Good job by Dist. 52
Ninety Six schools outshine neighbors on state report card
November 15, 2006
By
BOBBY HARRELL
Index-Journal staff writer
Ninety Six schools have made Good again in the academic field.
Superintendent Dan Powell announced Tuesday that Greenwood School
District 52 was one of seven districts to make a Good rating on
its South Carolina School Report Cards. No school in the state
made the best rating, Excellent, this year.
Every year, it gets harder and harder to achieve at those
levels, Powell said, adding he doesnt know what the
district can do to continue with a Good rating.
Theres not a whole lot we can do, Powell said.
Were working hard as we always do.
Programs to help students are being tried at different schools,
including the Measures of Academic Progress program to get
immediate feedback.
Thats something the Palmetto Achievement Challenge Tests
dont do.
The MAP test can be administered several times to help target
students weak points, rather than a one snapshot
test like PACT, Powell said.
The five other school districts in the Lakelands Greenwood
School District 50, District 51, Abbeville County School
District, McCormick County School District and Saluda County
School District didnt make more than Average this
year.
Each school and district received a rating from one of five
categories: Excellent, Good, Average, Below Average or
Unsatisfactory. The ratings were based on student test scores,
according to a state Department of Education news release.
Scores go down statewide
Ninety Six has done well in a year when most districts have show
declining ratings. State Department of Education officials said
the ratings declined for the only second time since state and
federal accountability laws were enacted.
Sixty-five percent of the states 1,109 public school report
cards received ratings of Excellent, Good or Average, down from
74 percent in 2005.
Unsatisfactory ratings increased from 6 percent last year to 13
percent this year, the release said.
The report cards show state and federal ratings required by the
South Carolina Education Accountability Act of 1998, including
PACT, and the federal No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, which
includes Adequate Yearly Progress; student-teacher ratios,
dollars spent per student, absentee rates for students and
teachers, amount of instructional time, socio-economic status of
students families and average teacher salaries.
Complete rates for each district can be found at the state
Department of Educations Web site at http://ed.sc.gov/topics/researchandstats/schoolreportcard/2006/.
Greenwood District 50
District 50 rated Average in report cards this year with a Below
Average improvement rating for 2006 and failed to achieve AYP.
The district made a Good rating last year with a Below Average
improvement rating for 2005.
East End, Mathews and Woodfields elementary schools were Below
Average, while Hodges, Merrywood, Oakland and Springfield
elementary schools were Average in 2006.
Lakeview and Pinecrest elementary schools were both Good, while
Emerald and Greenwood high schools fared likewise.
Brewer and Westview middle schools were both Below Average, while
Northside Middle School was Average.
Superintendent Darrell Johnson didnt want to comment on the
districts report cards until today, but said at a specially
called meeting Monday night that there were some errors in the
states report cards, affecting possibly as many as 13
districts.
Those errors were not ours, said Pat Ross, assistant
superintendent of instruction at District 50.
Greenwood District 51
The Ware Shoals school district has been given an Average rating
in its report cards with an Excellent improvement rating. It also
failed to achieve AYP.
District 51 increased its improvement rating from Average last
year while its Absolute rating stayed the same. Ware Shoals
Elementary School scored Average, while Ware Shoals Primary
School also was graded Average.
Ware Shoals High School made a Below Average for its middle
school component and an Average for the high school.
The district maintained its Average Absolute rating even
though the targets were more difficult to achieve,
Superintendent Fay Sprouse said via e-mail. We will
continue to use additional assessments, like Measures of Academic
Progress, to determine student needs and to guide our
instruction.
Ware Shoals teachers and administration are dedicated to
providing a good learning experience for students, she added.
Greenwood District 52
The Ninety Six school district scored Good this year with an
Unsatisfactory improvement rate. It also failed to achieve AYP.
District 52s grade was even better last year, with an
Absolute Excellent and a Good rating.
Ninety Six Elementary had a Good rating, Edgewood Middle School
had an Average score and Ninety Six high and primary schools had
an Excellent rating.
Superintendent Dan Powell said the district obviously wants to do
better on report cards next year.
Abbeville County
The district gained an Absolute rating of Average for the year
and failed to make AYP. Abbeville also had an Unsatisfactory
improvement rating for 2006, slightly less than the Absolute
rating of Good and an Average improvement rating last year.
Cherokee Trail, Diamond Hill, and Long Cane elementary schools
all made Good ratings on the report cards, while Westwood
Elementary School received an Average rating and John C. Calhoun
Elementary School got a Below Average.
Cherokee Trail also took home a Good rating for its middle school
component, while Diamond Hills slumped to a Below Average
rating for its middle school component.
Wright Middle School rated Average, while Calhoun Falls High
School was Below Average for its middle school section. Abbeville
and Dixie high schools both had Excellent ratings, while Calhoun
Falls was Average.
Kathy Stevenson, assistant superintendent for the Abbeville
County School District, acknowledged the Absolute rating for 2006
was lower than last years. She added she would have
preferred last years score this year.
Stevenson said the scores are lower because the state has raised
the bar for student performance again.
On a positive note, she said all Title One schools in Abbeville
made AYP. Children who receive free or reduced lunches go to
Title One schools, Stevenson said.
The district plans to make curriculum changes to improve test
scores, including building more consistency into the curriculum
department, Stevenson said.
She wants to best meet students needs in programs like Gifted and
Talented.
Were continuing to make progress in a lot of areas,
Stevenson said.
