have
been avoided with more transparency in the courts.
• Reporter Kelly Quimby
writes about government and
other local topics. Contact her
at [email protected], or at 265-8320, ext.
321.
Schools: Discourage parties
Continued from 1A
“Throughout the year, our administrators and teachers work
with students on the importance
of making good decisions,”
Mann said. “As graduation approaches, these efforts are
ramped up. For instance, Glynn
Academy met with a group of
parents and community leaders to plan activities that would
help deliver the message of responsibility and good decision
making to the students.”
Assemblies where students
are addressed by police officials
and others are included in the
ramp up, he said.
“The same types of things
are going on at Brunswick High
School, and we believe these efforts are working,” Mann said,
adding that “most of our students are good kids who make
good decisions.”
It is not unprecedented for the
school system to get involved.
When principal of Glynn Academy, Davis Baker made it more
difficult for seniors to party late
into the night at senior houses by requiring them to be in
school most of the school day.
Traditionally, seniors only attend graduation practices during the final days of school.
The following year, however,
a new principal restored the tradition of half-day or less school
attendance.
The school system does not
plan to adopt any policy to discourage senior houses in 2014.
“All we can do is ask parents
to discourage this practice,”
Mann said.
Mann did not comment on the
resolution adopted by all seven
members of the Glynn County
Commission, other than to say,
“We appreciate the county commission and the rest of the community for helping us to get this
message out.”
Glynn County School Board
member Millard Allen concurs
with Mann.
“We just have to keep communicating the message of responsibility and accountability,”
Allen said.
A company that rents houses
on St. Simons Island says an
individual must be at least 25
years of age to sign a lease and
that the company monitors its
rentals for compliance with the
rules.
What do you think?
Go online at www.thebrunswicknews.com to vote in this
week’s poll on “senior houses.”
You do not have to be a subscriber to vote.
FULLERTON, Calif. — It’s
been 78 years since Ann Hunt and
Elizabeth Hamel were last together
— in their mother’s womb.
The twin sisters were reunited last
week for the first time since birth
in Fullerton, California, thanks to a
nudge from their children and help
from a psychology professor.
Hunt, who lives in England, was
given up for adoption and only
learned she had a twin when she
began looking for her birth mother
after her adopted mother died.
Hamel, who lives in Oregon, always knew she had a twin but says
she never thought she would see
her.
“How lovely to see you in the
flesh,” Hamel said, as she embraced
her sister at a hotel in Fullerton.
The women were to spend the
next day undergoing testing at the
Twin Studies Center at California
State University, Fullerton, with
professor Nancy Segal, who researches twins who were raised
apart to better understand the role
of genes and environment in human development.
Both women were born in Aldershot, England, in 1936. Their
mother, a domestic servant, decided to give up one of the girls after
their birth father fled. Hamel said
she kept her because she was born
with curvature of the spine, which
would have made it more difficult
for her to be adopted.
Hamel grew up an only child. She
met her husband — a “Yank”—
while stationed with the Women’s
Royal Enlisted Navy in Malta, and
eventually moved to the United
States. The couple had two sons.
Hunt was adopted by a couple,
and was also raised as an only child.
She didn’t look for her birth mother
until after her adopted mother died,
and only learned a year ago she
was a twin. Samantha Stacey, one
of Hunt’s three daughters, tracked
down Hamel and sent her a letter.
The two women were soon talking on the phone. Hamel’s son
Quinton read one of Segal’s books
about twins and contacted the professor, who arranged the reunion.
After undergoing testing in Fullerton, the sisters, who are believed to
be fraternal twins, and cousins plan
to spend a week at Hamel’s home
looking at old photos and learning
more about each other.
“You wonder about someone
and what they’re like and suddenly
they’re here,” Hamel said. “It’s a
shock.”
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Commentary
Monday
May 5, 2014
The Brunswick News
6A
Nation | Case exemplifies IRS’ power
The heavy hand of the IRS
CLARENCE H. LEAVY
President and Editor, 1902-1946
C.H. LEAVY
1941-1983
C.H. LEAVY III
1965-1999
C.H. LEAVY IV
President and Editor
W. RON MAULDEN
Vice President/
General Manager
HANK ROWLAND
Managing
Editor
HEATH SLAPIKAS
Director
of Advertising
rené GRIFFIS
Director
of Circulation
Editorial | Abuse can be stopped
Prescription drug abuse
rising in Glynn County
Police in Glynn County say they are
seeing more and more cases of individuals violating prescription drugs
in this community. The numbers, they
say, have been going up and up over the
years.
In many cases, the prescription drugs
found in the possession of violators belong to someone else. Most likely, they
were lifted from a medicine cabinet at
home by a family member who plans
to abuse them or to sell them to someone else. In some cases, these are adults
abusing their own prescriptions or making money off them.
There have even been instances when
a friend or a neighbor helped themselves, without permission, to the contents of someone else’s medicine cabinet. More than likely, they will continue
the abuse until caught by the owner or
police.
In other cases, it is a young son or
daughter who is doing the experimenting or selling, which puts the main
battlefield in the home and one that re-
quires the full participation of parents.
Caring parents have more power than
they think in the war against drugs.
They can teach their children a healthy
respect for medicine, beginning at a
young age, and instill in them a respect
for themselves, as well as the knowledge
that taking drugs – and that includes
abusing prescription pain killers – is a
dead end street. There’s no future in it.
They might, of course, hear a different story from other children or classmates who were never taught the value
of self-respect or the ugliness of drugs
when abused. They might even do some
experimentation. But parents will have
that hook, that knowledge and respect
they planted in their children at an early
age, on which to reconnect them with
reality.
This is more than saving a child from
a brush with the law. It’s saving the life
of a son or daughter, sparing them and
families from the kind of grief that has
already consumed and destroyed so
many others.
Another view | Jim Powell
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Faith built on struggles
Dear Dr. Graham: My neighbor
has had some serious personal problems recently, and she blames them
all on God. She says she doesn’t want
anything more to do with Him and
gets very upset if I even mention praying about her problems. How can I help
her? — Mrs. M.M.
Dear Mrs. M.M.: I’ve often said
that hard times will either drive people away from God, or they will drive
them closer to Him.
What makes the difference? It usually depends on how strong a person’s
faith was before the hard times came.
Sadly, if a person’s faith is already
weak, when troubles come they often
react the way your neighbor has. I hope
your letter will encourage people to
grow strong in their faith right now, so
they won’t be thrown off course when
troubles do come. Job in the Old Testament is a good example of this; his
strong faith didn’t break when troubles came. He declared, “Though he
slay me, yet will I hope in him” (Job
13:15).
What can you do to help your neighbor? First, pray for her. Pray that God
will help her see her need of Him, and
will help her understand His love for
her. Pray too that you will be the kind
of friend she needs right now – not
lecturing her, but being a good listener
and gently letting her know you care.
Then be an example to your neighbor of Christ’s love and mercy. If God
opens the door, share with her the hard
times you’ve been through, and how
Christ gave you hope in the midst of
them. But even if you can’t do this right
now because it upsets her, your life will
speak just as loudly as your words. The
Bible says, “Let your gentleness be evident to all” (Philippians 4:5).
POSTMASTER: Send change of address to
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The Brunswick News is a member of the
Associated Press, Georgia Press Association and Southern Newspaper Publishers
Association.
Billy
Graham
www.billygraham.com
My Answer
FLINT, Mich. — Earnest moralists
lament Americans’ distrust of government. What really is regrettable is that
government does much to earn distrust,
as Terry Dehko, 70, and his daughter
Sandy Thomas, 41, understand.
Terry, who came to Michigan from
Iraq in 1970, soon did what immigrants
often do: He went into business, buying
Schott’s Supermarket in Fraser, Mich.,
where he still works six days a week.
The IRS, a tentacle of a government
that spent $3.5 trillion in 2013, tried
to steal more than $35,000 from Terry
and Sandy that year.
Sandy, a mother of four, has a master’s degree in urban planning but has
worked in the store off and on since
she was 12. She remembers, “They just
walked into the store” and announced
that they had emptied the store’s bank
account. The IRS agents believed, or
pretended to believe, that Terry and
Sandy were or conceivably could be –
which is sufficient for the IRS – conducting a criminal enterprise when not
selling groceries.
What pattern of behavior supposedly
aroused the suspicions of a federal government that is ignorant of how small
businesses function? Terry and Sandy
regularly make deposits of less than
$10,000 in the bank across the street.
Federal law, aimed primarily at money
laundering by drug dealers, requires
banks to report cash deposits of more
than $10,000. It also makes it illegal to
“structure” deposits to evade such reporting.
Because 35 percent of Schott’s Supermarket’s receipts are in cash, Terry and
Sandy make frequent trips to the bank
to avoid tempting actual criminals by
having large sums at the store. Besides,
their insurance policy covers no cash
loss in excess of $10,000.
In 2010 and 2012, IRS agents visited
the store and examined Terry’s and
Sandy’s conduct. In 2012, the IRS notified them that it identified “no violations” of banking laws. But on Jan. 22,
2013, Terry and Sandy discovered that
the IRS had obtained a secret warrant
and emptied the store’s bank account.
Sandy says that if the IRS had acted
“the day before, there would have been
only about $2,000 in the account.”
Should we trust that today’s IRS was
just lucky in its timing?
The IRS used “civil forfeiture,” the
power to seize property suspected of
being produced by, or involved with,
crime. The IRS could have dispelled its
suspicions of Terry and Sandy, if it actually had any, by simply asking them
about the reasons – prudence, and the
insurance limits – for their banking
practices. It had, however, a reason not
to ask obvious questions before proceeding.
The civil forfeiture law – if something so devoid of due process can be
dignified as law – is an incentive for
perverse behavior: Predatory government agencies get to pocket the pro-
Metro Graphics
According to columnist George Will, the Internal Revenue Service used “civil forfeiture,” the power to seize property suspected of being produced by or involved
with crime.
George
Will
Syndicated columnist
[email protected]
ceeds from property they seize from
Americans without even charging
them with, let alone convicting them
of, crimes. Criminals are treated better
than this because they lose the fruits of
their criminality only after being convicted.
Sandy remembers her father exclaiming “Aren’t we in the United
States? We did nothing wrong.” They
did something right in discovering the
Institute for Justice’s activities against
civil forfeiture abuse. IJ, a libertarian
defender of property rights and other
American premises, says that what was
done to Terry is done routinely across
the nation – indeed, it was done almost
simultaneously to the owner of a gas
station near Schott’s Supermarket who
deposited his cash receipts whenever he
could get to the bank, typically every
few days.
Civil forfeiture proceeds on the
guilty-until-proven-innocent principle,
forcing property owners of limited
means to hire lawyers and engage in
protracted proceedings against a government with limitless resources, just
to prove their innocence. Says IJ:
“To make matters worse, forfeiture
law treats property owners like random
AP/File
The headquarters of the Internal Revenue Service is shown in Washington.
bystanders and requires them to intervene in the lawsuit filed by the government against their property just to get it
back. That is why civil forfeiture cases
have such unusual names, such as United States v. $35,651.11 in U.S. Currency
– the case involving Terry and Sandy.”
In what it probably considered an act
of unmerited mercy, the IRS offered
to return 20 percent of Terry’s money.
Such extortion – pocketing others people’s money – often succeeds when the
IRS bullies bewildered people not represented by IJ, which forced the government to return all of Terry’s and the
gas station owner’s money.
IJ’s countersuit seeks an injunction to
prevent such IRS thefts and extortions.
Meanwhile, earnest moralists might
consider the possibility that Americans’
distrust of government is insufficient.
Nation | Columnist writes on Sen. Chip Rogers
Senator’s job at GPB vanishes
The scene: The office of Teya Ryan,
president of GPB.
Knock! Knock! Knock!
“Ms. Ryan?”
“What is it, Tiffany? I am very busy,
and I asked not to be interrupted.”
“I’m sorry to bother you, but there is a
man pacing outside your office dressed
like Big Bird. He says he must talk to
you now. Says it is an emergency.”
“That would be Chip Rogers. I figured this would happen. OK, Tiffany,
send him in.”
“Teya! I have just heard from the
Cookie Monster and Miss Piggy that I
am no longer wanted here! You can’t
do this! I gave up a wonderful career in
the state Senate, where I led the fight
to keep the United Nations out of Putnam County and microchips off our
body parts. When I got this gig, I told
people it was my ‘dream job.’ Little
did I know that my dream would suddenly go ‘poof.’ Boy, are my feathers
ruffled!”
“Chip, settle down and take off that
silly costume. You did this to yourself. I have been informed that you are
lobbying for a hotel association while
taking $150,000 taxpayer money to do
whatever it is we were told to hire you
to do. Don’t blame me. This one is on
you.”
“Oh, yeah? Well, we’ll just see about
that. May I remind you that I have
friends in the very highest levels of
state government, and they are going
to be very upset about this. You seem
to have forgotten that it was the gov-
Richard
Yarbrough
Syndicated columnist
[email protected]
ernor who encouraged me to take this
job. As we say on ‘Sesame Street’, you
have just laid an egg, Teya.”
“In the first place, I’ve never heard
anybody on ‘Sesame Street’ say that
and as for calling Gov. Deal, don’t
bother. The Atlanta newspapers got
emails through an Open Records Act
that says Chris Riley, the governor’s
chief of staff received an anonymous
tip about your sideline venture. Mr.
Riley then had Bart Gobell, the governor’s chief operating officer, talk to me
about the matter personally.
“Sonufagun. Nobody tells me anything. I should have known better than
to trust that crowd in the governor’s office. They have had it in for me ever
since I told the governor that he looked
like Zoot. I meant that as a compliment,
but I don’t think he watches ‘Sesame
Street.’ Now, I wish I had told Chris
Riley that he reminds me of Oscar the
Grouch. He does, you know.”
“At this point, Chip, I don’t think any
of that matters. What matters is that
you have become a distraction here at
Georgia Public Broadcasting at a time
we are trying to raise some serious
money. A lot of donors quit giving to
GPB when they found out they were
also paying your salary. With this issue
behind me, I can now get back to promoting the cultural ambience that so
defines public broadcasting. I am quite
excited about our newest GPB concert,
entitled, “Snoop Doggy Dogg Sings
Mozart’s Requiem Mass in D Minor.”
We will also be giving hula hoops to
the first one hundred callers during our
upcoming pledge drive.”
“Gosh, Teya, I would love to be a part
of that. I love all that requiem stuff and
I’m crazy about dogs. I will even learn
to hula hoop. Let me show you that I
can be a part of the team. I’ll even put
away my Big Bird outfit if you wish,
although I think I look pretty sharp in
that sucker.”
“Chip, I’m sorry, but my decision is
final. I hate that it happened this way,
but I must confess it will be nice to no
longer worry about that crass columnist who is always taking potshots at
us. If you go away, maybe he will go
away.”
“I can make that happen, Teya. I will
go back to Woodstock and announce
that I am going to run for public office. That will keep Mr. Smarty-Pants
so preoccupied with what I am going to
say or do next that he won’t have time
to think about you guys.”
“Hmm. That just might work. What
do you want in return?”
“Two tickets to see that singing dog
and six hula hoops.”
“Oh, good grief. Say good-bye,
Chip.”
“OK, ‘Good-bye, Chip.’”
7A
The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014 7A
Nation & World
MORE NEWS, 11A
Obama jokes about term
during association dinner
Associated Press
AP/File
Women attend a demonstration calling on government to rescue kidnapped school girls of a government secondary school in northeastern Nigeria on Thursday in Lagos, Nigeria.
Nigerian leader calls for new
order to free abducted girls
By BASHIR ADIGUN
and MICHELLE FAUL
Associated Press
ABUJA, Nigeria — Nigerian
President Goodluck Jonathan met
with security, school and state officials and ordered that “everything
must be done” to free the 276 girls
held captive by Islamic extremists,
one of his advisers said Sunday
amid growing national outrage at
the government’s response to the
abduction.
Jonathan said in a televised
“media chat” Sunday night that he
believes Nigeria is winning its war
against an Islamic uprising.
Two bomb blasts in three weeks
that have killed about 100 people
and injured more than 200 in the
capital, Abuja, “does not mean the
situation is worsening,” Jonathan
said.
“I believe we are succeeding,”
he said, though the death tolls tell
a different story.
More than 1,500 people have
died in the insurgency this year,
compared to an estimated 3,600
between 2010 and 2013. Both of
the Abuja blasts are blamed on
Boko Haram, the Islamic terrorist
network.
Jonathan said he has been asking for and getting help from the
United States but that President
Barack Obama has expressed concern to him about allegations of
gross human rights abuses by security forces accused of summary
executions and the killings in detention of thousands of people.
“I said, ‘Send someone to see
what we are doing and assist us,
give us equipment that will help
us, because we need sophisticated
(equipment), don’t just say there is
some matter of alleged abuses,”
Jonathan said, describing one of
two conversations with the U.S.
leader.
U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry over the weekend promised
help.
“The kidnapping of hundreds
of children by Boko Haram is an
unconscionable crime, and we will
do everything possible to support
the Nigerian government to return these young women to their
homes and to hold the perpetrators
to justice,” Kerry said from Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia.
Jonathan’s meeting over Saturday night was the first time the
president had met with all stakeholders, including the principal
of the Chibok Government Girls
Secondary School in northeastern
Nigeria where the girls and young
women were kidnapped in a predawn raid April 15, presidential
adviser Reuben Abati told reporters.
Nigerians’ anger at the failure
to rescue the students, and protest
marches last week in major Nigerian cities as well as New York City,
have spurred to action Jonathan’s
government, which many see as
uncaring of the girls’ plight.
“The president has given very
clear directives that everything
must be done to ensure that these
girls must be brought back to safety,” Abati said.
The police said last week that
the actual number abducted had
risen to more than 300 and that
276 remain in captivity. It said 53
students managed to escape their
captors. None have been rescued
by the military, which initially
said it was in hot pursuit of the abductors.
Some of the girls have been
forced into “marriage” with their
abductors and were paid a nominal bride price of $12, according
to a federal senator from the area
whose report is unverified.
WASHINGTON — From the
bungled rollout of “Obamacare”
to New Jersey gridlock to the hue
of John Boehner’s tan, all was fair
game for President Barack Obama
and his spirited but pointed humor when he took center stage as
comedian in chief.
At the annual White House
Correspondents’ Association dinner on Saturday, Obama observed
that the House speaker’s fellow
Republicans have lately been as
critical of Boehner as they’ve
been of him.
“Which proves that orange really is the new black,” Obama
said to roars of laughter.
“We rolled out healthcare.gov.
That could have gone better,”
Obama said, poking a little fun
at himself and his administration.
“In 2008 my slogan was ‘Yes
we can.’ In 2013 my slogan was
‘Control-alt-delete.”’
On the plus side, the president
said, “they did turn the launch
of healthcare.gov into one of
the year’s biggest movies.” On a
screen flashed the poster for “Frozen.”
When a video Obama intro-
Jacquelyn Martin/AP
President Barack Obama gestures and smiles during his speech
at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner on Saturday at the Washington Hilton Hotel in Washington.
duced failed to play properly, he
asked, “Does anybody know how
to fix this?” To laughter, the outgoing Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
stepped up and said: “I got this. I
see it all the time.”
The annual dinner has become
a tradition in the nation’s capital,
promising a black-tie evening of
humor and celebrity gazing. The
event once again attracted an array of journalists, government
officials, politicians and media
personalities as the association
raised money for college scholarships. The featured entertainer
was comic actor Joel McHale, the
star of the NBC series “Community.”
In his own stand-up routine,
Obama didn’t waste any time
turning his barbed jokes toward
the news media.
“MSNBC is here,” he said.
“They’re a little overwhelmed.
They’ve never seen an audience
this big before.”
two parts of a maritime system that
failed passengers April 16 when the
ferry sank, leaving more than 300
people missing or dead.
The disaster has exposed enormous safety gaps in South Korea’s
monitoring of domestic passenger
ships, which is in some ways less
rigorous than its rules for ships that
handle only cargo. Collectively,
the country’s regulators held more
than enough information to conclude that the Sewol was routinely
overloaded, but because they did
not share that data and were not
required to do so, it was practically
useless.
The Korean Register of Shipping examined the Sewol early last
year as it was being redesigned to
handle more passengers. The register slashed the ship’s cargo capacity by more than half, to 987 tons,
and said the vessel needed to carry
more than 2,000 tons of water to
stay balanced.
But the register gave its report
only to the ship owner, Chonghaejin Marine Co. Ltd. Neither the
coast guard nor the Korean Shipping Association, which regulates
and oversees departures and arrivals of domestic passenger ships, appear to have had any knowledge of
the new limit before the disaster.
“That’s a blind spot in the law,”
said Lee Kyu-Yeul, professor emeritus at Seoul National University’s
Department of Naval Architecture
and Ocean Engineering.
S. Korea ferry was routinely overloaded
By YOUKYUNG LEE
Associated Press
INCHEON, South Korea — The
doomed ferry Sewol exceeded its
cargo limit on 246 trips — nearly
every voyage it made in which it
reported cargo — in the 13 months
before it sank, according to documents that reveal the regulatory
failures that allowed passengers by
the hundreds to set off on an unsafe
vessel. And it may have been more
overloaded than ever on its final
journey.
One private, industry-connected
entity recorded the weights. Another set the weight limit. Neither appears to have had any idea what the
other was doing. And they are but
Reports show American teachers
nowhere near as diverse as students
By JESSE J. HOLLAND
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — U.S. teachers are nowhere near as diverse as
their students.
Almost half the students attending public schools are minorities, yet fewer than 1 in 5 of their
teachers is nonwhite.
New studies from the Center
for American Progress and the
National Education Association
are calling attention to this “diversity gap” at elementary and
secondary schools in the United
States. The groups want more to
be done to help teachers more
accurately mirror the students in
their classrooms.
Teachers are always pushing
their students to excel, said Kevin
Gilbert, coordinator of teacher
leadership and special projects for
the Clinton Public School District
in Clinton, Mississippi.
It becomes easier for students to
believe “when they can look and
see someone who looks just like
them, that they can relate to,” said
Gilbert, a member of the NEA’s
executive committee. “Nothing
can help motivate our students
more than to see success standing
right in front of them.”
More than minority students
would benefit from a more diverse teacher corps, said Ulrich
Boser, the author of the center’s
report.
“Even in a place like North
Dakota, where the students aren’t
particularly diverse relative to the
rest of the country, it’s important
for our social fabric, for our sense
as a nation, that students are engaging with people who think,
talk and act differently than them
but can also be just as effective
at raising student achievement in
the classroom,” he said.
There were about 3.3 million
teachers in American public elementary and secondary schools
in 2012, according to a study by
the National Center for Education
Statistics. It said 82 percent were
white, 8 percent were Hispanic,
7 percent were black and about 2
senior
Tuesday, May 6
Jacquelyn Martin/AP
Lyle Alderson, left, a former teacher, with his wife Jan Alderson, a
high school science teacher, both of Overland Park, Kansas, and
Kevin Gilbert, 42, of Ridgeland, Miss., right, a member-at-large
on the National Education Association executive committee, are
interviewed on Thursday in Washington.
percent were Asian.
Students are a different story.
In 1993, minority students made
"3*/4,!
*' !,
%.4-3*/, 3
.*-0!
up 31 percent of the public school
population; it was 41 percent in
2003.
June 8-20 or July 7-18 Time(s): 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Roosevelt Lawrence Community Center, Brunswick, Ga.
Openings: 40 youth
Training:
The Brunswick Police Department will host two, two week
training sessions. During the two week training youth will
meet with members of various law enforcement agencies
and have the opportunity to ask questions regarding their
duties and training. They will be instructed on fingerprinting,
handcuffing, crime scene investigations, firearms safety,
pursuit driving, the court system and laws, with visit by a
k-9 drug dog and other special guests.
Uniform:
A shirt, hat, name badge, and tote bag will be provided
to each cadet on the first day.
Meals:
Lunch, water and snacks will be provided during training;
a cookout celebration will be held the last day of the
program.
Cost:
FREE!
Qualifications:
City of Brunswick and Glynn County residents, between the
ages of 11-14 years old.
Application:
Submit a handwritten essay of 50 words or more, entitled
“Why I Am Interested in Law Enforcement”. Essays can be
dropped off at the Brunswick Police Department by May 9th;
late essays will not be accepted. All essays will be judged by
a committee and winning applications will be notified.
Graduation:
Graduation ceremony will be held on Friday, July 18th, 2014
at 6:00 p.m. at Old City Hall 1229 Newcastle St. Bwk. Ga.
31520. The ceremony will include elected officials, special
guests, and members of the media.
Questions:
Contact Officer Evelyn Timmons, Brunswick Police
Department, at (912)279-2607.
1%.$3*/,!'&!1, -,
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206 Mansfield St. Brunswick, Ga. 31520
Location:
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The Brunswick Police Department Announces:
Openings for Summer Cadet Positions In
the Youth COP’s Summer Program
Date(s):
senior
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Monday
May 5, 2014
The Brunswick News
QUICK HITS
Sports
Associated Press
Mayweather holds
off Maidana to win
welterweight bout
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — J.B. Holmes was a 3-foot
putt away from winning the Wells Fargo Championship when he backed away to size up the situation.
This wasn’t about pressure. He was just happy to
be there.
Nearly three years removed from brain surgery,
Holmes was in a far better place Sunday at Quail Hollow. His 3-foot bogey putt gave him a 1-under 71 and
a one-shot victory over Jim Furyk, capping a remarkable comeback from a health issue that wouldn’t be
classified as the garden variety in golf.
Not many other guys keep a piece of their skull in a
container in their closet.
The Atlanta Braves have
activated right-hander Gavin
Floyd from the disabled list
and optioned left-handed reliever Ian Thomas to Triple-A
Gwinnett.
Floyd signed a one-year, $4
million deal with the Braves
in December after his 2013
season with the White Sox was
shorted by an elbow injury. He
had surgery last May to repair
the ulnar collateral ligament
and a torn flexor muscle in his
right elbow.
The Braves did not immediately announce Floyd’s role.
The 31-year-old pitcher has
a 70-70 career record with
Philadelphia and the White
Sox. His best season came in
2008, when he was 17-8 with
a 3.84 ERA with Chicago.
He hasn’t won more than 12
games or had an ERA under
4.00 since 2008.
Thomas was 1-1 with a 4.26
ERA in 10 games.
Braves
struggle at
home with
Giants, 9A
8A
“Just enjoying the moment,” Holmes said. “You
don’t get that very often, so getting up and thanking God for letting me have the opportunity to do it.
Whether I made it or not, just enjoy being there.”
He made it more stressful than he needed, with two
bogeys on the last three holes and an 8-foot par putt
on the other. Jason Bohn had the best chance to catch
Holmes, one shot behind until pulling a 4-iron into
the water on the par-3 17th and making double bogey. Phil Mickelson never had a chance, missing four
putts from the 4-foot range and closing with a 76 to
finish out of the top 10.
It was the third PGA Tour win for Holmes, and by
far the sweetest.
Please see PGA, 10A
Bob Leverone/AP
J.B. Holmes holds the winner’s trophy Sunday after capturing
the Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte, N.C. Holmes’ victory
earns him a berth in this week’s Players Championship.
State tournament soccer: Frederica boys back in final
Marcos Maidana did
everything but beat Floyd
Mayweather Jr., taking him
12 tough rounds before losing
a majority decision.
Mayweather remained unbeaten Saturday night, but not
by much. Maidana swarmed
all over him from the opening bell and gave him perhaps
his toughest fight in a 16-year
professional career.
In the end, though, Mayweather got the win — just
as he did in his previous
45 fights. He retained his
welterweight title by winning
117-111 on one scorecard and
116-112 on another. A third
judge had it even at 114-114.
Maidana threw far more
punches, but Mayweather was
more accurate with his as the
two battled into the late rounds
with the fight still very much
in doubt. Maidana raised his
arms in victory when the final
bell sounded, and Mayweather
watched pensively from his
corner as the scorecards were
added up before he was declared the winner.
Floyd to pitch for
Braves versus Cards
Alex
Wood
Holmes earns way into
Players with Fargo win
By DOUG FERGUSON
Floyd Mayweather
8A SPORTS PROCESS
Hamlin
sprints
to win
at ’Dega
Associated Press
been successful. “They love
each other and couldn’t care
less who scores, as long as
somebody scores.”
Barrow found the back
of the net twice in the first
half as FA built a 2-0 lead
John Mitchell in the first 10 minutes. A
penalty-kick goal by GateBrock
wood in the 25th minute cut
the Knights’ lead in half, but a Brett Steilen
header made it 3-1 before halftime.
Steilen’s sixth goal of the season — off a
pinpoint pass from Michael Voss — was the
result of patience by the Knights after Voss’
original corner kick was defended by Gate-
TALLADEGA, Ala. — Denny
Hamlin started his full-time career
at Joe Gibbs Racing with an upset
victory in an exhibition race at Daytona. Over the years, he added three
more wins in races that didn’t count,
including a sweep this season in the
buildup to the Daytona 500.
But when it came to the restrictorplate races that paid points, Hamlin
came up empty time and again.
Until now.
Hamlin, who opened the season
with two exhibition victories only
to finish second in the Daytona 500,
was again sitting second in the closing laps Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway. But he won a drag race
with leader Kevin Harvick on a restart with two laps remaining, and
was out front when NASCAR froze
the field because of debris from an
accident.
Hamlin let out a deep sigh when
the yellow flag waved.
“Superspeedway win,” he said
on his radio. “With points! With
points!”
“I think I’ve gotten better. I’ve
come close. When you drive as
aggressive as I drove early in my
career on superspeedways, you’re
going to have a huge risk, huge reward,” he said after the win. “I was
either wrecking or finishing in the
top three every single superspeedway race and was wrecking most of
the time. I think this way of driving
and the way I’m doing things now
kind of lends itself to being a little
bit more consistent on these type
of race tracks, and really you learn
from the guys that are good at it.”
Hamlin became the eighth winner in 10 races this season as drivers
Please see KNIGHTS, 10A
Please see RACE, 10A
Nathan Deen/The Brunswick News
Frederica Academy’s Brett Steilen, middle, heads in a goal to put the Knights up 3-1 over Gatewood during the GISA Class AA state
tournament semifinals on Saturday at Frederica. Paced by two goals by Landon Barrow, front right, and stellar goaltending by John
Mitchell Brock, the FA boys won 5-1 to advance to the state championship game. The Lady Knights were not so fortunate, losing 2-1
in overtime to Monsignor Donovan earlier in the day.
Knights one step closer
By DAVE JORDAN
The Brunswick News
A tight soccer game turned into a comfortable win Saturday for the Frederica Academy
boys in the semifinals of the state tournament.
The Frederica girls, however, will have to
wait until next year to try and get back to their
state championship game.
On St. Simons Island, Landon Barrow
scored twice, John Mitchell Brock was stellar
in goal, and the FA boys downed Gatewood
Schools 5-1 in the Georgia Independent
School Association Class AA state tournament semis.
In the day’s opening match, Monsignor
Donovan broke the heart of the FA girls with
an overtime goal that earned
the Lady Rams a return trip
to the state final with a 2-1
victory.
The win by the top-ranked
Frederica boys sends the
defending state champion
Knights back to the title
Landon
game, which will be played
Barrow
Saturday right back on their
home field against either Monsignor Donovan
or Region 2-AA nemesis First Presbyterian
Christian Academy, which would be a repeat
of the 2013 matchup won 7-0 by Frederica.
The fourth-ranked Lady Knights end their
season 12-4.
“The boys are unselfish,” said first-year FA
boys coach Frank Dineen of why his team has
Derby winner ‘Chrome’ eyes
second leg of Triple Crown
Associated Press
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Art Sherman has
never had a big operation or wealthy clients who infused cash and horses into his
stable.
But the 77-year-old trainer can now say
he won the Kentucky Derby.
A day after California Chrome raced
to a 13⁄4-length victory as the 5-2 favorite
in the Derby, Sherman and his star horse
received a stream of visitors at Churchill
Downs.
“It’s pretty cool, I can tell you,” he
said Sunday. “Beating all the big boys,
and maybe they had their doubts that this
horse wasn’t a runner, but when you run
against him you find out. He’s the real
McCoy, this one.”
Now the oldest trainer to win the Derby
and his horse are headed to Baltimore for
the Preakness in two weeks, the next step
on the Triple Crown trail.
It will be Sherman’s first trip to Maryland since 1959, when he was a jockey at
Kentucky Derby
A look at the top 10 finishers from
Saturday’s race:
1. California Chrome
2. Commanding Curve
3. Danza
4. Wicked Strong
5. Samraat
6. Dance With Fate
7. Ride On Curlin
8. Medal Count
9. Chitu
10. We Miss Artie
Up next: Preakness Stakes, May
17, Baltimore
the old Bowie Race Course. He rode some
races at Laurel during his 23 years in the
saddle, but has never visited Pimlico.
Sherman plans to keep California
Chrome at Churchill Downs before sending him to Baltimore, possibly on May
12.
“Five days at Pimlico would be perfect
for me,” said Sherman, who will briefly
return to his Southern California base,
where he trains 20 horses. “That way I
wouldn’t have to do much with him. Just
school him, stand him in the gate and let
him get familiarized with the surroundings.”
California Chrome appeared to bounce
out of the 19-horse Derby in good order,
leaving just a handful of grain in his feed
tub after the race. Jockey Victor Espinoza
said he eased the colt over the final 70
yards.
“He said he didn’t ask him for too much
thinking about saving something for the
next one, for the Preakness,” Sherman
said, adding that his colt is “peaking now.
He’s full of himself.”
Sherman typically likes to give his
horses plenty of time off between races,
David J. Phillip/AP
but California Chrome’s owners Steve
Coburn and Perry Martin thinking big and Victor Espinoza rides California Chrome to a victory Saturday at the 140th running of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. Commanding
Please see DERBY, 10A
Curve was second, and Danza finished third.
Share your sports opinions • E-mail [email protected] • Web: www.TheBrunswickNews.com • Fax 280-0926
9A SPORTS
The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014 9A
Sports
Hawks make strides despite
stinging playoff loss to Indy
Atlanta
drops
sixth
straight
Associated Press
Giants finish off
sweep of Braves
at Turner Field
Associated Press
ATLANTA — Brandon Crawford hit two home runs and the
San Francisco Giants completed
a three-game sweep, beating Atlanta 4-1 Sunday and handing the
Braves their sixth straight loss.
Madison Bumgarner pitched
six sharp innings as the NL Westleading Giants won their fifth in
a row. The Braves’ skid is their
longest skid since an eight-game
slide in May 2012. Atlanta, which
began the series leading the NL
East, was held to one run in each
of the losses to San Francisco.
Bumgarner (3-3) allowed one
unearned run and three hits, striking out nine. He earned his first
win since April 11.
Santiago Casilla pitched the
ninth for his first save. Closer Sergio Romo was rested after recording saves in two straight games.
Crawford gave the Giants a 2-1
lead with his homer off Alex Wood
(2-5) in the fourth. Crawford hit a
two-run shot off Jordan Walden in
the eighth for his first career mulAmerican League
East Division
W
L Pct GB
New York
16 14 .533 —
Baltimore
15 14 .517 1⁄2
Boston
15 17 .469
2
Tampa Bay
15 17 .469
2
Toronto
14 17 .452 21⁄2
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
Detroit
17
9 .654 —
Minnesota
14 15 .483 41⁄2
Chicago
15 17 .469
5
Kansas City
14 16 .467
5
Cleveland
13 18 .419 61⁄2
West Division
W
L Pct GB
Oakland
19 12 .613 —
Texas
17 14 .548
2
Los Angeles
15 15 .500 31⁄2
Seattle
14 15 .483
4
Houston
10 21 .323
9
Sunday’s Games
Chicago White Sox 4, Cleveland 3
Tampa Bay 5, N.Y. Yankees 1
Oakland 3, Boston 2, 10 innings
Toronto 7, Pittsburgh 2
Minnesota 5, Baltimore 2
Detroit 9, Kansas City 4
Seattle 8, Houston 7
Texas 14, L.A. Angels 3
Today’s Games
Minnesota (Gibson 3-2) at Cleveland
(McAllister 3-2), 7:05 p.m.
Toronto (Happ 0-0) at Philadelphia
(K.Kendrick 0-2), 7:05 p.m.
Houston (Cosart 1-2) at Detroit (Scherzer
3-1), 7:08 p.m.
David Tulis/AP
San Francisco’s Brandon Crawford watches his eighth-inning tworun homer against the Braves on Sunday in Atlanta. The Giants
won 4-1 to complete a three-game sweep.
tihomer game. He began the day
with only one homer this season.
Wood lost his fourth straight
start, again receiving almost no
run support. The one run scored
by Atlanta on Sunday is the only
offense Wood has received in that
span, which included back-toback 1-0 losses.
The left-hander has a 3.00 ERA
after allowing two runs on seven
hits and one walk in five innings.
The Giants’ only runs in their
first two wins of the series came
on five solo homers. They found
another way to score in the first
when Hunter Pence hit a one-out
double, moved to third on a wild
pitch and scored on Buster Posey’s
grounder to first base.
Atlanta’s Evan Gattis was
called for catcher’s interference
on Posey’s grounder, and the umpires initially ruled Posey was safe
at first and Pence had to return to
third base. Giants manager Bruce
Bochy took advantage of Rule
6.08c, which allows a manager to
take the live play instead of the interference ruling.
Chicago White Sox (Quintana 1-2) at
Chicago Cubs (Samardzija 0-3), 8:05 p.m.
Texas (M.Perez 4-1) at Colorado (Lyles 3-0),
8:40 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Phelps 0-0) at L.A. Angels
(Weaver 2-2), 10:05 p.m.
Seattle (C.Young 1-0) at Oakland (Kazmir
4-0), 10:05 p.m.
Kansas City (Ventura 2-1) at San Diego
(Stults 1-3), 10:10 p.m.
Philadelphia 1, Washington 0
San Diego 4, Arizona 3
Cincinnati 4, Milwaukee 3, 10 innings
N.Y. Mets 5, Colorado 1
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, late
Today’s Games
L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 5-0) at Washington
(Zimmermann 2-1), 7:05 p.m.
San Francisco (M.Cain 0-3) at Pittsburgh
(Locke 0-0), 7:05 p.m.
Toronto (Happ 0-0) at Philadelphia
(K.Kendrick 0-2), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Niese 2-2) at Miami (Eovaldi 2-1),
7:10 p.m.
St. Louis (S.Miller 3-2) at Atlanta (Harang
3-2), 7:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Quintana 1-2) at
Chicago Cubs (Samardzija 0-3), 8:05 p.m.
Arizona (Bolsinger 1-1) at Milwaukee (Garza
1-3), 8:10 p.m.
Texas (M.Perez 4-1) at Colorado (Lyles 3-0),
8:40 p.m.
Kansas City (Ventura 2-1) at San Diego
(Stults 1-3), 10:10 p.m.
National League
East Division
W
L Pct GB
Atlanta
17 13 .567 —
Washington
17 14 .548 1⁄2
New York
16 14 .533
1
Philadelphia
15 14 .517 11⁄2
Miami
16 15 .516 11⁄2
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
Milwaukee
21 11 .656 —
Cincinnati
15 16 .484 51⁄2
St. Louis
15 16 .484 51⁄2
Chicago
11 17 .393
8
Pittsburgh
12 19 .387 81⁄2
West Division
W
L Pct GB
San Francisco
20 11 .645 —
Colorado
19 14 .576
2
Los Angeles
18 14 .563 21⁄2
San Diego
14 18 .438 61⁄2
Arizona
11 23 .324 101⁄2
Saturday Braves
San Francisco 3, Atlanta 1
Sunday’s Games
Miami 5, L.A. Dodgers 4
San Francisco 4, Atlanta 1
Toronto 7, Pittsburgh 2
Braves today
Opponent: St. Louis
When: 7:10 p.m.
Where: Turner Field, Atlanta
TV/Radio: SS/103.7 FM
Starting pitchers: A. Harang
(3-2) vs. S. Miller (3-2)
SCOREBOARD
WHERE TO GO
Tuesday, soccer
GHSA Class AAAAA boys tournament
Second round
Houston Co. at Glynn Academy, 6 p.m.
Tuesday, tennis
GHSA Class AAAAA tournaments
Semifinal rounds
Pope at Glynn Academy boys, 1 p.m.
Cambridge at Glynn Academy girls, 2:30 p.m.
Wednesday, soccer
GHSA Class AAAAA girls tournament
Second round
Greenbrier or McIntosh at Glynn Academy, 6
p.m.
GHSA Class 6A girls tournament
Second round
Kennesaw Mountain at Camden Co., TBA
Saturday, soccer
GISA Class AA boys tournament
State championship
First Presbyterian or Monsignor Donovan at
Frederica Academy, TBA
WHAT TO WATCH
Today
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m. ESPN, SS — St. Louis at Atlanta
NBA
7 p.m. TNT — Playoffs, conference semifinals,
Game 1, Washington at Indiana
9:30 p.m. TNT — Playoffs, conference semifinals, Game 1, L.A. Clippers at Oklahoma City
NHL
7:30 p.m. NBCSN — Playoffs, conference
semifinals, Game 3, N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh
10 p.m. NBCSN — Playoffs, conference semifinals, Game 2, Los Angeles at Anaheim
SOCCER
2:55 p.m. NBCSN — Premier League, Crystal
Palace vs. Liverpool, at London
BASKETBALL
NBA Playoffs
FIRST ROUND
Friday
Brooklyn 97, Toronto 83, series tied 3-3
Dallas 113, San Antonio 111, series tied 3-3
Portland 99, Houston 98, Portland wins 4-2
Saturday
Indiana 92, Atlanta 80, Indiana wins series
4-3
Oklahoma City 120, Memphis 109, Oklahoma
City wins series 4-3
L.A. Clippers 126, Golden State 121, L.A. Clippers wins series 4-3
Sunday
Brooklyn 104, Toronto 103, Brooklyn wins series 4-3
San Antonio 119, Dallas 96, San Antonio wins
series 4-3
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
Today
Washington at Indiana, 7 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Oklahoma City, 9:30 p.m.
ATLANTA — Once the sting
wears off from squandering a
chance to knock off the top seed
in the East, the Atlanta Hawks
will likely savor this season as a
successful first step toward their
ultimate goal.
San Antonio East.
The Hawks’ season ended in the
opening round of the playoffs for
the third year in a row, snuffed off
by the Indiana Pacers in Game 7
on Saturday. Atlanta led the series three times and had a chance
to clinch on its home court, but
couldn’t take advantage.
Indiana returned home and finished off the Hawks 92-80 in the
deciding contest.
“We are young and we will learn
from this,” forward DeMarre Carroll said. “When you’ve got them
at home and you can win at home,
you should take care of business.”
Now, it’s time to take stock
of what it all meant in the grand
scheme.
The Hawks went 38-44, their
worst record since the 2007-08
season and barely good enough
to sneak into the playoffs as a No.
8 seed. But there were plenty of
promising signs for a franchise
that wants to build along the lines
of the San Antonio Spurs.
First, the Hawks persevered despite losing one of their top players, center Al Horford, to a seasonending injury in late December.
Paul Millsap was a bargain of a
free-agent signing, making the
All-Star Game for the first time,
and Jeff Teague showed signs of
becoming an elite point guard
with some stellar performances in
the playoffs.
When Horford returns next season, rejoining Millsap, Teague and
3-point specialist Kyle Korver, the
Hawks will have four cornerstone
players in their plan to change the
entire culture of the organization.
That’s what general manager
Danny Ferry had in mind when
he rebuilt almost the entire roster
over the last years, ridding the
Hawks of longtime stalwarts such
as Joe Johnson and Josh Smith.
Ferry, who came to Atlanta from
the Spurs, brought in a coach who
sees eye to eye with him on exactly what the roster should look
like: longtime San Antonio assistant Mike Budenholzer. It’s clear
they both want to build an Eastern
Conference team that will have
the sort of stability and long-term
success of their previous employer
out West.
“I think with all the moves we
made within the organization,
every phase of the organization,
we’re laying the foundation for
how we’re going to play in the future, how we’re going to be, what
we’re going to be about and how
we’re going to play,” Korver said.
“I think some really good things
happened this year.”
Carroll was another astute
pickup by Ferry, setting career
highs in points (11.1 per game)
and rebounds (5.5) after becoming a full-time starter for the first
time in his vagabond career. He
plays with a chip on his shoulder
after being waived twice by others
teams, just the sort of blue-collar
player that Ferry and Budenholzer
like having around.
Long range, Ferry wants to
make the Hawks a viable player
when big-time free agents go on
the market. The team has never
won more than one playoff series in a year since moving to Atlanta in 1968, so it’s never been
a very attractive option for those
marquee players who are largely
focused on the team that gives
them the best chance of winning a
championship.
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STRIKE BOTH THE FUNNY
BONE AND THE HEART.”
Backstage
BAT ACROSS THE BRIDGE
Brunswick Actors’ Theatre Readers’ Series
GOLF
PGA-Wells Fargo
at Quail Hollow Club Course
Charlotte, N.C.
Sunday’s final round scores
J.B. Holmes, $1,242,000
Jim Furyk, $745,200
Martin Flores, $469,200
Jason Bohn, $331,200
Justin Rose, $276,000
Br. de Jonge, $239,775
Kevin Kisner, $239,775
Roberto Castro, $200,100
Rory McIlroy, $200,100
Rory Sabbatini, $200,100
Kevin Chappell, $158,700
Phil Mickelson, $158,700
Mi. Thompson, $158,700
Jonathan Byrd, $120,750
Zach Johnson, $120,750
Geoff Ogilvy, $120,750
Kevin Streelman, $120,750
Ch. Howell III, $89,976
Martin Kaymer, $89,976
Ryan Moore (51), $89,976
Kevin Na (51), $89,976
Gary Woodland, $89,976
Jason Kokrak, $58,157
Y.E. Yang, $58,157
Stewart Cink, $58,157
John Merrick, $58,157
Wes Roach, $58,157
Robert Streb, $58,157
Mark Wilson, $58,157
Ricky Barnes, $40,106
Scott Brown, $40,106
Angel Cabrera, $40,106
Derek Ernst, $40,106
Chris Kirk, $40,106
Martin Laird, $40,106
Vijay Singh, $40,106
Brendan Steele, $40,106
Sang-Moon Bae, $28,980
70-67-66-71
72-69-69-65
67-68-69-72
73-67-67-70
69-67-71-71
80-62-68-69
72-66-68-73
71-70-69-70
69-76-65-70
74-68-71-67
73-70-70-68
67-75-63-76
71-69-69-72
68-71-70-73
71-70-69-72
72-67-70-73
72-69-71-70
69-71-70-73
69-69-70-75
70-71-76-66
69-72-69-73
71-72-68-72
75-68-73-68
73-72-71-68
68-70-74-72
71-70-70-73
71-71-69-73
71-69-71-73
72-72-66-74
72-72-68-73
71-73-70-71
66-69-75-75
73-68-70-74
71-70-71-73
69-70-73-73
69-72-71-73
72-72-69-72
72-71-71-72
— 274
— 275
— 276
— 277
— 278
— 279
— 279
— 280
— 280
— 280
— 281
— 281
— 281
— 282
— 282
— 282
— 282
— 283
— 283
— 283
— 283
— 283
— 284
— 284
— 284
— 284
— 284
— 284
— 284
— 285
— 285
— 285
— 285
— 285
— 285
— 285
— 285
— 286
Bud Cauley, $28,980
Rickie Fowler, $28,980
Scott Langley, $28,980
Hideki Matsuyama, $28,980
Webb Simpson, $28,980
Ernie Els, $20,861
Brian Harman, $14,352
Davis Love III, $14,352
Local PGA pros in bold
71-71-70-74
74-71-74-67
70-71-71-74
69-72-72-73
68-73-70-75
76-67-67-77
70-74-78-70
75-68-74-75
— 286
— 286
— 286
— 286
— 286
— 287
— 292
— 292
RACING
Sprint Cup-Aaron’s 499
Sunday, at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway
Top 25; start position in parentheses
1. (34) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 188 laps, 123.2 rating, 47 points.
2. (35) Greg Biffle, Ford, 188, 115.1, 44.
3. (27) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 188, 67.2, 41.
4. (18) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 188, 81.8, 41.
5. (3) A J Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 188, 88.2, 39.
6. (2) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 188, 83.8, 39.
7. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 188, 107.6, 38.
8. (42) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 188, 87.7, 36.
9. (29) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 188, 94.8, 35.
10. (25) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 188, 65.5, 34.
11. (41) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 188, 64.6, 0.
12. (19) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 188, 103.4, 33.
13. (15) Aric Almirola, Ford, 188, 66.3, 31.
14. (4) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 188, 74.7, 31.
15. (5) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 188, 79.4, 29.
16. (17) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 188, 55.2, 28.
17. (43) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 188, 85.2, 27.
18. (6) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 188, 45.8, 27.
19. (26) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 188, 61, 26.
20. (36) Josh Wise, Ford, 188, 48.8, 24.
21. (31) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 188, 58.2, 23.
22. (7) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 188, 74.9, 23.
23. (20) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 188, 99.8,
22.
24. (37) Terry Labonte, Ford, 188, 38.7, 20.
25. (28) Michael Waltrip, Toyota, 188, 43.9, 19.
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When entrusting the subject of motherhood to such a dazzling collection
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with illuminating insight the humor, raw emotions and rocky roads we experience in life. The play is written by award winning writers including Leslie Ayvazian, David Cale, Jessica Goldberg, Beth Henley, Lameece Issaq,
Claire LaZebnik, Lisa Loomer, Michele Lowe, Marco Pennette, Theresa Rebeck, Luanne Rice, Annie Weisman and Cheryl L. West.
“CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE MOM.”
Bob Verini, Variety
An Art Downtown Production produced by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service
10A SPORTS
10A The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014
Sports
Derby: Preakness field limited to 14
Continued from 8A
talking bigger.
They’re not shy about saying
their colt has the talent to win the
Triple Crown.
“I told people this colt will go
down in history,” said Coburn,
the more talkative of the partners.
“When he wins the Triple Crown,
he will be the first California-bred
to ever win a Triple Crown. That’s
where we’re going.”
Of course, California Chrome
Nathan Deen/The Brunswick News
Frederica Academy’s Chris Holt, front, and Michael Voss, right,
close in on a Gatewood Gator during their state semifinal match
on Saturday at Frederica. The Knights won 5-1 to advance to the
state championship game.
Knights: Eyeing
repeat of 2013 finish
Continued from 8A
wood.
“That is the most amazing feeling,” Steilen said. “Off the cross
and off your head into the goal is
probably the best way to score.
The corner kick bounced out to
Landon and he hit it back to Mike,
and he hit it back in. I found some
space and buried it in the back. I
just had to make space for myself
and get off my defender.”
Steilen said
Gatewood was
a good test, especially in the
way the Gators
defended against
the Knights. He
said his own
Brett
goalkeeper had
Steilen
a big hand in the
win as well.
“They made us work, and they
played hard,” Steilen said. “They
loaded up the middle with midfielders and that hurt us. John
Mitchell (Brock) was wonderful.
He made a great save in the beginning and did a great job of directing traffic and keeping everyone
alive. He’s done a great job all
year.”
Brock said it was “one of my
better games.”
“That save in the first half — I
was pretty impressed with myself,” Brock said. “I don’t know
how I reacted so fast. It was probably one of the better saves in my
life. I dove left and reached out.”
In the second half, two more
goals sealed the Knights’ trip back
to the finals: Ryan Steilen matched
his brother with a header of his
own — his 11th goal of the season
— from Keegan Morgan in the
58th minute, and Voss finished the
scoring, with an assist from Barrow, in the 68th minute.
PGA:
Furyk
second
Continued from 8A
Furyk was watching on TV in
the locker room when Holmes
knocked in the bogey putt to finish at 14-under 274.
Martin Flores, in his first time
playing in the last group, fell too
far back with a three-putt bogey
on the 13th. He made bogey on
the 18th for a 72 and was third.
Local pros
In the final round of the
Wells Fargo Championship:
Zach Johnson
St. Simons Island resident
shot 72 and was 8 back
71-70-69-72 – 281
Jonathan Byrd
St. Simons Island resident
shot 73 and was 8 back
68-71-70-73 – 282
Charles Howell III
St. Simons Island resident
shot 73 and was 9 back
69-71-70-73 – 283
Davis Love III
Sea Island touring pro shot
75 and was 18 back
75-68-74-75 – 292
Brian Harman
St. Simons Island resident
shot 70 and was 18 back
70-74-78-70 – 292
• More scores, 9A
The win was
the Knights’ 14th
in a row and improved their season record to 152. The FA boys
have out-scored
their three playRyan
off opponents
Steilen
29-2.
Should FPCA advance, the
Knights would face them for the
third time this season in the final.
They defeated the Highlanders
1-0 on March 19 at their place and
won 8-4 on March 28 at home.
Gatewood, the Region 1-AA
champion, ends its season 13-3-1.
In the girls’ game, Madi Bush
put the Lady Knights on top 1-0
with an early goal, but Monsignor’s Elizabeth Allen tied the
game at 1-1 with a goal just before
halftime. After the teams played a
scoreless second half, they went to
the required 10-minute overtime
period. The Lady Rams’ Haleigh
Nixon scored 5 minutes, 43 seconds into the extra period, then
held the Lady Knights scoreless
the rest of the way for the win.
“They’re tough. We gave them
all we had,” said FA girls coach
Ike Podlesny. “The girls took it
pretty hard. We were good enough
(to win it all), but things just didn’t
go our way. We didn’t press them
enough. We just couldn’t get into
a rhythm when we needed to.”
The Lady Knights had won 11
straight entering the semifinal
matchup.
• Sports Editor Dave Jordan
writes about local sports. Contact
him at [email protected], on Facebook or at
265-8320, ext. 319.
will run in the Preakness with a
target on him, the competition ripe
to try and knock off the Derby
champ. Already other horses are
lining up to take him on.
Commanding Curve, the Derby
runner-up, and seventh-place finisher Ride On Curlin could possibly show up in Baltimore, where
the Preakness has a maximum
field of 14.
The possible new shooters include Pablo Del Monte, whose
owners decided not to run in the
Derby; Federico Tesio winner Kid
Cruz; Illinois Derby winner Dynamic Impact; Bayern, trained by
Bob Baffert; and Social Inclusion,
who ran third in the Wood Memorial.
Like his trainer, California
Chrome typically stays close to
home. The colt made his first trip
out of state to run in the Derby.
Sherman built a low-key but respected training operation first in
the San Francisco Bay area and
now in the Los Angeles area, but
rarely travels outside the state to
race. Still, he and his horse impressed some of racing’s big-name
trainers.
“I thought he reflected Art Sherman,” trainer Steve Asmussen
said about California Chrome.
“He wasn’t overwhelmed by the
situation, did what he did and went
about his business as usual and
looked like a winner every step of
the race. I would expect him to be
able to be in the best shape in two
weeks.”
Clint Bowyer finished third and
was followed by Michael Waltrip
Racing teammate Brian Vickers
as Toyota took the victory and
three of the top four spots.
AJ Allmendinger finished fifth
in a Chevrolet, followed by Paul
Menard and then Harvick, who
faded to seventh.
Kasey Kahne, Kyle Larson and
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. rounded out
the top 10.
Daytona 500 winner Dale
Earnhardt Jr. finished a disappointing 26th despite leading
three times for 26 laps, second
most in the race.
Danica Patrick led two times
for six laps, and the crowd roared
its approval when she drove to
the front early in the race. She
finished 22nd.
“It was nice to lead laps,” she
said. “It was a fast, fast car so
we’ll be happy to take this one
to Daytona.”
It was a rough day for Brad Keselowski, a two-time Talladega
winner, who darted to the lead on
Lap 14 but appeared to not have
cleared Patrick before squeezing
in front of her car.
She tapped the back of Keselowski’s car, sending him for
a spin through the grass that
caused enough damage to drop
him six laps off the pace.
“We weren’t clear enough
to make that,” crew chief Paul
Wolfe told his driver. “I’ll just
call it at that: We weren’t clear
enough to make that move.”
Keselowski raced in the heart
of the pack after the first incident
in an attempt to get his laps back
under caution periods. But he
was heavily criticized for triggering a 14-car accident with 51
laps remaining.
The accident began when Keselowski spun in front of Trevor
Bayne, and among those collected were Jeff Gordon, Matt
Kenseth, Tony Stewart and Jimmie Johnson.
“Brad made a pretty bold move
early, a mind-boggling move,
in going in front of Danica and
spun out in front of the field and
got away with it,” Kenseth said.
“This time we weren’t so lucky.
He was driving really, really,
really aggressively to try to get
back up there.
“If it was the other way around
and it was anybody else except
for him, we’d all be getting lectured.”
Gordon also chastised Keselowski.
“I had seen him for several
laps driving over his head being
pretty aggressive,” Gordon said.
“I knew he was laps down, but
he wasn’t doing anybody any favors, nor himself.”
Keselowski took the blame for
the late accident.
“I just spun out in front of the
whole field,” he said. “I don’t
know why, if I just busted my
butt on my own or lost a tire, but
I feel bad for everyone that got
torn up.”
Race: Gordon maintains Cup points lead
Continued from 8A
jockey to grab the 16 spots available in the Chase for the Sprint
Cup championship. A victory
conceivably gives a driver an
automatic berth, and Joe Gibbs
Racing now has both Hamlin
and Kyle Busch eligible for the
Chase.
“I wasn’t ever worried, but
you get a little bit more panicked
when it’s, ‘Win a race and you’re
in Chase,’ “ he said.
“You see all these guys logging
wins, wins, wins, and the next
thing you know they’re running
out of Chase spots. Now we can
be a little bit more relaxed.”
The win came at the track
where Hamlin made a brief return last year — he ran just 23
laps before turning his car over
to Brian Vickers — after missing four races with a broken
back. Hamlin’s return to the car
briefly built some momentum for
the No. 11 team, but as his back
continued to ache, the season fell
apart in late summer and it took
until the season finale for Hamlin
to score his first win of the year.
He also missed the Chase for the
first time in his career.
It didn’t appear that Hamlin
had enough to beat Harvick, already a two-time winner this
season, until the final restart.
Harvick didn’t get the help he
needed from behind, was hung
out without any drafting partners, and Hamlin pulled out to a
Call 265-8320
Let our
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Sprint Cup
A look at the updated points
standings:
Top 12
1. J.Gordon, 347
2. M.Kenseth, 344
3. Ky.Busch, 343
4. D.Earnhardt Jr., 328
5. C.Edwards, 328
6. J.Logano, 305
7. J.Johnson, 304
8. G.Biffle, 300
9. R.Newman, 299
10. B.Vickers, 297
11. Bra.Keselowski, 294
12. D.Hamlin, 292
comfortable lead.
“We were in a good spot there
at the end, and what you would
want to put yourself in a position
to win,” Harvick said. “Our line
just never formed up.”
As Hamlin pulled away, an
accident deep in the pack scattered debris, and NASCAR was
forced to throw the caution when
a bumper was seen laying on the
surface.
The yellow prevented Greg
Biffle, who led five times for a
race-high 58 laps, from pulling
out of line in an attempt to grab
the victory away from Hamlin.
“I just didn’t want to pass too
early. I was going to be the lone
soldier on the outside lane,” Biffle said. “So I was just waiting. I
was setting up to go by him but
just never had the chance.”
11A SPORTS PROCESS
The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014 11A
World
Pro-Russian crowd storms police HQ
By NICOLAE DUMITRACHE
and PETER LEONARD
Associated Press
ODESSA, Ukraine — Outrage
over the deaths of pro-Russian activists in riots in Odessa triggered
new violence Sunday in the Black
Sea port, where a mob of protesters stormed police headquarters
and freed dozens of their jailed
allies.
The activists had been jailed for
their involvement in clashes Friday
that killed more than 40 people —
some died from gunshot wounds,
but most from a fire that broke out
in a trade union building. It was
the worst violence in the Ukrainian crisis since more than 100
people died in Kiev in February,
most of them shot by snipers.
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk visited Odessa on
Sunday to try to defuse the mounting tensions and hinted strongly
that he saw Moscow’s hand in the
unrest spreading through southeastern Ukraine.
Odessa is the major city between
the Crimean Peninsula, which
Russia annexed in March, and
the Moldovan separatist region of
Trans-Dniester, where Russia has
a military peacekeeping contingent.
Concerns are mounting that
Moscow ultimately aims to take
control of a huge swath of southeastern Ukraine from Trans-Dniester to Russian-dominated industrial areas in the east. Russian
President Vladimir Putin, who
calls the area historically Russian
lands, has said he doesn’t want to
send in troops but will if necessary
to protect his country’s interests.
Alexei Pushkov, a prominent
member of Russia’s parliament
who often expresses Kremlin
views on foreign policy, suggested
Ukraine was destined to be split
apart.
“Through the justification of
arson, military operations and the
killing of Russians in Ukraine, the
Kiev government is destroying the
basis for the existence of a united
country,” Pushkov said on Twitter.
Yatsenyuk said Odessa police
were being investigated for their
failure to keep the peace during
the riots and said he had ordered
prosecutors to find “all instigators,
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Associated Press
BELFAST, Northern Ireland —
Sinn Fein party leader Gerry Adams was released without charge
Sunday after five days of police
questioning over his alleged involvement in a decades-old IRA
killing of a Belfast mother of 10,
an investigation that has driven a
dangerous wedge into Northern
Ireland’s unity government.
Addressing reporters and supporters at a Belfast hotel, Adams said he wanted his party to
provide help to the children of
Jean McConville, the 37-yearold widow taken from her home
by the Irish Republican Army in
1972, killed and dumped in an
unmarked grave. He also rejected
claims by IRA veterans in audiotaped interviews that he had ordered the killing.
“I am innocent of any involvement in any conspiracy to abduct,
kill or bury Mrs. McConville.
I have worked hard with others
to have this injustice redressed,”
said Adams, 65, who has led Sinn
Fein since 1983 and won credit
for steering the IRA toward
cease-fires and compromise with
Northern Ireland’s Protestant majority.
Yet the investigation of Adams
is not over. Police said they have
sent an evidence file to Northern
Ireland prosecutors for potential
charges later.
“For all I know I can still face
charges,” Adams said. He said he
had been interviewed 33 times
during 92 hours in custody. “One
presumes they would have made
a charge against me. But they
offered no evidence against me
whatsoever.”
The episode has underscored
the unrelenting hostility of some
Protestants to Adams and his party’s ambitions to merge Northern
Ireland into the Republic of Ire-
""
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Vadim Ghirda/AP
A man cries after being released from a police station which was stormed by pro-Russian protesters
on Sunday in Odessa, Ukraine.
all organizers and all those that
under Russian leadership began
a deadly attack on Ukraine and
Odessa.”
Hours later, however, the police
bowed to a mob of several hundred pro-Russian demonstrators
who attacked their headquarters,
smashing doors, windows and
security surveillance cameras.
Shortly after some of them managed to break into an inner courtyard, police released the detainees,
who were swept up by the cheering, rain-dampened crowd that
had been chanting “Freedom!”
The Interior Ministry said 67
activists had been released on
prosecutors’ orders. Prosecutors,
however, later said they had nothing to do with the release and accused the police of failing to carry
out their duties. It was not immediately clear whether any activists
were still being held.
Putin spoke by telephone Sunday night with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the latest in
a series of discussions they have
had about Ukraine. The Kremlin
said they agreed on the importance of the role to be played by
the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, and said
Irish party leader
freed after 5 days
in police custody
By SHAWN POGATCHNIK
"
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land. His departure from the police’s main interrogation center
in Antrim, west of Belfast, was
delayed two hours by a crowd of
Protestants outside the front gate.
The protesters waved Union Jack
flags and held placards demanding justice for IRA victims. They
roared with fury as a convoy of
police armored vehicles came
into view, thinking Adams’ car
was in the middle.
Dozens of officers — many
sporting full riot gear with flameretardant boiler suits, body armor,
helmets and shields — confronted
the hardline Protestants, many of
whom covered their faces, as they
tried to block Adams’ exit by sitting down in the roadway. After
a 15-minute standoff, police escorted Adams out via a rear exit
that the protesters could not see.
Adams said detectives chiefly
questioned him about audiotaped
interviews that IRA veterans
gave to a Boston College oral history project. Police successfully
sued in U.S. courts last year to
acquire the accounts, which had
been given to researchers on condition that they remain secret until the interviewees’ own deaths.
Some accused Adams of being
the Belfast IRA commander who
ordered McConville’s killing.
One former Adams colleague
in the Belfast IRA, Brendan
Hughes, specified that Adams
gave the order that her body
should vanish to leave her fate
deliberately unclear.
The IRA did not admit responsibility for killing McConville
until 1999, when the underground
organization defended its action
by claiming she had been a British Army spy. Her remains were
found accidentally in 2003 near
a Republic of Ireland beach. An
investigation three years later by
Northern Ireland’s police complaints watchdog found no evidence she had been a spy.
• Personal Injury
• Social Security
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Representing Individuals and Small Business
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503 G Street, Brunswick, GA
stromlawgeorgia.com
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Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP
An Orthodox priest, right, blesses a pro-Russian activist on Friday
as people gather to honor the memory of fallen comrades during
fighting with pro-Ukrainian activists in Odessa, Ukraine.
Swiss President Didier Burkhalter,
whose country currently chairs
the OSCE, would visit Moscow on
Wednesday.
The interim government in Kiev,
which took power in February, has
renewed its push in recent days to
quell the pro-Russian insurgency
in the east, where government
buildings have been seized in more
than a dozen cities and towns.
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov
said on his Facebook page that an
Zeig's Café
"The Place Where Friendships Begin"
“anti-terrorist operation” was being executed in the eastern city of
Kramatorsk, the latest flashpoint
for unrest.
A standoff Saturday in Kramatorsk culminated with pro-Russian
insurgents setting buses ablaze to
ward off attacks. Russian state TV
reported 10 deaths, including two
among government forces, during
clashes there so far. The figures
could not be independently confirmed.
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Breakfast special 2 eggs, bacon
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Tuesday night serving lasagna &
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- expires May 15th
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To Go Orders Welcome!
(Phone) 912-265-1180
EXPLORE ‘14
Your Guide To Life In And Around The Golden Isles
Advertising deadline: May 12
Publication date: May 22
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For more information call: Brunswick, 912-265-8320 or SSI, 912-638-7601
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
on you
12A WEATHER PROCESS
12A The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014
Golden Isles weather
Five-day forecast
Today
Tuesday
Sunny
89º
Wednesday
Sunny
64º
89º
Almanac
Sunny
63º
87º
River stages
Statistics are for Brunswick yesterday
Temperature
Yesterday's high ................................
Yesterday's low ..................................
Normal high .......................................
Normal low .........................................
84°
58°
79°
63°
Yesterday ......................................... 0.00"
Month-to-date .................................. 0.07"
Normal month-to-date .................... 0.20"
Year-to-date ................................... 17.01"
Normal year-to-date ...................... 13.26"
Record high for month ... 12.55" in 1966
Record low for month ....... 0.52" in 1962
Flood Yesterday's 24 -hr
Stage
Stage
Change
Atlamaha River
Charlotte .......... 15
Baxley ............ 74.5
Doctortown ...... 14
9.75
73.00
10.40
Humidity
Today
High
2:16 am
Noon
4 P.M.
80%
70%
50%
Thursday
High
3:57 am
Friday
UV index
High
4:52 am
Today at Noon
Saturday
High
5:46 am
7
0-1 minimal
2-3 low
4-6 moderate
7-9 high
+10 very high
-0.19
-0.51
Low
7:58 am
High
1:55 pm
Low
8:12 pm
Low
8:49 am
High
2:45 pm
Low
9:07 pm
Low
9:41 am
High
3:38 pm
Low
10:03 pm
Low
10:32 am
High
4:34 pm
Low
10:56 pm
Low
11:20 am
High
5:29 pm
Low
11:47 pm
Low
12:07 pm
High
6:20 pm
Low
None
Low
12:37 am
High
7:07 pm
Low
12:53 pm
Wednesday
High
3:05 am
8 A.M.
11.92
13.11
Brunswick's East River
Today
Tuesday
Sunday
High
6:37 am
Sunrise today ......................... 6:36 a.m.
Sunset today .......................... 8:08 p.m.
Sunrise Tuesday .................... 6:36 a.m.
Sunset Tuesday ..................... 8:08 p.m.
Moonrise today .................... 11:55 a.m.
Moonset today ..................... 12:52 a.m.
Moonrise Tuesday ............... 12:47 p.m.
Moonset Tuesday .................. 1:31 a.m.
For these locations, add or subract these minutes to the
times above
St. Simons Pier
-34 min.
Jekyll Pier
-34 min.
Bwk Boat Marina
-9 min.
Hidden Harbor Yacht Club
-4 min.
Golden Isles Marina
-9 min.
Mac’s Bait Shop
+21 min.
St. Simon’s Marina
-9 min.
Hampton River, Jones Creek
-34 min.
Two Way Fish Camp
+1 hr. 1 min.
Altamaha Park
+3 hrs. 1 min.
Cloister Dock
-19 min.
Turtle River (Crispen Island)
+11 min.
Christmas Creek
-34 min.
Hickory Bluff Marina
+31 min.
Dover Bluff
+11 min.
Downtown Darien
+16 min.
Moon phases
Marine forecast
The higher the UV Index, the greater the
need for eye and skin protection
Sun and moon
First
5/6
88º
Mostly Sunny
86º
64º
66º
Shown is today's weather. Temperatures are today's
highs and tonight's lows.
-0.65
-0.44
-0.22
Tides
High
1:30 am
Sunny
64º
Last
New
110s
100s
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
0s
L
H
Summerville
86/56
Rome
88/57
Toccoa
89/60
Atlanta
86/59
Today we will see sunny skies with a
high temperature of 89º, humidity
of 65%. Southwest wind 5
to 8 mph. The record high
temperature for today is
95º set in 1952. Expect
Athens
clear skies tonight
with an overnight
88/59
low of 64º.
Augusta
92/62
*ULIÀQ
86/55
Macon
89/57
Phenix City
86/57
Dublin
89/59
Albany
89/59
Bainbridge
89/59
Hampton
91/61
Savannah
90/64
Brunswick
89/64
Valdosta
89/58
Waycross
89/59
Tallahassee
89/59
Jacksonville
90/65
Gainesville
90/59
Ocala
90/60
U.S. extremes
L
H
This map shows high temperatures,
type of precipitation expected and
location of frontal systems at noon.
Golden Isles Today
Water Temperature: 70º
Today: W wind around 8 kt becoming SSW in For the 48 contiguous states yesterday.
the afternoon. Sunny. Seas around 2 ft.
High: 112° in Death Valley, Calif.
Tonight: S wind 8 to 10 kt becoming SW after Low: 17° in Eagle Nest, N.M.
midnight. Clear. Seas around 2 ft.
5/21
5/28
5/14
&'(&')*+,#
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Full
Today's national forecast
Friday
Regional forecast
Satilla River
Record high ..........................92° in 1959 Waycross .......... 16
Record low ............................47° in 1971 Atkinson ........... 13
Precipitation
Thursday
Cold Front
Stationary Front
Regional cities
Today
City
Hi
Albany ..............89
Alpharetta ........87
Americus ..........88
Athens ..............88
Atlanta..............86
Auburn .............87
Augusta ............92
Bainbridge .......89
Columbia..........86
Columbus.........87
Darien ..............88
Daytona............86
Gainesville .......85
*ULIÀQ ...............86
Jacksonville .....90
Jekyll Island .....84
Jesup ................89
Kingsland .........89
La Grange ........86
Lithonia ............87
Macon ..............89
Milledgeville.....90
Moultrie............88
Nahunta ...........89
Newnan ............86
Rome ................88
St. Marys ..........89
St. Simon Is. ....87
Savannah.........90
Statesboro .......92
Summerville.....86
Tifton ................88
Toccoa..............89
Valdosta ...........89
Vidalia ..............90
Waycross..........89
Lo
59
59
57
59
59
59
62
59
61
60
58
61
56
55
65
68
59
60
54
60
57
58
58
60
54
57
61
65
64
61
56
59
60
58
63
59
Warm Front
L
Low Pressure
National cities
Tuesday
W
Hi
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 87
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 90
s ...... 88
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 89
s ...... 83
s ...... 88
s ...... 89
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 86
s ...... 87
s ...... 86
s ...... 88
s ...... 86
s ...... 87
s ...... 89
s ...... 87
s ...... 89
s ...... 90
s ...... 86
s ...... 85
s ...... 87
s ...... 87
s ...... 89
s ...... 88
Lo
57
57
57
59
58
59
63
58
59
58
58
59
56
56
65
68
59
59
55
59
57
56
60
59
55
56
60
64
65
62
55
59
58
58
61
59
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s
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All maps, forecasts and data provided
by Accessweather.com, Inc. © 2012
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Anchorage.............58
Artesia, NM ...........88
Atlantic City ...........63
Baltimore ..............65
Billings ..................66
Boise .....................66
Boston ...................64
Chicago .................54
Cincinnati ..............70
Cleveland ..............54
Dallas ....................90
Denver...................82
Detroit ...................57
Honolulu ...............86
Houston ................86
Indianapolis ..........68
Kansas City ...........81
Knoxville ...............87
Las Vegas .............91
Los Angeles ..........68
Miami ....................84
Milwaukee ............50
Minneapolis ..........60
Nashville ...............86
New Orleans .........79
New York ...............67
Oklahoma City ......96
Orlando .................89
Philadelphia ..........67
Phoenix .................96
Pittsburgh .............57
St. Louis ................86
Salt Lake City ........76
San Diego .............66
San Francisco .......65
Seattle...................64
Topeka ..................83
Tucson ..................93
Washington, DC ....66
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Monday
May 5, 2014
The Brunswick News
Life
1B CELEBRATIONS PROCESS
Celebrations
Also inside
Advice & More, 2B
TV schedule, 3B
Wedding Announcement
COUPLE MARRIED ON APRIL 5 AT OLD CITY HALL
Rachel McClellan
& Raiford Schriber
COUPLE MARRIED ON APRIL 5 AT LOVELY LANE CHAPEL
ring bearer.
Following the ceremony, a
reception was held at Old City
Hall in downtown Brunswick. A
rehearsal dinner, hosted by the
groom’s mother, was held at the
Confederate Station in Brunswick.
Following a honeymoon to
Richmond, Va., the couple will
reside in Valdosta.
Wedding Announcement
April Johns & Timothy Johnson
COUPLE MARRIED ON APRIL 3 IN PENNSYLVANIA
April Ocie Johns and Timothy
Dorane Johnson were united in
marriage at 2 p.m. April 3 at St.
Francis Xavier Church in Gettysburg, Pa. Deacon Thomas M.
Aumen officiated the double-ring
ceremony. Nuptial music was provided by Cindy Kane.
The bride is the daughter of
Sandra Marie Johns of Brunswick
and the late Vernon Johns Sr., formerly of Brunswick. The groom is
the son of Theresa Kaye Johnson
of Little Rock, Ark.
The bride and groom walked
down the aisle together. She wore
a Mark Zunino gown with a Pnina
Tornai veil. She carried a bouquet
of peonies, roses, spray roses, lisianthus and atilbe wrapped with
ivory ribbon.
Nancy Von Guggenberg of Alexandria, Va., was the maid of
honor. Rayburn Felix Johnson II
of Little Rock, Ark., was the best
man.
Following the ceremony, a reception was held at The Pub &
Restaurant in Gettysburg, Pa. The
couple will reside in Brunswick.
B
Wedding Announcement
Kayla Pickren & Jason Reeves
Kayla Pickren and Jason
Reeves were united in marriage
at 5 p.m. April 5 at Old City Hall
in downtown Brunswick. The
Rev. Jim Crandall officiated the
double-ring ceremony. Nuptial
music was provided by Camden
DJ and Services.
The bride is the daughter of
Joseph and Karen Pickren of
Brunswick. The groom is the son
of Michelle Stieve of Atkinson.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore an A-line,
lace gown and veil. She carried
a bouquet of handmade, vintage
fabric flowers.
Allye Leggett of Brunswick was
the maid of honor. The bride’s attendants were Brandy Whittaker
of Brunswick, Ashleigh Stevens,
cousin of the groom of Hahira,
Keri Feoli of Providence, R.I., Kayla and Jason Reeves
Cattie Jarrell of Brunswick, and
Chelsi Stieve, sister-in-law of the the groom of Buena Vista, Patrick Stieve, brother of the groom
groom of Nahunta.
They wore gem-colored, floor of Nahunta, Max Stieve, brother
length, A-line gowns with pea- of the groom of Brunswick, Alcock feather bouquets. Emma- lan Pickren, brother of the bride
Leigh Hagin, cousin of the of Warner Robins, Ricky Pickren,
groom of Buena Vista, was the brother of the bride of Athens,
Drayton Hogarth of Brunswick,
flower girl.
Jeremiah Jarrell of Brunswick and Scott Johnson of Warner
was the best man. The grooms- Robins. Tripp Pickren, nephew
men were John Hagin, cousin of of the bride of Athens, was the
Comics, 4B
Classified ads, 5B
Rachel Kathleen McClellan
and Raiford Pryor Schriber were
united in marriage at 2 p.m.
April 5 at Lovely Lane Chapel
on St. Simons Island. April Herbert officiated the double-ring
ceremony. Nuptial music was
provided by George Ingram.
The bride is the daughter of
Gregg and Nancy McClellan
of Tacoma, Wash., and Barbara
McClellan of Belfair, Wash.
The groom is the son of Jim
and Rebecca Schriber of St. Simons Island.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a crinkled
silk chiffon gown that featured
a cool sunburst neckline and a
beechwood, rhinestone-encrusted sash. She carried a bouquet
of kangaroo paw, succulents and
white anemones from The Vine.
Brenda Noble, sister of the
bride of Seattle, was the maid of
honor. Josh Bruce of St. Simons
Island was the best man.
Following the ceremony, a reception was held at Palm Coast
Coffee and Pub. A rehearsal dinner, given by the groom’s parents, was held at Village Creek
Landing.
Following a honeymoon to
Paris, France, the couple will reside in Seattle.
Engagement Announcement
Anna Morrison
& Allan Simmons
Allen and Michelle Morrison of Brunswick announce the
forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Anna Morrison, to Allan Simmons, son of Curt and
Diane Simmons of Clover, S.C.,
and Michelle Z. Simmons of Roswell.
The bride-to-be is the granddaughter of David Morrison of
Brunswick, Dorothy Cobb of
Vidalia, James Harris of Statesboro and the late Dolores Harris, formerly of Statesboro, and
Hank and Delores Joyner of
Millen.
She is a 2007 graduate of
Glynn Academy at Brunswick.
She received a bachelor’s degree in marketing from Georgia
Southern University at Statesboro in 2011. She is a member
of Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority. Ms.
Morrison is employed as a senior
account manager for Continuous
April and Timothy Johnson
Rachel and Raiford Schriber
Health LLC at Atlanta.
The groom-to-be is the grandson of the late Walter and Helen
Zaborniak, formerly of Jacksonville, and Allan and Faye Simmons of Jacksonville.
He is a 2005 graduate of
Centennial High School at Alpharetta. He received a bachelor’s degree in business management from Georgia Southern
University at Statesboro in 2009.
He graduated cum laude and is
a member of Alpha Tau Omega
Fraternity. Mr. Simmons is employed as a logistics solutions
representative for Unisource
Worldwide, Inc. at Norcross.
A 5:30 p.m. wedding is planned
for June 7 at Jekyll Island Club
Hotel on Jekyll Island.
A reception will be held in the
Morgan Center of the Jekyll Island Club Hotel. Invitations will
be sent.
Anna Morrison
Mother, daughter artists exhibit works at Brunswick library
ART
Through May
• Anderson Fine Art Gallery,
3309 Frederica Road, St. Simons Island: Exhibit “Marshside
to Seaside” featuring plein air
works of Laurel Daniel on display
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays
through Saturdays until May 16.
• Brunswick-Glynn County Library, 208 Gloucester St., Brunswick: Works of mother-daughter
artist duo Nancy and Shelli Lane
on display in the lobby from 9:30
a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and from 9:30
a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and
Thursdays as part of its Featured
Artists of the Month.
• Left Bank Art Gallery, 3600
Frederica Road, St, Simons
Island: Palette Passions: Vibrant
New Works by Katherine Gal-
COASTAL
SCENE
braith, Sonia Grineva, Catherine
Elliot and Millie Gosch on display
in the gallery from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays
through May 31.
• Left Bank Art Gallery, 3600
Frederica Road, St, Simons
Island: A New Dimension in Art:
The Ralph Hurst Collection of
Sculpture and Bas Relief on
display from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesdays through Saturdays
through June 5.
• SoGlo Gallery, 1413 Newcastle St., Brunswick: Artist Jim
Jone’s sculptures in mixed media
on display from 11 a.m. to 5:30
p.m. today and Friday, 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Saturday or by appointment through Sunday.
• SoGlo Gallery, 1413 Newcastle St., Brunswick: Artist Irwin
Berman’s phototransformations
in mixed media on display from
11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. today and
Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday or by appointment through
Monday.
• Southeast Georgia Health
System, 2415 Parkwood Drive,
Brunswick: Exhibit of HofwylBroadfield Plein Air Paintings on
display in the Outpatient Care
Center Art Gallery from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. today and Friday and 9
a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday through
Sunday.
• Southeast Georgia Health
System, 2415 Parkwood Drive,
Brunswick: Annual Physician
and Team Members Art Show on
display in the Outpatient Care
Center Art Gallery from 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays
and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays
through June 5.
• St. Simons Island Public
Library, 530 Beachview Drive, St.
Simons Island: David Milliman’s
exhibit on display from 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Mondays, Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Fridays, noon to 7
p.m. Wednesdays, and 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m. Saturdays through May
31.
SOCIAL DANCE
Mondays
• College Place United
Methodist Church, 3890 Altama
Ave., Brunswick: Six weeks of line
dancing classes, starting April
21, from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. for
beginners and 10:30 to 11:30
a.m. for intermediate at the
church’s Christian Life Center.
Tuesdays
• The Golden Isles Ballroom
Dancers: Beginners lessons at
St. Simons Island Health and Fitness Club on Demere Road Tuesday evenings from 6:30 to 7:30
p.m. Cost: $25 for five weeks of
lessons for gym members, $35
for nonmembers. Details: 634
8219.
Thursdays
• Golden Isles Shag Club: Free
lessons at 7 p.m. Thursdays at
Ziggy Mahoney’s, in Retreat Plaza,
St. Simons Island. Shag dancing
with DJ Wayne Bennett follows
lessons.
• Shoreline Dance Club: Beginner ballroom and Latin dance
classes from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.
at First United Methodist Church,
624 Ocean Blvd, St. Simons
Island; intermediate ballroom and
Latin dance lessons from 6:30 to
7:30 p.m. at the church.
EVENTS
Wednesday
• Literary Guild of St. Simons
Island: Meet and greet with
“Untamed: The Wildest Woman
in America and the Fight for
Cumberland Island” author Will
Harlan at 10:30 a.m., Room 108
at St. Simons Island Casino, 530
Beachview Drive. Cost: $10 for
guests, free for Literary Guild
members. Reservations needed.
Details: 289-7357.
How to share news of your life including engagements, weddings and births
Help us share the good news
of your life, including an engagement, wedding, birth, 50th
wedding anniversary or personal achievement, with these
guidelines:
• Information for engagement, wedding, birth or 50th
anniversary announcements
must be on a Brunswick News
form for the occasion, so that
we can properly gather all of
your important details. Forms
are available at The News offices at 3011 Altama Ave., Brunswick, or 1701 Frederica Road,
St. Simons Island. Engagement
and wedding forms may be
downloaded from our website
at www.thebrunswicknews.
com. You may request a form
by sending a self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Community Life, The Brunswick News,
3011 Altama Ave., Brunswick
GA 31520. We are unable to
fax forms.
• Engagement announcements must be received at
least six weeks before the
wedding date. Engagement
announcements may include a
portrait-style photograph of the
future bride, and need be at
least of good snapshot quality.
• Wedding announcements
and photographs must be
submitted within 30 days after
the wedding date. Wedding
photographs should be of the
bride and groom in their wedding attire.
As assurance that you will
be able to meet the 30-day
deadline, we recommend that
someone take a photograph of
the bride and groom in case
your professional photographer
encounters time difficulties.
• Fiftieth wedding anniversary stories may be accompanied
either by a current photograph
or one from the wedding.
• Birth announcement forms
may be obtained from The News
Community Life reports on the life of the community.
or information may be submitted independently, with signatures of both parents.
• News of personal achievements does not require a
special form, but must include
a daytime telephone number for
the person submitting it.
If you have questions, call
Community Life at 265-8320,
ext. 231.
2B LIFE
2B The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014
Advice & More
Friend rents out beach condo, Students excel academically
ruining family’s vacation plans
Dear Abby: For the last few
years, my family has rented the
same beach condo. My friend
“John” and his family have joined
us there on many occasions.
When I asked him his vacation
plans for this year, he informed
me last night that he has rented
the beach condo for the same
weeks we have historically occupied it.
I was floored. I think a more
appropriate approach would have
been for him to have called me
first and expressed his interest in
renting it, but he should not have
rented the unit if it conflicted with
our vacation plans. I understand
the free marketplace – first-come,
first-served – but I can’t help feeling he undercut me. – Confused
in a Tent at the Beach
Dear Confused: Your feeling
is 100 percent accurate. That weasel DID undercut you, and real
friends don’t act that way. Now
that you know what he’s capable
of, contact the landlord and make
a long-term deal in advance if you
want that unit in the future.
Dear Abby: I am a lonely
83-year-old woman. All I want is
someone to love me, preferably a
handsome, wealthy man who will
spoil me. I have spent my entire
Jeane
Phillips
Syndicated advice
columnist
Dear Abby
life making other people happy,
and now all I want is some happiness back. I mean, can’t an older
woman get some loving, too?
I have been told I’m charming.
I have the laugh of an angel, a
full head of blond/gray hair and
a slim figure. I would like a man
(preferably in his elderly years)
who is lonely and needs some
company. And also someone who
wants to spend his savings on me.
Abby, help me find my soul mate.
– Waiting for “Got-Dough”
Dear Waiting: Why do I
suspect this letter may have been
written by a group of sorority
sisters after a few drinks? However, just in case it’s actually on
the level, your “want ad” has now
been viewed by millions of Dear
Abby readers worldwide, and I’m
sure we will hear from many applicants who are eager to be “The
One.” Let’s hope none of them
write from “Scam-dinavia.”
Dear Abby: My daughter-in-
law is having a baby. My mother
and I told her we would have a
shower for her. She registered at
a local store for baby gifts, let us
start planning the shower, and
then informed us that she would
not be opening gifts at the party.
My son has sided with her. He
said he didn’t know her reason,
but felt like it was no big deal.
Why would she act that way?
We think it’s peculiar. The shower
has now been canceled at her
request. – Mystified in California
Dear Mystified: Your daughter-in-law may have been trying
to be considerate of any guests
– possibly members of her family
– whose gifts might not have been
as expensive as those purchased
or crafted by other guests. Or she
may have felt self-conscious about
being the center of attention.
While I agree that one of the
pleasures of attending a shower
is seeing the expression of joy
on the mother-to-be’s face as the
presents are unwrapped, look at
it this way: Because the shower is
canceled, your problem is solved.
Now forget about it.
– Write to Dear Abby at P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA,
90069 or www.DearAbby.com.
Staying well-hydrated reduces
severity of morning sickness
Dear Doctor K: I’m in my
first trimester of pregnancy
and battling terrible morning
sickness. What can I do to feel
better?
Dear Reader: Morning
sickness can put a damper on
an otherwise joyous time. It is
very common, affecting 50 to
90 percent of pregnant women.
In most cases, the nausea and
vomiting associated with morning sickness start around the fifth
or sixth week of pregnancy. They
are worst around the ninth week
and start to go away around the
16th week.
The severity of morning sickness varies widely. Some women
experience only mild nausea,
while others have severe nausea
and vomiting that lasts all day.
When you have morning sickness, the most important thing
is to stay hydrated. This can be
difficult if you are not eating and
drinking enough, or are vomiting
several times a day. Aim to drink
8 to 10 cups of fluid per day.
Here are some tips to prevent
dehydration:
• Drink ginger, peppermint or
decaf tea.
• Drink water with lemon juice.
• Try drinking beverages with
electrolytes, such as Gatorade,
Anthony
Komaroff
Syndicated medical
columnist
Ask Doctor K
Pedialyte, coconut water or
broths.
• Eat foods with high water
content, such as watermelon,
grapes, oranges, cucumbers, fruit
ices or popsicles.
• Avoid caffeine.
Dietary changes can help to
keep nausea at bay:
• Eat four to six small meals
throughout the day.
• Eat foods high in protein such
as low-mercury fish, chicken,
nuts, peanut butter, eggs, yogurt
and cheese.
• Avoid spicy or fatty foods, or
foods that have a strong aroma.
• Keep dry crackers or toast
next to your bed.
• Try eating plain, bland foods
such as crackers, cereal, toast,
pretzels, mashed potatoes and
applesauce.
• Suck on hard ginger candies
or drink ginger tea.
• Try sniffing a lemon or adding lemon juice to your food or
water.
• Take your prenatal vitamin
before bed with a snack.
Finally, steer clear of environmental triggers such as noise,
touch, odors or motion, which
may also trigger nausea. (I’ve
listed environmental triggers and
tips to avoid them on my website,
AskDoctorK.com.)
If your morning sickness
continues to be severe and
unrelenting, talk to your doctor
about medications that may help.
Several medications can ease
the symptoms and do not cause
adverse effects for the developing
baby. These include pyridoxine,
doxylamine, diphenhydramine,
meclizine, dimenhydrinate, ondansetron, prochlorperazine and
metoclopramide.
Although I have not treated
many women for morning sickness myself, my colleagues in
obstetrics tell me that today’s
treatments are superior to those
available when they began training. That’s good news for the
many women who experience
this temporary but often debilitating illness.
— Dr. Anthony Komaroff can
be reached at www.AskDoctorK.
com.
Columnist says to take threat of
suicide from teenagers seriously
Dr. Wallace: I read in a magazine for teens that suicide is
the third leading cause of death
among teens after accidents
and homicides, and every year
in the United States there are
about 6,000 teen deaths caused
by suicide. This figure shocks
me. Why would a teen become
so depressed that he chooses
an early death over a possible
wonderful life? – Nameless,
Michigan City, Ind.
Nameless: According to a
survey by Who’s Who Among
High School Students, almost
half of all Americans know of a
young person who has attempted suicide, and about 7 percent
who attempt suicide die.
Too often, friends and
relatives don’t take the warning signs of a young person’s
suicide threat seriously. Some
of the precipitating factors are
listed below. It’s important that
we are all aware of these:
• Feelings of isolation and
loneliness.
• A feeling of personal worthlessness.
• Pressure to achieve.
• Lack of communication
between teen and parents.
• Lack of attention from
parents.
• Lack of family stability.
The following are signs that
Robert
Wallace
Syndicated advice
columnist
Between 12 & 20
a teen is looking for assistance
and support, often the alternative to self-destruction:
• A sudden change in behavior; for instance, when someone who normally takes great
pride in his or her appearance
suddenly seems to stop caring
about it.
• A dramatic change in appetite, eating excessively, or
hardly eating at all.
• Sleeping difficulties.
• Poor performance in school.
• Frequent agitation.
• Excessive fatigue.
• Loss of interest in friends.
• Increased drug and/or alcohol use.
• Expressed feelings of worthlessness.
• Excessive risk-taking.
• A preoccupation with death.
• Giving away prized possessions.
It is most important to take a
teen’s threat to commit suicide
seriously, and to see to it that
the troubled teen receives immediate help.
Dr. Wallace: I’m a 14-yearold guy and am very active
in sports. I was selected as
the most valuable player on
our freshman football team. I
also earned a varsity letter in
wrestling, which has just ended.
I won eight matches and only
lost two. Everybody thinks I’m
a pretty tough guy, but I do have
one flaw.
Sad things always make me
cry. I don’t sob, but I do tear up,
and I think this is unmanly. Do
you think I am doomed to be a
“crier,” or will I have to see a
“shrink” when I get older to get
rid of this unwanted problem? –
Nameless, Philadelphia, Pa.
Nameless: You don’t have
a problem. Crying is a natural
human response to pain, sorrow
and even joy. By crying you are
showing that you feel events
deeply and are in tune with
your emotions, and this is critical for maintaining good mental
health.
Society teaches boys that they
should not cry and that they
should be “macho.” Society is
wrong. Don’t be upset that you
tear up on occasion. Your tears
show both courage and that you
are a caring individual.
— Write to Dr. Wallace at
[email protected].
Woodbine resident Tyler Spinnenweber was recently recognized as an Academic Degree
Program Award recipient for
sports studies at Reinhardt University’s Honors Day at Waleska.
He was also selected to participate in Reinhardt University’s
Convocation of Artists & Scholars.
•••
Brunswick resident Chevy
Young was recently named to the
fall President’s List at Abraham
Baldwin Agricultural College at
Tifton.
•••
Brunswick resident Karis Williams was recently honored for
academic excellence at Brenau
University’s Honors Convocation
at Gainesville by being named
the Best in Show Undergraduate
Student Juried Exhibition Award
winner.
•••
Brunswick resident Tyler
Mimbs recently received the
President’s Award for Baccalaureate Studies at the College of
Coastal Georgia’s Annual Honors Day Program at Brunswick.
•••
St. Marys resident Cathern
Rosser recently received the
President’s Award for Pre-Bacca-
laureate Studies at the College of
Coastal Georgia’s Annual Honors Day Program at Brunswick.
•••
Brunswick residents Mallorie Blount and Ashlie Simmons recently received President’s Choice Scholarships for
the 2014-2015 academic year at
the College of Coastal Georgia’s
Annual Honors Day Program at
Brunswick.
•••
The following local students
recently received the Vice President’s Awards at the College of
Coastal Georgia’s Annual Honors Day Program at Brunswick.
From Brunswick: Jill Kerr.
From St. Marys: Brandon
Cole.
•••
Brunswick resident Anna Makova recently received the Georgia Outstanding Scholar Award at
the College of Coastal Georgia’s
Annual Honors Day Program at
Brunswick.
•••
Darien resident Tanya Powell
recently received the W.H. and
Madeline Bloodworth Memorial Scholarship at the College of
Coastal Georgia’s Annual Honors Day Program at Brunswick.
•••
The following local students
were recently recognized at the
College of Coastal Georgia’s
Annual Honors Day Program
at Brunswick. From Brunswick:
Jessica Ahl, Mallorie Blount,
Alexis Cunliffe, Emiko Diaz,
Adam Herring, Philip Lyons,
Sarah Mendenhall, Matthew
Miles, Amanda Mincey, Elisabeth Tasciotti and Rebekah
Watson.
From St. Simons Island: Meredith Burch, Brooke Baskin,
Jenna Fitzgerald and Ayla Wilson.
From Jekyll Island: Daniel
Fleuren.
From Darien: Shanda Armstrong and Jakob Feeney.
From Kingsland: Deanna
Bicek, Ashley Groover, Mary
Hyten, Joshua Panos and Greg
Remson.
From Woodbine: Stephanie
Basey, Melissa James and Emily Waldron.
From Nahunta: Stephen Rowell.
•••
The following local residents
were recently initiated into The
Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi
at Baton Rouge, La. From St. Simons Island: Allison Honea.
From St. Marys: Ian Cooper.
Letter carriers to collect food for hungry
The National Association of
Letter Carriers will host its 22nd
annual Stamp Out Hunger food
drive on May 10.
Carriers across the country
– and in Glynn County – will be
collecting non-perishable food
donations from its customers.
These donations go directly to local food pantries to provide food
Posted by Michael Robinson
to people in need.
Customers are asked to leave
a non-perishable food donation
in a bag by your mailbox on May
10.
Track club donates to girls’ running program
The Golden Isles Track Club recently donated funds to the local
chapter of the Girls on the Run
program for the purpose of entering a local running event. This
will give the girls the experience
of actually competing in a local
running event after a 12-week
training, which includes running
exercises and positive youth
development programs for girls
in third- through eighth-grades.
Pictured are members AnnaGrace Martin, from left, Thames
Cranz, Sofia Quintanar, Eden
Roberts, Kathleen McQuigg,
Rachel Moseley, Ava Paga, Jana
Cassas, Vicky Lathrop, coach,
Club names students of the month
The Exchange Club of Brunswick recently held its quarterly
student of the month program.
Paul McKenzie, program chairman, welcomed the teachers
and family members of students
from Glynn Academy and Brunswick High. The students were
chosen by their school counselors for the months of March,
April and May. Each student was
presented a plaque. A student
of the year will soon be chosen
from each school and awarded a
$1,000 scholarship.
Pictured are GA student
Posted by
Karen Stone
Me
Tracy Quintanar, coach, and
Vince Marchionne, Goldenthe
Isles U
Track Club treasurer.
Air F
Posted by Steven Floyd
U.S. Air Force photo by S
in
Charlene Scott, from left, Cheryl
Hendrix, who accepted for
her daughter who was visiting
college, Faith Singleton, GA,
Twinkle Suthar, GA, Paul McKenzie, chairman, Justin Thrower,
Distributed by U
BHS, Maeetta Arnold, BHS, and
Nicholas Cason, BHS.
Appearing i
Lions Club recognizes JROTC members
The Brunswick Lions Club celebrated
Marine Corp Junior Reserve Officer Training
Corps cadets for their unflagging and enthusiastic help during the 1st Annual Jekyll
Island BBQ Beach Bash in January.
Pictured are Cpl. Travis Head, back row
from left, 1st Sgt. Ignacio Sanchez, Maj.
Christian Carter, Lance Cpl. Edmundo
Vasquez-Reyes, Lance Cpl. Cullen Newman, front row from left, Staff Sgt. Julia
Dean
and dates:
Lance Cpl.
release
MayZach
17-23Sanders.
newspaper
TheSimms
Mini Page
Posted byfrom
Trisha
© 2014 Universal Uclic
.OTETO%DITOR!
ready, one colum
promoting Issue
®
from The Mini Page © 2014 Universal Uclick
Standards Spotlight:
Meet the U.S. Air Force
Mini Page activities meet many state and national educational standards. Each
week we identify standards that relate to The Mini Page’s content and offer
activities that will help your students reach them.
4HISWEEKSSTANDARD
s3TUDENTSUNDERSTANDPEOPLEANDEVENTSHONOREDINCOMMEMORATIVEHOLIDAYS
(History)
Activities:
1. Use newspaper words and pictures to make a poster that honors members of
our armed forces.
2. In your newspaper, circle non-human things that can fly. Put a check next to
those things that could be used by the Air Force.
&INDFIVEPEOPLEINYOURNEWSPAPERWHOWOULDMAKEGOODAIRMEN%XPLAIN
your choices.
4. How are these important to the Air Force story: (a) satellites, (b) Wright
brothers, (c) tiltrotors and (d) hot air balloons?
5. Research one of the eight aircraft listed in The Mini Page. Write a paragraph
describing it: How big is it? How is it used?
(standards by Dr. Sherrye D. Garrett, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi)
3B TV
The
May 5,
5, 2014
2014 XC
3B
TheBrunswick
Brunswick News
News // Monday,
Monday, May
XC The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014
Television
Television &
& Entertainment
Entertainment
HIGHLIGHTS
7:00 AM - Ch. 3, 12:
TODAY (CC) Zac Efron
and Dave Franco; Jenna
Elfman; Mother’s Day
gifts; Linda Lavin; Joy
Bauer; Candy Spelling.
(N) ’ (4 hrs.)
7:30 AM - Ch. E!:
KEEPING UP WITH THE
KARDASHIANS A vacation to Breckenridge
turns volatile.
8:00 AM - Ch. HIST:
AFRAID OF THE DARK
(CC) Researchers explore why darkness has
been feared throughout
history. ’ (2 hrs.)
8:30 AM - Ch. DISC:
SHAUN T’S FOCUS T25
(CC) An hour’s worth of
results in 25 minutes a
day. From the creators
of Insanity & P90X
comes Focus T25. GET
IT DONE! ’
9:00 AM - Ch. 10:
LIVE! WITH KELLY AND
MICHAEL (CC) Zac
Efron (“Neighbors”); the
latest eliminated contestant from “American
Idol” performs. (N) ’
(60 mins.)
9:30 AM - Ch. FOOD:
BOBBY FLAY’S BARBECUE ADDICTION Grilled
lamb sausage salad
with goat cheese; black
olives.
10:00 AM - Ch. 11:
MID MORNING LIVE
Newsmakers and leaders from the Coastal
Empire and Lowcountry
join in a discussion.
10:30 AM - Ch. DISN:
MICKEY MOUSE CLUBHOUSE (CC) Mickey
and friends try to keep
a surprise party secret.
’
11:00 AM - Ch. A&E:
CRIMINAL MINDS (CC)
(DVS) The BAU team
pursues an amateur
surgeon who amputates
limbs from his victims.
’ (60 mins.)
11:00 AM - Ch. FX:
MOVIE ›› “White
Chicks” Two male FBI
agents pose as female socialites to foil
a kidnapping plot and
save their jobs. Shawn
Wayans, Marlon Wayans.
(2 hrs., 30 mins.)
11:30 AM - Ch. FOOD:
UNWRAPPED Potato
salad; seedless watermelons; deli meat; olive
oil.
11:30 AM - Ch. TLC:
SOMETHING
BORROWED, SOMETHING
NEW (CC) Courtney
has recently lost over
100 pounds and wants
to show off her body. ’
12:00 PM - Ch. 13:
JERRY SPRINGER (CC)
A contrite man confesses through song; Sha
Sha discovers that her
father slept with her
roommate. (N) ’ (60
mins.)
12:00 PM - Ch. A&E:
CRIMINAL MINDS (CC)
(DVS) When four men
from Oregon go missing, the team looks for
a common link. ’ (60
mins.)
12:30 PM - Ch. 10:
DR. ORDON’S SECRET!
Forget Surgery! Dr. Andrew Ordon shows you
the trick to looking visibly younger, INSTANTLY
with Derm Exclusive by
Beachbody.
12:30 PM - Ch. FOOD:
BAREFOOT CONTESSA
Baked shrimp scampi;
fruit salad with limoncello.
1:00 PM - Ch. 5:
HISTORY DETECTIVES
(CC) Wanted posters;
metal may have come
from a B-25 Bomber
that crashed into the
Empire State Building.
’ (60 mins.)
1:00 PM - Ch. 10:
THE CHEW (CC) Celebrating Cinco de Mayo.
(N) ’ (60 mins.)
MONDAY MORNING
Comcast
MAY 5, 2014
7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30
NETWORK & AREA CHANNELS
(WSAV)
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3 Today Zac Efron and Dave Franco; Jenna Elfman. (N) ’ (CC)
4 The Morning Show The Morning Show The Morning Show
5 Arthur
Wild
Curious Cat in
Peg
Dinosaur
7 Willow
DFlyTV The People’s Court The 700 Club (CC)
9 CBS This Morning (N) ’ (CC)
Rachael Ray (N) ’
10 Good Morning America (N) (CC)
Live With Kelly
11 News Daybreak
CBS This Morning (N) ’ (CC)
12 Today Zac Efron and Dave Franco; Jenna Elfman. (N) ’ (CC)
13 Action News
Action News
Minute
Minute
18 Married Married There
Browns Payne
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The Dr. Oz Show ’
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(A&E) 32 Dog
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Criminal Minds ’
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(AMC) 48 Paid
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Stooges (:45) ››› “Maverick” (1994) Mel Gibson, Jodie Foster. (CC)
(:45) ››‡ “A Perfect Getaway” (2009) (CC)
›› “Pearl Harbor” (2001) Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett. (CC)
(DISC) 35 Paid
Robison J. Meyer Focus
Almost, Away
Disappeared (CC)
Wicked Attraction
Sins & Secrets ’
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Car Hoards
(DISN) 16 Ella the Mickey Pirates Mickey Wil. West Doc
Sofia
Mickey Doc
Mickey Mickey Little
Little
Octo
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Good
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(E!) 56 Kardas Kardas Kardas Kardas Kardashian
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Fashion Police
E! News
Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City
(ESPN) 14 SportCtr SportsCenter (CC)
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On the Clock
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(ESPN2) 15 (6:00) Mike & Mike (N) (Live) (CC)
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Numbers Never Lie First Take ’ (CC)
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(FOOD) 21 Paid
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Williams Barbecue Tyler
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Good Eat Unwrap Pioneer Contessa Money
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Contessa Contessa Pioneer Farm
(FSSO) 67 Cutting Dumbest World Poker
World Poker
Canoe Worlds
MLB Baseball San Francisco Giants at Atlanta Braves.
World Poker
Training Golf Life The Best of Pride
Tennis
(FX) 38 ›‡ “Down to Earth” (2001) Chris Rock.
› “The Bachelor” (1999, Comedy-Drama)
›› “White Chicks” (2004) Shawn Wayans.
›‡ “The Benchwarmers” (2006)
Mother Mother Two Men Two Men Pineap
(HBO)
››› “About a Boy” (2002)
(:45) ›› “Jack the Giant Slayer” (2013)
(:45) ››‡ “Sabrina” (1995) Harrison Ford. ’ ‘PG’
The Cheshire Murders ’ (CC)
Fight
››› “The Majestic” (2001) Jim Carrey. ‘PG’ (CC)
(H&G) 39 House Hunters
House Hunters
House Hunters
House Hunters
House Hunters
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
Love It or List It
(HIST) 49 MonsterQuest (CC) Afraid of the Dark ’ (CC)
MonsterQuest (CC) MonsterQuest (CC) MonsterQuest (CC) MonsterQuest (CC) MonsterQuest (CC) MonsterQuest (CC) MonsterQuest (CC) Swamp People ’
(LIFE) 28 Balance Balance Unsolved Mysteries Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Mother Mother Grey’s Anatomy ’ Grey’s Anatomy ’ Grey’s Anatomy ’ Hoarders (CC)
Hoarders (CC)
(MAX)
Brigham “Dreamer: True Story”
(:15) ››› “8 Mile” (2002) Eminem. ‘R’
(:10) ›› “Taken 2” (2012) Liam Neeson.
(12:50) ››› “The Warriors”
››‡ “Admission” (2013) Tina Fey. ’
“Abraham Lincoln: Vampire”
(SPIKE) 37 Williams Power
Paid
Focus
Gangland ’ (CC)
Gangland ’ (CC)
Gangland ’ (CC)
Gangland ’ (CC)
Gangland ’ (CC)
Gangland ’ (CC)
Gangland ’ (CC)
Gangland ’ (CC)
Cops ’ Cops ’
(SPSO) 71 Paid
Paid
Power
Paid
10 Min
Paid
Pain Free Paint
College Baseball Florida International at East Carolina.
College Baseball Baylor at Oklahoma.
Driven
(TLC) 40 19 Kids 19 Kids Ultimate Cake Off
Hoard-Buried
Know-Pregnant
Borrowed Borrowed What Not to Wear
Medium Medium 19 Kids 19 Kids Cake
Cake
Honey
Honey
Toddlers & Tiaras
(TNT) 17 Charmed ’ (CC)
Supernatural (CC)
Supernatural (CC)
Supernatural (CC)
Bones ’ (CC)
Bones ’ (CC)
Bones ’ (CC)
Bones ’ (CC)
Castle ’ (CC)
Castle ’
Charmed ’ (CC)
(TOON) 42 Adven
Beyblade Pokémon Scooby “Scooby Doo”
Garfield Looney Tunes ’
Tom & Jerry
Jerry
Jerry
Johnny T Johnny T Gumball Gumball Adven
Adven
Regular Regular
(USA) 25 ›››‡ “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” (1989) (CC)
NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles
MONDAY EVENING
6:00
6:30
Comcast
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:30
9:00
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10:00
10:30
11:00
11:30
MAY 5, 2014
12:00
12:30
NETWORK & AREA CHANNELS
(WSAV)
(WJXT)
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(WTBS)
3 WSAV News 3
4 Chann 4 News
5 Wild Kratts
7 Meet, Browns
9 News
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12 News
13 Be a Millionaire
18 Seinfeld (CC)
Nightly News
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Wheel Fortune Jeopardy! (N)
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News
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America Now Entertainment
Wheel Fortune Jeopardy! (N)
Modern Family The Simpsons
Seinfeld (CC)
Family Guy ’
The Voice The artists perform; Gwen Stefani. (N) ’ (Live) (CC)
Love-Raymond Engagement
Big Bang
Big Bang
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Star-Crossed (N) ’ (CC)
The Tomorrow People ’ (CC)
2 Broke Girls
Friends-Lives Mike & Molly ’ Mom ’ (CC)
Dancing With the Stars Guest judge Abby Lee Miller. (N) (CC)
2 Broke Girls
Friends-Lives Mike & Molly ’ Mom ’ (CC)
The Voice The artists perform; Gwen Stefani. (N) ’ (Live) (CC)
24: Live Another Day Jack risks his life to avert a disaster. ’
Family Guy ’ Family Guy ’ (CC)
Big Bang
(:01) The Blacklist “Berlin” (N) ’ WSAV News 3
The 10 O’Clock News (N) (CC)
Chann 4 News
The Civil War Lincoln’s emphasis shifts. ’ (CC)
TMZ (N) (CC)
Access H.
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NCIS: Los Angeles “Big Brother” News
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(:35) The Arsenio Hall Show (N)
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Charlie Rose (N)
The Office ’
King of the Hill King of the Hill
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(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) ’
(:37) Nightline
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Tonight Show-J. Fallon
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Two/Half Men How I Met
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Pete Holmes
Conan (CC)
CABLE CHANNELS
(A&E) 32 Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Bates Motel (Season Finale) (N)
Bates Motel
(:32) Bates Motel ’ (CC)
Bates Motel
(AMC) 48 ››› “Blazing Saddles” (1974) Cleavon Little, Gene Wilder. (CC)
›››‡ “Shrek” (2001) Voices of Mike Myers. Premiere. (CC)
›› “Teen Wolf” (1985) Michael J. Fox, James Hampton. (CC)
››› “Blazing Saddles” (1974)
(DISC) 35 Lords of the Car Hoards (CC)
Fast N’ Loud (CC)
Fast N’ Loud: Revved Up (N) ’
Fast N’ Loud The top fifty clips.
Lords of the Car Hoards (CC)
Fast N’ Loud The top fifty clips.
Lords of the Car Hoards (CC)
(DISN) 16 I Didn’t Do It ’ I Didn’t Do It ’ Jessie (CC)
Austin & Ally ’ Boy Meet World Boy Meet World Jessie (CC)
Austin & Ally ’ Dog With a Blog Good-Charlie Jessie (CC)
A.N.T. Farm ’ Good-Charlie Good-Charlie
(E!) 56 Total Divas
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Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Chelsea Lately E! News
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(ESPN) 14 SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (N Subject to Blackout)
Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
(ESPN2) 15 Around/Horn
Interruption
SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
NFL Live (N) (CC)
Sportscenter: On the Clock
2014 Draft Academy
Olbermann (N) (Live) (CC)
Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) (CC)
(FOOD) 21 Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
Guy’s Grocery Games
Rewrapped (N) Rewrapped
Kitchen Casino (N)
Mystery Diners Mystery Diners Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives ’
Kitchen Casino
(FSSO) 67 Tennis
UFC Reloaded “UFC 147: Silva vs. Franklin II” Highlights of UFC 147 in Brazil.
The Panel
The Panel
World Poker Tour: Season 12
UFC Reloaded
(FX) 38 (5:30) ››‡ “Pineapple Express” (2008, Comedy) Seth Rogen.
››‡ “Horrible Bosses” (2011) Jason Bateman, Charlie Day.
Louie “Back”
(:32) Louie (N) (:05) Louie
(:36) Louie
(12:09) Louie
(:39) Louie
(HBO)
›› “Jack the Giant Slayer” (2013) Nicholas Hoult. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC)
Fight Game
Last Week To. ››› “Pacific Rim” (2013) Charlie Hunnam. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC)
(:15) Game of Thrones ’ (CC)
(12:15) Veep ’ Silicon Valley
(H&G) 39 Love It or List It (CC)
Love It or List It (CC)
Love It or List It (CC)
Love It or List It (CC)
House Hunters Hunters Int’l
Love It or List It (CC)
Love It or List It (CC)
(HIST) 49 Swamp People ’ (CC)
Swamp People ’ (CC)
Swamp People ’ (CC)
Swamp People “Outer Limits” (N) Down East Dickering ’ (CC)
(:02) Swamp People ’ (CC)
(12:01) Swamp People ’ (CC)
(LIFE) 28 Hoarders “John; Vivian” (CC)
Hoarders Imminent foreclosure.
Hoarders “Glen & Lisa” (CC)
Hoarders “Kathleen; Scott” (CC)
Hoarders (CC)
(:01) Hoarders “BG & Lee; Chris” (12:02) Hoarders “Glen & Lisa”
(MAX)
(:05) ››‡ “Oblivion” (2013) Tom Cruise. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC)
(:15) ›› “Fantastic Four” (2005) Ioan Gruffudd. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC)
›› “Taken 2” (2012) Liam Neeson. ’ ‘NR’ (CC)
(:40) “The Super Sex Program” (2013) Mary Carey.
(SPIKE) 37 Cops ’ (CC)
Cops ’ (CC)
Countdown
Cops ’ (CC)
Jail ’ (CC)
Jail ’ (CC)
Cops ’ (CC)
Cops ’ (CC)
Cops ’ (CC)
Cops ’ (CC)
Cops ’ (CC)
Cops ’ (CC)
Cops ’ (CC)
Cops ’ (CC)
(SPSO) 71 (5:00) Driven
Braves Live!
MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (N) (Live)
Braves Live!
Braves Live!
MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Atlanta Braves.
(TLC) 40 My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding
Untold Stories of the E.R. (CC)
OMG! EMT! “Surprise Attacks”
Sex Sent Me to the E.R. (N) ’
Secret Sex Lives “Unusual Sex”
Sex Sent Me to the E.R. (CC)
Secret Sex Lives “Unusual Sex”
(TNT) 17 Castle “Boom!” (CC) (DVS)
Castle “The Late Shaft” ’
NBA Basketball Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC)
NBA Basketball Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (CC)
(TOON) 42 Adventure Time Regular Show Clarence (N)
Uncle Grandpa King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show Family Guy ’ The Boondocks American Dad Family Guy ’ Robot Chicken Aqua Teen
(USA) 25 NCIS: Los Angeles “Rocket Man” NCIS: Los Angeles “Plan B” ’
WWE Monday Night RAW Extreme Rules PPV results. Did Kane take the Championship? (N) (CC)
Chrisley Knows Playing House (12:06) NCIS: Los Angeles ’
1:30 PM - Ch. FX:
MOVIE ›‡ “The Benchwarmers” A millionaire helps three nerdy
buddies form a baseball team to compete
against all the mean
Little Leaguers. David
Spade, Rob Schneider.
(2 hrs.)
2:00 PM - Ch. A&E:
CRIMINAL MINDS (CC)
(DVS) The team travels
to Santa Monica when
burned bodies start
showing up on a pier. ’
(60 mins.)
2:30 PM - Ch. FOOD:
30-MINUTE MEALS A
mild Mexican spread;
chicken suizas quesadilla cake.
3:00 PM - Ch. AMC:
MOVIE ›› “Pearl Harbor” (CC) Two pilots
and lifelong friends fall
for the same woman,
but must put aside their
differences when the
Japanese attack their
naval base on Dec. 7,
1941. Ben Affleck, Josh
Hartnett. (3 hrs.)
3:30 PM - Ch. TLC:
CAKE BOSS (CC) Buddy
creates a cake inspired
by poisonous plants;
an engagement-ring-box
cake. ’
4:00 PM - Ch. 7:
MAURY (CC) John says
Ashlee is just trying to
trap him with another
man’s baby. (N) ’ (60
mins.)
4:30 PM - Ch. FOOD:
BAREFOOT CONTESSA
Filet of beef truffled
sandwiches; roasted
tomatoes in a Caprese
salad.
5:00 PM - Ch. A&E:
BATES MOTEL (CC)
Romero hopes a former
colleague can help him
determine Norman’s involvement in a crime. ’
(60 mins.)
5:30 PM - Ch. ESPN:
PARDON THE INTERRUPTION (CC) Opinion
and analysis of the
day’s sports stories.
With Tony Kornheiser
and Mike Wilbon. (N) ’
6:00 PM - Ch. A&E:
DUCK DYNASTY (CC)
The men camp out
before the opening of
duck season; stinky Phil
seeks romance with
Miss Kay. ’
6:30 PM - Ch. FOOD:
DINERS,
DRIVE-INS
AND DIVES A drive-in
is serving the same
double burger since the
restaurants opening.
7:00 PM - Ch. DISC:
FAST N’ LOUD (CC)
Richard makes a deal
to restore the first two
Firebirds ever made. ’
(Part 1 of 2) (60 mins.)
7:00 PM - Ch. ESPN:
MLB BASEBALL “St.
Louis Cardinals at Atlanta Braves” From
Turner Field in Atlanta.
(N Subject to Blackout)
(Live) (3 hrs.)
7:30 PM - Ch. SPIKE:
COPS (CC) A suspect
abandons a stolen vehicle and escapes; a
man claims a suspect
threatened him with a
gun. ’
7:30 PM - Ch. TOON:
UNCLE GRANDPA The
gang tries to reverse
Uncle Grandpa’s bad
mood.
8:00 PM - Ch. 7:
STAR-CROSSED (CC)
Drake and Roman realize they need help when
they learn the Trags are
building a bomb. (N) ’
(60 mins.)
8:00 PM - Ch. 9, 11:
2 BROKE GIRLS (CC)
(Season Finale) Caroline learns that Max
didn’t graduate high
school after missing
only one exam. (N) ’
8:30 PM - Ch. 9, 11:
FRIENDS WITH BETTER
LIVES (CC) Kate thinks
Jules gets special treatment because she is
attractive. (N) ’
8:30 PM - Ch. A&E:
DUCK DYNASTY (CC)
The workers are forced
to relocate to Godwin’s
house when termites invade Duck Commander.
’
9:00 PM - Ch. 5: ANTIQUES ROADSHOW
(CC) 1863 Ulysses S.
Grant letter; circa 1950
Charles Schulz “Li’l
Folks” original cartoon;
paintings. ’ (Part 3 of
3) (60 mins.)
9:00 PM - Ch. 9, 11:
MIKE & MOLLY (CC)
Molly wonders if she
should tell Mike when
she sees Carl coming
out of Victoria’s room at
night. (N) ’
9:30 PM - Ch. 9,
11: MOM (CC) Bonnie
and Christy go to great
lengths to help a sick
friend. ’
9:30 PM - Ch. A&E:
DUCK DYNASTY (CC)
Willie becomes concerned about Rebecca’s
future; sick Uncle Si
takes over Phil’s living
room. ’
10:00 PM - Ch. AMC:
MOVIE ›› “Teen Wolf”
(CC) A high-school student’s popularity soars
when it is discovered
that he is cursed with
the mark of the werewolf. Michael J. Fox,
James Hampton. (2
hrs.)
10:00 PM - Ch. E!:
KEEPING UP WITH THE
KARDASHIANS
The
family gathers in San
Francisco to surprise
Kim on her birthday;
Kanye proposes. (Part
2 of 2) (60 mins.)
Walt Disney Co. adding Marvel heroes to ‘Infinity’ game
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Buzz Lightyear, meet Captain America.
The Walt Disney Co. is adding
several Marvel superheroes to its
toys-meets-games series “Disney Infinity.” The company announced plans Wednesday to add
more than 20 such characters —
beginning with “The Avengers”
members Captain America, Iron
Man, Hawkeye, Black Widow,
Thor and Hulk — in a new installment of the franchise.
“Disney Infinity: Marvel Super
Heroes” is set for release this fall
for Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and
Wii U, as well as the PlayStation
4 and Xbox One. The new 2.0
version of “Infinity” will include
several updates, including more
ways to upgrade characters, new
moves and vehicles like motorcycles.
“We wanted to take everything
that worked so well and make it
epic,” said Jimmy Pitaro, presi-
dent of Disney Interactive, during
an event Wednesday at Pacific
Theatres’ Cinerama Dome in
Hollywood.
Marvel comic writer Brian Michael Bendis is writing original
stories featuring the Marvel characters for the game.
“Infinity” utilizes real-life toy
figures to depict Disney personalities in sprawling virtual lands
where those characters can do
things like race vehicles, create
and play games and construct locales — solo or cooperatively —
as well as embark on adventures
in their own realms. Each toy figure stores and transmits the character’s history through a reader
connected to a game console.
A starter pack for the new version will feature the game, three
figures — Iron Man, Thor and
Black Widow — an “Avengers”themed play set and two discs,
which can be used to upgrade or
customize characters and lands in
the game. Additional figures and
discs are sold separately.
Disney/AP
This photo shows Marvel’s The Avengers play set with Captain
America from “Disney Infinity” (2.0 edition). Walt Disney Co. is
adding several Marvel superheros to its toys-meets-game series
“Disney Infinity.” The company announced plans on Wednesday to
bring such characters as Captain America, Iron Man and Thor to a
new installment of the game.
The Marvel superheroes will
join such Disney characters as
Buzz Lightyear from “Toy Story,”
Sorcerer Mickey from “Fantasia”
and Elsa from “Frozen.”
“Infinity” executive producer
John Vignocchi said backstage
after the event that previously re-
leased Disney characters will be
compatible with the new edition
of “Infinity,” but that newer figures and toy boxes won’t be backward compatible.
“One of the most unique features of ‘Disney Infinity’ 2.0 on
Xbox One and PlayStation 4, just
because of the memory footprint
of those systems, is that the size
of the toy boxes you can create
are just gigantic,” said Vignocchi,
who added that additional Marvel
and Disney characters would be
announced at a later date.
A video shown during Wednesday’s event teased such characters as Spider-Man, Loki, Nick
Fury and the Winter Soldier in
“Infinity.” Much like the previous installment, the diverse array of characters will be able to
mingle within the game’s toy box
mode, meaning it’s possible that
the monstrous Hulk could drive
Cinderella’s royal coach, or pirate
Jack Sparrow could be outfitted
with the wings of soaring sidekick Falcon.
Joe Quesada, chief creative officer at Marvel Entertainment,
which was acquired by Disney
in 2009, said this rendition of
the comic book characters are
“uniquely Marvel but still fit
within the game.”
“We put the ‘Infinity’ team
through the exactly same rigorous torture that we put ourselves
through,” Quesada said. “They
were really up to the challenge.”
“Infinity” closely resembles
the successful “Skylanders” franchise from Activision Blizzard
Inc. However, Disney’s rendition
relies on better-known characters
and adds an open-world toy box
mode akin to “Minecraft,” where
users’ imaginations can run wild.
Earlier this month, Activision
announced plans for an Oct.
5 installment of its successful
“Skylanders” toys-meets-games
franchise called “Trap Team”
that allows players to take control of enemies in the game and
store them on toy crystals in the
real world. “Skylanders,” which
launched in 2011, currently boasts
175 different toy characters.
Pitaro noted Wednesday that
3 million copies of the original
“Infinity” starter park have been
sold and the franchise has generated $500 million in sales since it
launched last August.
4B COMICS
4B The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014
Xx The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014
The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014 Xx
Fun & Games
CONTRACT BRIDGE
By STEVE BECKER
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
CLASSIC PEANUTS
Famous Hand
DILBERT
HOROSCOPE
By FRANCIS DRAKE
For Monday, May 5, 2014
ARIES (March 21 to April
19) The entire month of May
is the perfect time for you to
shop for wardrobe goodies.
This is because you like what
you see in the mirror.
TAURUS (April 20 to May
20) Solitude in beautiful surroundings will delight you this
month. But more than that,
many of you will have secret
love affairs as well. Oh my.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 20)
This month, you will schmooze
with others and, in particular,
you will enjoy hanging out with
artistic, creative people. Possibly, a friend could become a
lover.
CANCER (June 21 to July
22) With fair Venus at the top
of your chart during the month
of May, others will seek your
creative advice. They might
want your input on design,
layout, furniture placement,
gardening -- whatever.
LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22)
Travel for pleasure will delight
you in the month of May. It will
please you to learn new things
about distant places. Some of
you might strike up a flirtation!
VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22)
Gifts, goodies and favors from
others will come your way during the month of May. You can
benefit from the wealth and
resources of others.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct.
22) With fair Venus opposite
your sign during the month
of May, all your relations with
others, especially partners
and close friends, will be warm
and friendly. Enjoy this sweet
SUDOKU
Sudoku instructions:
Fill in the grid so that
every row, column and
3x3 box contains the
digits 1 through 9.
KIT ’N’ CARLYLE
benefit.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov.
21) You will work hard during
May to make your workplace
more attractive. Meanwhile,
some of you will get a raise or,
at least, praise.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to
Dec. 21) New romance and
saucy flirtations will be sprinkled throughout the month of
May for your sign. Enjoy social
diversions, sports events, the
arts and playful times with
children.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to
Jan. 19) You will delight in
an opportunity to make your
home look more attractive in
the month of May. This same
time is also excellent for
exploring real-estate opportunities.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb.
18) This month, you will have
an opportunity to see how
much love there is in your
daily life. You will notice how
much beauty there is in your
surroundings.
PISCES (Feb. 19 to March
20) When shopping in May,
you will buy beautiful things
for yourself and loved ones.
However, this is also an excellent month for business and
commerce.
YOU BORN TODAY You are
intelligent and convincing.
You like to study and learn
because, in turn, you want to
teach or enlighten others. In
fact, you want to stimulate and
arouse others. (You hate to
be ignored.) Good news. This
year might be one of the most
powerful years of your life.
Yesterday’s Answer
This deal occurred in the
Mixed Pairs at the 2002
world bridge championships.
North-South were many-time
women’s world champion Judi
Radin, playing with the irrepressible hero of many a deal
reported in this column, Zia
Mahmood (now known to all
simply as Zia).
After Radin’s three-club
rebid, Zia characteristically
pressed on to slam, learning
along the way via Roman Key
Card Blackwood that North
held either three aces or two
aces and the king of clubs.
Looking at all four hands,
it can be seen that the spades
do not break 3-3 and the ace
of hearts is offside, so six
notrump seems doomed. But
things changed dramatically after West selected the harmlesslooking ten of spades as his
opening lead.
Zia played low from dummy
and noted with great interest
the appearance of East’s jack
as he won with the ace. If the
opponents’ plays were honest,
this meant that West had the
9-8 of spades, giving Zia an
opportunity to steal the slamgoing trick.
So at trick two, Zia put the
six of spades on the table
and, after West followed low,
showed the courage of his convictions by letting the six ride.
When it held, Zia had his 12th
trick and the slam.
It might appear that if West
had covered the six with the
eight, the slam would have
gone down, but this is not necessarily true. The play of the
eight would have given Zia a
chance to shine in another way.
After taking the eight with
dummy’s king, declarer would
run his clubs and diamonds,
reducing his hand to the Q-7
of spades and singleton king
of hearts. West would come
down to the 9-5 of spades and
ace of hearts. The play of the
king of hearts would then force
West to win and lead a spade
into South’s Q-7, and the slam
would still come home.
Tomorrow: Silence is
golden.
BEETLE BAILEY
BLONDIE
FRANK AND ERNEST
BORN LOSER
ARLO AND JANIS
THIS DATE IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, May 5, the 125th day of
2014. There are 240 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On May 5, 1862, Mexican troops defeated
French occupying forces in the Battle of
Puebla. (The Cinco de Mayo holiday commemorates Mexico’s victory.)
On this date:
In 1973, Secretariat won the Kentucky
Derby, the first of its Triple Crown victories.
In 1981, Irish Republican Army hunger-striker Bobby Sands died at the Maze Prison in
Northern Ireland in his 66th day without food.
In 1994, Singapore caned American teenager Michael Fay for vandalism, a day after
the sentence was reduced from six lashes to
four in response to an appeal by President Bill
Clinton, who considered the punishment too
harsh.
Thought for Today: “The test of courage
comes when we are in the minority. The test
of tolerance comes when we are in the majority.” — Ralph W. Sockman, American clergyman (1889-1970).
MALLARD FILLMORE
MARY WORTH
HEATHCLIFF
ALLEY OOP
The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014 5B
THE PUBLIC RECORD
“Information is the currency of democracy”
– Thomas Jefferson
Sheriff
Neal Jump
554-7669
Clerk of Superior Court
Probate Judge
Debra G. Howes
554-7231
FAX
EMAIL
– or –
your legals to
[email protected]
Lola Jamsky
554-7272
your legals to
– or –
912-264-4973
BRING OR
R MAIL
DEADLINES:
D
EA
your legals
l tto
The deadline for legal advertising copy is
3011 Altama Ave. - P.O. Box 1557
Brunswick, GA 31521
2:00 P.M. – 2 Business Days before
you need it to run
View legal advertising online at thebrunswicknews.com
View Legal & Public Notices for all 159 Georgia Counties at GeorgiaPublicNotice.com
005 Debtors and
006 Divorces
Creditors
In The Probate Court of
Glynn County
State of Georgia
Notice to Debtors
and Creditors
IN RE: ESTATE OF Kevin
Cha r l e s B ast, DECEASED
All creditors of the Estate
of Kevin Charles Bast,
deceased, late of Glynn
County, Georgia, are
hereby notified to render
their demands to the undersigned according to
law, and all persons indebted to said Estate are
required to make immediate payment to the undersigned.
Karen Silver Bast
Executor of
Kevin Charles Bast
deceased
308 Brailsford Pl.,
St. Simons Island, GA
Address
GEORGIA,
GLYNN COUNTY.
NOTICE TO
CREDITORS
AND DEBTORS
All creditors of the estate
of Martha Lanier Veal,
deceased, late of Glynn
County, Georgia, are
hereby notified to render
an account of their demands to the undersigned
according to law, and all
persons indebted to said
estate are required to
make immediate payment
to the undersigned.
/s/ Mary Veal Walters
Mary Veal Walters,
as Executor of the
Estate of
Martha Lanier Veal
4 St. Andrews Court
Brunswick, Georgia 31520
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF GLYNN
NOTICE TO
DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS
IN RE:
ESTATE OF
MYRLEEN P. SOUTHER,
DECEASED
All creditors of the Estate
of Myrleen P. Souther,
deceased, late of Glynn
County, Georgia, are
hereby notified to render
their demands to the undersigned according to
law, and all persons indebted to said estate are
required to make immediate payment to the undersigned.
This 1st day of
May, 2014.
/s/ R. Michael Souther,
Personal Representative
of the Estate of Myrleen
P. Souther
R. Michael Souther, P.C.
P.O. Box 978
Brunswick,
GA
31521-0978
(912) 265-5544
006 Divorces
In The Superior Court
of Glynn County
State of Georgia
Duane R. Giessman
Plaintiff,
v.
Rimma G. Giessman
Defendant
Civil Action File No.
CE014-00084-063
014 Probate Notices
135 Handyman
144 Legal Services
190 Tree Services
235 Houses For Sale
Seizures
Notice and Summons
To:
You are hereby notified
that the above-styled action Complaint for Divorce
was filed in the said Court
on 24th day of January,
2014, and, by reason of
an Order for Service of
Summons by Publication
entered by the Court on
the 7th day of April, 2014,
you are hereby commanded to file with the
Clerk of said Court and
serve upon the Petitionerss attorney whose
name and address is as
follows:
Andrew H. Lakin
Attorney at Law
512 “G” Street
Brunswick Ga 31520
an answer to this Complaint for Divorce within
sixty (60) days of the ____
day of ____, 2014.
Witness the Honorable
Judge of Superior Court of
Glynn County, Georgia.
This the 7th day of April,
2014.
Lola B. Jamsky
Clerk Superior Court
Marlene White Dep
Deputy Clerk, Superior
Court Glynn County,
Georgia
Filed
Glynn Co. Clerks Office
2014 Apr 7 PM 2 16
Lola B. Jamsky
Clerk Superior Court
008 Forfeitures and
This 15th day of April,
2014.
008 Forfeitures and
Seizures
NOTICE OF
SEIZURE OF
PERSONAL PROPERTY
VALUED AT LESS THAN
$25,000.00
Pursuant to O.C.G.A. Sec.
16-13-49, any person
claiming an interest in the
following property is
hereby notified that on
March 25, 2014, said
property was seized by officers of the Glynn/Brunswick Narcotics Enforcement Team (GBNET) from
Benjamin James Smith:
Seven Thousand One
Hundred and Ninety and
00/100
Dollars
($7,190.00) in United
States Currency. The
conduct giving rise to said
seizure was as follows:
On March 25, 2014, in
Glynn County, Georgia,
an officer with the Glynn
County Police Department
conducted a traffic stop on
Mr. Smith for failure to
maintain lane. Based on
his behavior during the
stop, the officer asked
permission to search Mr.
Smith and his vehicle. After receiving consent from
Mr. Smith, an officer conducted a search of the vehicle and discovered two
bottles containing 8 mg
hydromorphone tablets,
one container with 4 mg
hydromorphone tablets
and five marijuana joints
in a tin in the front passenger area. Mr. Smith
admitted to selling the
controlled substances and
stated he had additional
controlled substances in
his home and a substantial amount of cash. Mr.
Smith consented to a
search of his home where
officers recovered approximately 58.50 grams
of marijuana and the
United States currency.
Said property was used or
intended for use to facilitate a violation of
O.C.G.A. Sec. 16-13-30
and/or was proceeds de-
rived or realized therefrom.
You are further
notified that you may file a
claim within thirty (30)
days of the second publication of this Notice of
Seizure by sending the
claim by certified mail, return receipt requested, to
the District Attorney and
to the Seizing agency at
the addresses shown below.
Inv. Carl Evans
GBNET
157 Public Safety Blvd.
Brunswick, GA 31525
JACKIE L. JOHNSON
District Attorney
By: Liberty M. Stewart
Assistant District Attorney
Brunswick Judicial Circuit
701 “H” Street, Box 301
Brunswick, GA 31520
009 Corporations
NOTICE OF
INCORPORATION
Notice is given that Articles of Incorporation
which incorporate Golden
Isles Youth Orchestra,
Inc. have been delivered
to the Secretary of State
for filing in accordance
with the Georgia Nonprofit
Corporation Code. The
initial registered office of
the corporation is located
at 777 Gloucester Street,
Suite 200, Brunswick,
Georgia 31522, and its initial registered agent at
such address is Hillary
Stringfellow.
Application
To Register A Business
To Be Conducted
Under Trade Name,
Partnership Or Others
State Of Georgia
County of Glynn
The undersigned does
hereby certify that it is
Margaret A Prentice conducting a business as
Mixed Nuts Boutique and
Consignment Corporation
in the City of St Simons
Island Ga
County of
Glynn in the State of
Georgia, under the name
of Mixed Nuts Boutique
and Consignment and
that the nature of the business is retail sales of new
and used accessories,
home decor, and apparel.
and that the names and
addresses of the persons,
firms or partnership owning and carrying on said
trade or business are
MC of SSI, Inc.
500 Rivera Drive
St. Simons Island,
GA 31522
/s/ M A Prentice
President
Signature - Title
Subscribed and sworn to
before me this 24th day of
April, 2014
/s/ Ashley N. Mack
Notary Public SEAL
Filed in office, this 24th day of
April, 2014
Bonnie L. Clendenen Walker
Dep Clerk Superior Court
Glynn County, Ga.
014 Probate Notices
PETITION FOR
LETTERS OF
ADMINISTRATION
NOTICE
GEORGIA, GLYNN
COUNTY PROBATE
COURT ESTATE NO.
[PRO17677]
To Whom It May Concern:
(any heir whose current
address is unknown)
Merri L Pearson has petitioned to be appointed Administrator(s) of the estate
of Ann E. Wainright,
deceased, of said County.
(The petitioner has also
applied for waiver of bond
and/or grant of certain
powers contained in
O.C.G.A. §53-12-261.) All
interested parties are
hereby notified to show
cause why said petition
should not be granted. All
objections to the petition
must be in writing, setting
forth the grounds of any
such objections, and must
be filed with the court on
or before June 06, 2014.
All objections must be
signed under oath before
a notary public or before a
probate court clerk, and
filing fees must be tendered with your objections, unless you qualify to
file as an indigent party.
Contact probate court personnel at the following address/telephone number
for the required amount of
filing fees. If any objections are filed, a hearing
will be scheduled at a
later date. If no objections
are filed, the petition may
be granted without a hearing.
WITNESS, the Honorable
Debra G. Howes, Judge
COMMUNITY
PAINTING
Carpentry repairs,
pressure washing, window
cleaning & clean gutters.
We blow off roofs.
No job too small.
Licensed & Insured.
References furnished.
Call 912-264-8237 or
Cell 912-297-1920.
RENT A MAN
Carpentry, Painting,
Home Repair, 25 Years
Experience 223-2514
138 Hauling/Moving
AMWASTE
Construction Dumpsters
Residential • Commercial
Clean Up:
•Yard • Attic • Garage
• Roofing • Remodeling
• Demolition
10 & 20 Yard Roll Off
Containers
Locally Owned/Operated
Licensed & Insured
•Major Credit Cards
Accepted•
258-9311
TRASH HAULING
No trash too large or
small. Comm.- Res.
Appliances & furniture.
Trees & limbs also
hauled. Free estimates.
996-4487
DEBT
RELIEF
William S. Orange, III
Attorney at Law
Yes, Even under the
new code, Bankruptcy
is still an option!
Stop Foreclosure
Stop Garnishments
Stop Repossession
Wage Earner Chapter 13,
Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
Free Consultation
Doing Bankruptcy right
since 1979
Fmr. Member,
Board of Directors
Coastal Bankruptcy
Law Institute
1419 Newcastle St.
Bwk., GA. 31520
050 Pets
Puppy Paradise
New Owner, New Trainer!
The Islands Only Doggie
Daycare, Boarding, &
Training School.
IslandPuppyParadise.com
133 Center Street
St. Simons Island, GA
(912) 268-4725
106 Asphalt/Paving
Landscaping
Hollis Lawn
Care
Reliable & Dependable
912-223-5706
S & M Lawn
Weekly & Bi-weekly
services available
912-506-3948
please leave message
153 Misc. Services
Land Clearing
Leveling, and Fill Dirt
EPS
Call 912-222-8622
METABOLIC
RESEARCH
CENTER
Call Now and Start Losing
Tonight!
Brunswick
(912)266-8045
St. Simons
(912)266-8045
Waycross
(912)385-9196
Concrete/Rock
115 Cleaning Res.
and Comm.
Weekly and Monthly lawn
maintenance our specialty
Dependable and
reasonable service.
Also, mulch and straw.
American Owned
& Operated
Pressure
Washing
and Auto Detailing
912-270-4022
Free Estimates. Will rake,
mow, trim, edge, install
seasonal planting, etc.
Kerb Appeal
Concrete Landscape
Edging & Lawn Services,
Mike Benton,
Individually Secured w/
electric hook up and
lighting, up to 13 x 50
Spaces Available Now
BANKRUPTCY
* Free Estimates *
Great service
at great prices!
Call us today at
TOO MUCH DEBT?
IN FORECLOSURE?
NEED A WAY OUT?
Call The Schofield Law
Firm for a Free
Bankruptcy Consultation.
Exit 29 Storage
912-275-7018
Boats and
Private Planes Only
Professional Mobile
Detailing, Wash,
Compound,
Wet Sand, Wax.
Trailers Separate.
Find us on Facebook!
www.schofieldlawfirm.com
Backhoe
Tractor
D&W Handyman
No Job Too Small.
Work Guaranteed.
912-222-4264
Hobson
Heavy Brush Cutting &
Stump Grinding Services.
Cuts and mulches debris
Call John
706-961-4164
Easy to Use
New Ad Entry System
on our website
240 Lots & Acreage
East Brantley
County
One Acre lots, Atkinson
and Waynesville, from
$6,000 * Seller Financing
* 1.63 Acres, cleared,
paved road, $10,390
Seller is a licensed
Realtor Johns Realty
912 266.5163
250 Real Estate
Brunswick
200 Real Estate
Mobile Homes
By Owner
417 Courson St.
- 2 BR - 1BA
Central H/A, fenced yard
$45,000
265-8999
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this
newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to advertise
“any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color,
religion, sex or national origin, or
an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing
custody of children under 18.
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby informed
that all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis.
To complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777.
the toll-free telephone number for
the
hearing
impaired
is
1-800-927-9275.
230 Real Estate
Commercial
Priced Like A
Foreclosure
Extensivley renovated
2200 sq ft brick home
near the hospital. Way
above average at a below
average price. $150,000
(Serious Buyers Only)
912-269-2401
Leave Message
262 Real Estate
Other
For Sale
3/2 Home
in Woodbine Ga.
Well built, spacious,
new roof, geothermal
heat pump and wiring,
remodeled kitchen
and bath.
.87 acres.
2 car carport,
and 2-car garage.
Large deck.
16 x 32 above ground
saltwater pool.
Asking $149,000
or email
[email protected]
3415 & 3417
Norwich Street
$299,000
Formerly McDonalds Car
Stereo site, spacious with
lots of storage space,
5220 sqft, wood finished
walls and columns, gravel
lot and property with
house next to it are also
included. $299,000
Hodnett Cooper
Real Estate
(912) 638-4750
Brand New
Indoor RV and
Boat Storage
Pressure Washing
135 Handyman
Making You Nervous?
Then call D&Ms Tree
Service. 912-571-7249
912-242-6069
912-673-6402
Lawn Services
144 Legal Services
Dirt Leveling, Bushhogging, Top Soil, Fill Dirt,
Septics 269-3798
Are Your Trees
See Our Ad in Saturdays
Business Card Directory
912-230-1535
J & S Coastal
129 Grading
230-1523
Sit Back & Enjoy
912-222-6250
912-429-1746
102 Cherrywood Ct.
2000 sq.ft, 4/2 Sunroom,
shop, $185.000
• Tree Trimming
• Tree Removal
• Stump Grinding
• Land Clearing
• Fire Wood
Licensed & Insured
EMetabolic.com
Leave msg if no answer
Slabs & drives. Fill dirt or
topsoil. Grading & leveling
261-0560 or 222-5752
Timber Ridge,
TREE SERVICE
267-9272
141 Lawn/
By: Cecelia D. Aiken
CLERK, PROBATE
COURT OF
GLYNN COUNTY
701 G STREET
BRUNSWICK, GA 31520
912-554-7231
WOOD TO GO
261-1788
Stephanie Foster
(912) 223-0604
Need A Paper?
Call The Brunswick News
Circulation Department at
912-265-1104
285 Rentals
Brunswick
Millcrest
2, 3 & 4 Brs Avail.
Starting at $800 mo.
New carpet, Flattop stove,
garage, microwave,
dishwasher, disposal.
Trash, Lawn & 24 hr
emergency maintenance
included. Call Christie at:
912-223-2386
Open 7 days a week
Professionally managed
by Coastal Residential
Properties.
Sand Dollar Shores
Properties Inc.
'PMMJOT-BOFt4U4JNPOT*TMBOE("
Ship Shape
912-506-4798
UNFURNISHED RENTALS
HIDDEN HARBOR - %FFQXBUFSWJFXT
#3#"&MFWBUPS$PWFSFEQBSLJOH5PQFOEEFDPS
"WBJMBCMF/08$BMMGPSEFUBJMT
MALLERY VILLAS - #3#""WBJMBCMF/PX
FURNISHED RENTALS
MALLERY VILLAS -#3#"5PXOIPNF
www.thebrunswicknews.com
175 Remodeling
Allows you to price & pay
for your ad with a
credit or debit card.
No waiting or busy
signals. Available
whenever you are!!!
Home Repairs
Visit our web site at www.sanddollarshoresproperties.com
Decks, roofing, painting,
concrete, cabinets,
counters, etc 266-2947
$BMM3FOBF,JSLPS+PZDF)BBTGPSBOBQQPJOUNFOUUPQSFWJFX
SKIFF LANDING - #3#".BSTIWJFX
UPQSFWJFXPVSGVSOJTIFETIPSUUFSNWBDBUJPOQSPQFSUJFT
"WBJMBCMFGPS7BDBUJPOFST3FMPDBUJOH1FSTPOOFM'-&5$1FS%JFN"DDFQUFE
PSo
6B The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014
REAL ESTATE & HOMES ONLINE
You can now read stories from the Real Estate & Home Section (free-of-charge)
Online at www.thebrunswicknews.com
1 CALL US:
2 VISIT US:
3011 Altama Ave.,
Brunswick, GA 31520
247 Edwards Plaza,
St. Simons Island, GA 31522
We Accept:
3 FAX US:
Real Deal
Brunswick 912-267-5991 or 912-267-5992
St. Simons Island 912-638-7601
Mon.- Fri. 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Locally Brunswick 912-264-4973 or
St. Simons Island 912-638-8812
CLASSIFIEDS
YOUR CLASSIFIEDS
4 PLACE
ONLINE ALL THE TIME
Email:
[email protected]
Online: 24 hours a day
www.thebrunswicknews.com
• Money Order
• Personal Check
285 Rentals
285 Rentals
Brunswick
Brunswick
2 Bedroom/
1 Bath Duplex
GLYNN PLACE
APARTMENTS
209 Crandal Street $550 rent & $550 Damage
Deposit Call 264-8972
3 BR 2.5 BA
Town Home.
$710 per month
1/2 off 1st months rent
2 Br 1 Ba Apt
267-6868
Near hospital, $495/mo,
1mo free with
approved application.
912-294-0708
2BR DUPLEX
106 A South Palm Drive.
Rent $600, $500 dep.
269-2469
5BR, 3.5BA.
$1100. 262-1061
facebook.com/
GoldenIslesRentals
GLYNN PINES
Now has 1 and 2bedroom apartments
available in a quiet, senior
apartment community for
those 62 and older.
Applications being
taken 8 - 5 M - F
Call 264-4626 today
for more information.
Large 3Br 2Ba
Duplex
w/garage, freshly painted,
jetted tub in master bath,
covered back porch, quiet
and close to everything,
$850 a mo + $850 dep.
Call 266-4306 or
266-2144 to show.
Little House
2BR 1BA, small kitchen,
living room, dining room,
laundry area, fenced
backyard, central air, all
elec., quiet loc. front porch
3119 Treville Ave
$625 per mo., $450 dep.
4BR 3BA Home
with deepwater access.
Very private,
serious inquiries only.
$1750/mo
912-270-6351
Beautifully
Renovated
Charming unfurnished
1 and 2 bedroom apts.
in historic
old town Brunswick
oldetownrentalsga.com
912-571-6992
No Deposit
(912) 264-9292
Quiet -Like New
US 17 North Needwood Road
16 x 80 2BR, 2BA
mobile home, dishwasher,
walk-in closet, lg. private
lot, water furnished, lawn
maintained, non smoking,
no pets, $650 mo.
+ $600 dep. Call
912-264-1548;
Parker-Kaufman
RENTAL LIST
(912) 265-7711
ONE BEDROOM
2316 1/2 Wolfe St.
1904 1/2 Goodyear Ave.
TWO BEDROOM
1307-D “G” St.
2824 Union St.
THREE BEDROOM
2123 Ellis St.
1504 Monck St.
COMMERCIAL
3395-A Cypress Mill Rd.
3395-B Cypress Mill Rd.
3395-C Cypress Mill Rd.
1612 Union Street
3015 Altama Avenue
TOWNHOMES
ASK ABOUT OUR
MOVE-IN SPECIAL
1, 2 or 3 Br Townhomes
Huge Bedrooms/Walk-in
Closets
3 bedroom 2 bath
duplexes available.
Newly remodeled. Call
912-230-2037 or
912-266-6040.
WESTMINSTER CLUB
APARTMENTS
264-4832
Xtra Lg 1Br Apt
Southend, new floors,
new paint, new stove/
oven, $575 + dep incl.
water, trash & lawn care.
(912)638-0877
261-8400
www.mcgarveyinc.com
2 Br, 2 Ba Home with all
appliances plus washer
and dryer. Very clean.
Glynn Haven Subdivision.
Bob Ghioto
Real Estate Co., Inc
638-3228
Caretaker
Needed
20 acre, secluded,
horse ranch
in Brantley County.
Large Barn, stable,
outdoor kitchen, and
partially furnished house.
$800/month plus electric.
912-399-9472
In Village
1BR Condo
Washer/Dryer, balcony.
Complex has pool,
tennis court, and
workout room.
$775 per month.
Available now, call
912-399-5075
One Bedroom
Condo
Need A Paper?
Call The Brunswick News
Circulation Department at
912-265-1104
912-261-0306
for directions to our office.
No phone interviews
accepted.
Busy Auto
Repair Shop
needs R & R Technician.
Must have own tools
and extensive auto
repair knowledge.
Apply in person at
Boyds Transmissions
912-264-6768
440 General
Employment
Commercial
Office Suites
$350/mo, oversized training/conference room, kit.,
storage area, utilities incl.
Bwk. 223-7832
410 Construction/
Skills & Trades
Walk to Village
Furnished / No Pets
Utilities, cable / $900
long term, Deep water
home with dock
Riverside Dr. $2500
Island Club home $3500
with pool.
DeLoach Sotheby's
International Realty
912-638-0406.
must have own hand tools
drivers license and
reliable transportation.
Please call
Employment
299 Rentals
Painters
Drivers License &
insurance a must.
912-634-3335
2 Housekeeping
Inspector
positions.
Full-time with benefits,
valid driver's license, and
weekend work required.
Prior customer service
required and hotel/ housekeeping exp. a plus.
Apply in person at
520 Ocean Blvd.
or send resume' to
Dancers
& COCKTAIL SERVERS
Must apply in person
ONLY!
Flexible schedule.
Excellent pay for
college students.
Red Carpet Lounge
300 F St, Bwk
[email protected]
Lead Man
Frame Carpenters
and Trim Carpenters.
Paid by experience.
571-1955
440 General Employment
Residential
Painters
Needed
*Local work
*Established company
that is well structured
*Get paid every Friday
*Opportunities for
advancement
Must have
minimum 3 years exp.,
Graphics/Layout and Design
440 General Employment
Rogers Cartage Company
is looking for Class “A” Liquid Drivers for our
Jacksonville, FL terminal.
PARKERS
Management Position Available
Parker's Convenience Stores
***Increased Pay Package
of .45 loaded/ .36 unloaded ***
10-14 days out then 2-3 days home
Must have Class “A” CDL
Medical benefits from $36 - $95/week
Tank and HAZMAT endorsements required
Hourly pay for loading and unloading of trailers
No liquid experience necessary
Orientation and liquid training in Jacksonville
We are looking for a Manager in the Brunswick area
with strong people skills, attention to detail, and
organizational ability. Restaurant experience
a Plus, but not required.
Parker's offers a great professional work environment
with benefits.
Call Brian at 800-507-8848
www.tankstar.com
Send resume by email to [email protected]
or by fax to 912-638-7078.
440 General Employment
NOW HIRING FOR SUMMER WORK
Drivers and Auto Processors at Colonel’s Island
s-USTBEYEARSOROLDER
s#LEANDRIVINGRECORDABILITYTODRIVEMANUALTRANSMISSION
s7ORKSCHEDULESCHANGEDAILYBASEDONSHIPARRIVALS
REGULARLYHRSPERWEEK
s3TARTINGATPERHOUR
47)##ARD2EQUIRED\$RUG&REE7ORKPLACE
1 Bedroom
Efficiency near beach,
deposit &
1 yr lease required.
A DIVISION OF GOODWILL OF THE COASTAL EMPIRE, INC
!PPLYONLINEATWWWGSTARSTAFlNGCOM
or in person Monday-Friday 11 am – 2 pm
Goodwill Job Connection
249 Village at Glynn Place – (912) 342-1106
440 General
440 General
Employment
Employment
Excellent Pay
Experienced
Seeking reliable
individuals to service
existing policy holders &
solicit new clients in local
area. Must possess good
record, personality, and
reliable vehicle.
Management Position, if
licensed. Apply in person
at 3303 Norwich Street
(no phone calls pls)
Commercial
Housekeeper and
Landscape
Maintenance Crew
Members Needed.
Exp. Hair
Stylists
Needed at A New Horizon
Salon & Day Spa. Call or
come by with resume.
Must have minimum
five years experience and
be able to work AM, PM,
and weekend hours.
Transportation, drivers license, clean MVR and
cellphone required
-Please do not inquire
without meeting the above
requirements.
No Exceptions!
Call 265-7857
912-634-0227
507 Ocean Blvd.,
Suite 101A, SSI
Now Hiring
on attitude and training
for success. Clean driving
record and heavy lifting
required. Positive
attitude a must!
Apply in person
4015 Community Rd
Everybody Rents
and Sales
Home Furnishings
Worthy Pools &
Spas Inc.
in St. Simons Island, GA
is seeking maintenance
technicians. Must have a
valid drivers license.
Attendance is important.
Experience is a plus.
Please apply in person at:
125 Gary L. Moore Ct.
St. Simons Island,
GA 31522.
440 General Employment
The Brunswick News is looking for an individual
who is proficient in InDesign, InCopy and Photoshop.
Headline writing skills a plus. The right candidate
should be detail-oriented and creative and able to
handle multiple tasks at the same time.
Send resume and samples to
Hank Rowland, Managing Editor,
The Brunswick News, P.O. Box 1557, Brunswick, GA
31521 or email [email protected]
420 Drivers
287 Rentals Islands
Island Club, 3BR/3BA,
$2795/mo
greatoaksproperties.com
3 Brunswick Locations
1 Month stay required.
Available Soon
912-996-1636
2018 Reynolds Street Renovated 2 Bedroom $525 Monthly
3119 Treville Avenue Central Location-$625 Mo
120 Yorkshire Drive Must See - $615 Monthly
www.RiversideRealty.net
for details
McGarveys
Efficiencies
440 General
HOW MUCH DID YOU
MAKE IN 2013?
ARE YOU SATISFIED WITH THAT?
HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO DOUBLE IT?
MIKE MURPHY AUTO GROUP HAS AN
OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU!
WE ARE LOOKING FOR A FEW GOOD
SALESPEOPLE
NO EXPERIENCE NECCESARY-WE TRAIN
OUR PEOPLE
APPLY IN PERSON TO MIKE MURPHY JR
PLEASE DRESS FOR AN INTERVIEW
MIKE MURPHY KIA
6150 ALTAMA AVE BRUNSWICK GA 31525
912-342-4190
WWW.MIKEMURPHYKIA.COM
440 General Employment
Seaboard Construction
Company
440 General Employment
A Division of Plant Improvement Company, Inc.,
is expanding its workforce. Applications are
being accepted for the following position:
Starting at $550
Riverside Realty
(912)265-4951
410 Construction/
Skills & Trades
Unfurn,
leave message.
Upgraded
Duplexes
292 Rentals Other
912-222-5782
912-265-5645
1-2bed, $450+Downtown
Peninsula Properties
287 Rentals Islands
Seaboard Construction
Company
A Division of Plant Improvement Company, Inc.,
is expanding its workforce. Applications are
being accepted for the following position:
Dozer/Loader Operator
Experience is required.
Job offers life, health, and dental insurance
as well as 401k and profit sharing opportunities.
Salary will be based on experience.
Applicant must be able to pass a physical
and drug screen. Apply in person only at
Seaboard Construction Company,
4745 Hwy 99, Brunswick, Georgia.
We are an Equal Opportunity Employer
and encourage women and minorities to apply.
440 General Employment
Grade Foreman/Motor Grader Operator
Experience is required.
Job offers life, health, and dental insurance
as well as 401k and profit sharing opportunities.
Salary will be based on experience.
Applicant must be able to pass a physical
and drug screen. Apply in person only at
Seaboard Construction Company,
4745 Hwy 99, Brunswick, Georgia.
We are an Equal Opportunity Employer
and encourage women and minorities to apply.
440 General Employment
Seaboard Construction
Company
230-1655
A Division of Plant Improvement Company, Inc.,
is expanding its workforce. Applications are
being accepted for the following position:
2BR 2BA
Water Truck Driver
Unfurnished Condo
Near village
$925/mo + Sec Deposit
Available Mid-May
Call 399-1409
after 6:00
Applicant must possess current CDL.
Experience is required.
Job offers life, health, and dental insurance
as well as 401k and profit sharing opportunities.
Salary will be based on experience.
Applicant must be able to pass a physical
and drug screen. Apply in person only at
Seaboard Construction Company,
4745 Hwy 99, Brunswick, Georgia.
We are an Equal Opportunity Employer
and encourage women and minorities to apply.
Want a
Newspaper Subscription.
Call The Brunswick News
at 265-1104
285 Rentals Brunswick
Eagles Pointe Apartments
Enjoy the Ultimate Living Experience!
Now Renting 1, 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom
Apartment Homes
Relaxed Pool with Free Wifi
Split Floor Plans Perfect for Sharing
Full size Washer & Dryer Available
Easy Access to Major Highways
Call or stop by today for a personal tour.
Some restrictions apply.
104 Eagles Pointe Drive
Brunswick, GA 31525
(912) 265-8030
440 General Employment
Deputy Fire Chief
Hiring Range: $39,780-$45,084
Police Records Clerk
Range: $10.68-$12.97/hr
Performs a variety of police related clerical and
recordkeeping duties and serves as receptionist for
the Police Department Headquarters.
Requires High School diploma or equivalent
and 3 years of clerical and recordkeeping
experience related to law enforcement.
Experience using automated record keeping
systems and other office equipment.
Experience with or knowledge of basic functions,
practices, and vocabulary of general law
enforcement work preferred.
Criminal History Background check, CVSA,
pre-employment drug screening, and
pre-employment physical exam required.
Apply at: Human Resources Department, City Hall,
601 Gloucester St., (2nd Floor) Brunswick, GA 31520,
an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Position Open Until Filled.
www.brunswickga.org
The City of Brunswick seeks interested applicants
for Deputy Fire Chief. The Deputy Chief oversees
the daily operations of a shift, serves as Incident
Commander, and directs emergency activities.
Requires High School diploma or equivalent,
basic Firefighter Certification and five (5) years work
experience in a fire-related management position.
Demonstrated ability to assist in leading, directing,
and guiding the work of the Brunswick Fire
Department. Safe driving record and valid drivers
license. Pre-employment drug screening and
physical examination required. Motor Vehicle
Records history and Criminal Background.
Preferred: Degree or College coursework
in fire science, public administration, and
State of Georgia Fire Safety Educator certification
preferred. Management training and
related certifications also helpful.
Apply to HR Department, 601 Gloucester St,
Brunswick, GA 31520.
EOE. www.brunswickga.org.
Position open until filled.
460 Medical/Nursing
RNs/LPNs
Sears Manor Coastal Nursing and
Rehab is seeking RNs and LPNs for
fulltime Charge Nurse positions.
Benefits include PTO and choice of
Medical Insurance plans.
Apply in person to 3311 Lee Street,
Brunswick, GA
DRUG FREE WORKPLACE AND EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014 7B
BUSINESS IS BOOMING
& WE ARE EXPANDING
3 Record Breaking Years in a Row
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR
• SALES MANAGERS
CALL GREG WEBB, GENERAL MANAGER AT 706-580-4660
•SALES PEOPLE
AGGRESSIVE PAY AND BENEFIT PLAN
APPLY IN PERSON TO JAY WEBB
•LUBE TECH
EXPERIENCE A MUST
•SERVICE PORTER/
SERVICE ADVISOR TRAINEE
OUTGOING PERSONALITY WITH AMAZING CUSTOMER SERVICE SKILLS
APPLY IN PERSON TO STAN LANIER
INTERESTED CANDIDATES SHOULD COME
IN AND FILL OUT AN APPLICATION.
IF YOU HAVE A WINNING ATTITUDE AND WOULD LIKE A
LONG TERM CAREER WITH A GREAT COMPANY,
WE ARE INTERESTED IN SPEAKING WITH YOU.
COME BY AND CHECK OUT THE ALL NEW 2014 DODGE VIPER!
$500 off
any new Chrysler,
Dodge, Jeep or Ram
Can not be used with other
coupons or offers. Exp. 5-23-14
WE SERVICE
ALL MAKES
& MODELS
10% off
10% off
all repairs
all accessories
Can not be used with other
coupons or offers. Exp. 5-23-14
Can not be used with other
coupons or offers. Exp. 5-23-14
Nitrogen For Your Tires
Rotate & Balance
$29.95
$29.95
Can not be used with other
coupons or offers. Exp. 5-23-14
Can not be used with other
coupons or offers. Exp. 5-23-14
CARL GREGORY
CHRYSLER • DODGE • HYUNDAI
5400 Altama Ave • Brunswick, GA
CHECK OUT
OUR TIRE
PRICES!
$29.95
Oil Change & Tire Rotation
w/ 23 point inspection*
*Most vehicles, Appt only.
Can not be used with other
coupons or offers. Exp. 5-23-14
WE HONOR
MOST
EXTENDED
WARRANTIES
8B The Brunswick News / Monday, May 5, 2014
440 General
Employment
Facility
Maintenance
Company Expanding
Floor Techs needed.
Position requires working
evening shifts. Must have
hard floor and carpet
cleaning experience,
have a valid drivers
license, a clean MVR,
transportation,
and cell phone. Please
DO NOT inquire if you do
not have the above
qualifications.
Call 912-265-7857
High Tide Carts
is now accepting
applications for a
delivery driver on
St. Simons Island.
Flexible hrs.
Must have a clean
driving record,
mechanically inclined
and be able to pull
a 22 ft. trailer.
Call our store
(912) 634-2313
or email:
[email protected]
Insurance
Billing Clerks
needed
Experience with both
UB-04 & HCFA forms is
a must! You must have
excellent communication
and organizational skills.
RGL provides a starting
pay of 11.00 an hour.
Benefit package includes
health/dental/vision
insurance/pto/401k.
Apply online at
www.rglassociates.com
or in person at
RGL Associates, Inc.
3536 Darien Highway
No phone calls or emails
please
440 General
Portmans
in Brunswick is seeking
qualified instructors
in guitar, piano
and orchestra.
Ability to teach all ages
and having lesson
experience is a must.
Send resumes to
[email protected]
556 Miscellaneous
For Sale
Painter Needed
Air Adjusters
55" LG
Experience, transportation
and phone a must.
638-6560, leave msg.
is seeking a
full time
Secretary/Dispatcher
who is self motivated
with strong organizational
and computer skills.
Please fax resume to
Flat screen TV HD
LED-with
separate sound bar
912-264-9053
Bradford Exchange
Collectible plates,
Includes Marilyn Monroe,
Thomas Kinkade and
many many more.
Every plate comes
with box and
Certificate of Authenticity.
Prefer to sell them all
as a set but need gone
ASAP $2300 OBO
Unique Building
Supplies
is seeking
full time employees for
our millwork operation.
Experience in millwork
operation is helpful;
what is necessary is:
hardworking, punctual,
sense of urgency,
neat appearance,
team player, willingness
and desire to learn.
Email resume to
[email protected]
444 Hotel/
Restaurant
or apply in person
at 3719 Norwich St.
500 Want To Buy
*DON'T SELL*
your gold, silver, or coins
at pawn shop prices.
Call us. We pay more!
912-996-2378
*WANTED
Rolex, diamonds, gold.
Highest Prices Paid
Redfern Jewelers
209 Redfern Village, SSI
912-638-5314
Bennies Red
Barn
Now hiring Buspersons,
Experienced Waitstaff
Apply in person between
4 pm & 6 pm, Mon. - Fri.
5514 Frederica Road
CASH PAID
for Broken and Working
washers, dryers, stoves
and refrigerators
We also Service all
Brands of Appliances.
Cheapest Rates
Quality Appliance
554-8900
460 Medical/Nursing
PRN
Housekeeping/
Dietary
Medical Facility
Experience
Preferred
Hospice of the
Golden Isles
WE BUY
JUNK CARS $300 & UP
DEPENDING ON SIZE
IF COMPLETED. MUST
HAVE TITLE. CALL NOW
QUICK FAST REMOVAL.
912-996-4037
505 Schools &
Instruction
Piano Lessons
No Phone Calls
Fax resume
to Shontrell Reed
912.289.2045
Music Academy
465 Office/Clerical
Employment
Lisa Hinshaw
Montessori Certified
Piano Instructor
Lessons in your home.
912-571-2400
235
912-275-9787
For Sale
Lots of used
homeschool books.
BJU textbooks and
Teachers Manuals
9th through 12th grade;
several different
subjects
Call 267-6559
between 5pm and 9pm.
$4/pint, $5/pound
912-424-0057
Kawasaki
2004 Ninja 250r,
1100 miles,
Excellent conditions,
$1800
265-3220
935 Autos For Sale
1st CITY
Auto Sales
51 State Auto
51 State Auto
2005 PONTIAC G-6
LUXURY SEDAN $3500 BEAUTIFUL
LUXURY-SPORT SEDAN
WITH AUTOMATIC,
COLD AIR, SUNROOF,
CD STEREO, ALLOY
WHEELS, V6, CRUISE,
CLEAN CAR FAX, AND
ALL COMFORT POWER
OPTIONS. VERY NICE
RIDE!
TEL: 222-2448
LINCOLN TOWNCAR 99
$2200 - BEAUTIFUL
LUXURY SEDAN WITH
AUTO, COLD AIR, CD,
LEATHER, ALLOY
WHEELS, CRUISE,
CLEAN CAR FAX, AND
ALL COMFORT POWER
OPTIONS.
TEL: 222-2448
**REDUCED**
AGAIN
2006 HONDA ODYSSEY
$2950
GREAT RUNNING
7 PASSENGER
LUXURY MINIVAN WITH
AUTOMATIC, COLD AIR,
REAR AIR, CD-DVD
SYSTEM, ALLOY
WHEELS, CRUISE,
CLEAN CAR FAX, AND
ALL COMFORT
POWER OPTIONS.
TEL: 222-2448
912-466-0704
4345 Community Rd
2000 Oldsmobile
Silhouette, leather,
loaded $2500
1st CITY
Auto Sales
LESS THAN
perfect credit OK.....
A/C, heat pumps
installed....
no money down.....
51 State Auto
MAZDA PROTEGE 97
$2200 - SUPER CLEAN
35 MPG ECONOMY 4
DOOR WITH ICE COLD
AIR, CD STEREO,
ALLOY RIMS, REAR
SPOILER, AND ALL
COMFORT POWER
OPTIONS.
TEL: 222-2448
51 State Auto
FORD RANGER 93
$1500 - GREAT RUNNING EXT. CAB PICK-UP
WITH AUTOMATIC,
REAR JUMP SEATS, CD
STEREO, ALLOY
WHEELS, TOWING, AIR,
AND CLEAN CAR FAX
HISTORY.
TEL: 222-2448
261-1922
665 Garage Sales
Brunswick
Entre Nous
Boutique
New Phone Number
275-7108
Correspondence Course
Fresh Local
Blueberries
795 Motorcycles
51 State Auto
Easy to Use
New Ad Entry System
For Sale
Open Thur, Fri, & Sat 9-2
* Donations are
Tax Deductible
BUICK RENDEZVOUS
CX 2003 $2200 BEAUTIFUL LUXURY
SUV WITH AUTOMATIC,
COLD AIR, LEATHER,
CD, ALLOY WHEELS,
CRUISE, CLEAN CAR
FAX, AND ALL
COMFORT POWER
OPTIONS.
TEL: 222-2448
Clothes
Allows you to price & pay
for your ad with a
credit or debit card.
NO waiting & NO busy
signals. Available
whenever you are!!!
110 Burnett Rd/Hwy 341
(across from High Hill
Lakes S/D)
912-466-0704
Free Bible
556 Miscellaneous
945 Trucks & Vans
For Sale
4345 Community Rd
2001 Oldsmobile
Intrigue - 4door, auto,
$2500 cash
NO WAITING!!
on our website
935 Autos For Sale
Store
SINCE 1963
BIG NO WAX VINYL
SALE. Let us help you
with all of your flooring
needs. Free estimates
4644 US 17N 264-8386
912-289-4299
www.thebrunswicknews.co
m
935 Autos For Sale
Brunswick
A-1 CARPET
Bridal, Formal, Womens
Top Designer Clothing
30-75% Off
1505 Newcastle Street
265-0596
665 Garage Sales
51 State Auto
2000 SUBARU OUTBACK $2200 - GREAT
RUNNING AND NICE
LOOKING AWD LUXURY
WAGON WITH AUTOMATIC, COLD AIR, NEW
TIRES, ALLOY WHEELS,
CD STEREO, CRUISE,
CLEAN CAR FAX, AND
ALL COMFORT POWER
OPTIONS. DEPENDABLE DAILY DRIVER
AND GAS SAVER!
TEL: 222-2448
25 cent & up - furniture bicycles, Baby & childrens
clothes $.25 - $.50, etc.
If you would like to donate
furniture, call us and we
can schedule a pickup.
265-0494, 265-5660,
Norwich Baptist
Helping Hands Thrift
Excellent
Condition
51 State Auto
51 State Auto
FORD FOCUS 2004
$2200 - GREAT RUNNING AND NICE LOOKING 32 MPG ECONOMY
4 DOOR WITH AUTOMATIC, COLD AIR, CD
STEREO, ALLOY
WHEELS, CRUISE,
CLEAN CAR FAX, AND
ALL LUXURY POWER
OPTIONS.
TEL: 222-2448
2010 Honda Accord,
25 K Miles, $ 18,940.
Phone 265-3220
PONTIAC SUNFIRE 2000
$1500 - GREAT RUNNING AND NICE LOOKING 35 MPG ECONOMY
-SPORT WITH AUTOMATIC, COLD AIR, CD
STEREO, CLEAN CAR
FAX, AND COMFORT
POWER OPTIONS.
TEL: 222-2448
Buying/Selling
Good used cars & trucks
Lighthouse Auto Sales
2216 Norwich St
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