McCormick County
McCormick scored a Below Average rating on report cards, even
thought every school in the district made AYP this year.
The districts improvement rating drastically changed from
last year, from Excellent to Below Average.
McCormick made a Below Average last year on its Absolute rating,
as well. The district failed to make AYP this year.
McCormick Elementary School had an Average rating for this year,
while McCormick Middle School was demoted to Unsatisfactory in
its Absolute rating in 2006 after having a Below Average rating
last year and a Good improvement rating this year.
McCormick High School scored Below Average on the report card.
Superintendent Sandra Calliham said its hard to explain to
parents and the public that while all schools made AYP, the
district itself got an Unsatisfactory on its report card. The
district obviously doesnt feel positive about the results,
but report cards themselves are a patchwork of numbers and
figures.
Its a hodgepodge, Calliham said.
Schools met their individual standards, but were lumped together
into sub-groups, which diluted the results.
Calliham commended the schools for doing well and said they will
continue to work on math and English/Language Arts while doing
additional work on science and social studies. The district plans
to use TestView and the MAP computer programs, which are not
funded by the state, to help teachers with assessment of student
learning.
The PACT test doesnt give that kind of diagnosis, Calliham
said.
You dont get those results until the children have
moved on, she said.
The benchmark for school is moved by the state every year.
Saluda County
Saluda made a Below Average rating for report cards this year
while making a Below Average improvement rating, as well.
The district scored the same way last year and also didnt
make AYP this year.
Saluda Primary School rated Excellent, Hollywood and Saluda
elementary schools made Average, while Saluda Middle School made
Below Average and Saluda High School made Good.
Superintendent Pete Stone declined to talk about Saludas
report cards, but commented on report cards in general. Ive
told my board over and over again, he said. The
report card is pretty invalid.
Report cards show details such as how much money is spent per
student, but some children with extreme conditions can rack up
thousands of dollars by themselves, Stone said. The report card
only displays district results in comparison to the 2010 timeline
and goals for the state.
South Carolina should be concerned with kids doing better on the
test than last year and nothing else, Stone said.
As for how Saluda schools are doing, the district was ranked No.
1 from 2001-05 in South Carolina. EOC called to congratulate
Saluda, Stone said.
Oversight board discusses ways to fix school systems
November 15, 2006
By
BOBBY HARRELL
Index-Journal staff writer
Lander University President Daniel Ball thinks getting rid of the
HOSTS program in Greenwood was a mistake.
Having 1,500 volunteers helping students was what the school
system needed, and you cannot put a price on that,
Ball said.
Ware Shoals still has the Helping One Student To Succeed program
and likes it, said Janice Walpole, assistant principal at Ware
Shoals High School. The one-on-one mentoring program targets
students at risk.
But more needs to be done to alter attitudes in the community,
said Janell Alston, director of curriculum services for Greenwood
School District 50.
Change is not in the picture for this community, she
said.
Teachers, administrators and business leaders sought hard answers
about how to improve education Tuesday morning during a meeting
sponsored by South Carolinas Educational Oversight
Committee at District 50s administration office. The
committee is a legislative agency composed of 18 educators,
business people and elected officials appointed to enact the 1998
South Carolina Education Accountability Act, said Wally Hall,
principal at Edgewood Middle School in Ninety Six and an
appointee to the committee.
The act set standards for grades K-12 to reach, including having
South Carolina student achievement in the top half of the nation
by 2010. Hall said that to achieve this, the state will have to
become one of the five fastest-improving education systems in the
country.
Part of reaching that goal involves bringing together local
officials to try to find a solution.
Groups were set up Tuesday to brainstorm good programs, barriers
and answers to the problems plaguing South Carolina schools.
Alston included a resistance to change on the list of things
holding back Greenwood County. A lack of money for education and
a breakdown in some family lives also were high on the list.
Ball speculated students would do better in school if they were
allowed to come in later, get more sleep and eat a proper
breakfast.
We need to look at what we can do simply, he said.
Improvements do need to be made, Hall said. More students must
make Proficient, the third-highest of the four Palmetto
Achievement Challenge Test scores, in the upcoming years.
South Carolina also has an achievement gap, Hall said. There is
disparity in achievement between majority and minority groups and
between economically advantaged and disadvantaged groups.
We would love for all of these to be equal, Hall
said, pointing to a bar chart highlighting the differences
between the groups.
South Carolinas graduation rate is one of the lowest in the
nation.
The state has made changes for the better in some areas, Hall
said. South Carolina was one of nine states to see improvement in
science on the National Assessment of Educational Progress test.
But the state saw decreases in the reading section for the fourth
and eighth grades.
When presenting their findings at the end of the meeting, the
four groups had different answers and problems, but some
overlapped.
Becky McIntosh, vice president of student development at Piedmont
Tech, also said the ending of the HOSTS program was a loss for
the community.
The EOCs Common Ground program is part of South Carolinas
answer to the education connundrum, said Paul Horne, director of
curriculum and program review for EOC.
Common Grounds key goals include getting pre-kindergarten
through grade 20 (college and beyond) education dedicated to
every students success; recruiting educators to guide
students to the highest possible achievement level; placing
students at the center of education and respecting their culture;
fostering the role of family as the primary influence in students
lives; and providing facilities and technology that affirm
education as the cornerstone of a communitys strength.
Educators also must be prepared to think outside the box, Horne
said.
For example, a South Carolina school gave all its students laptop
computers but couldnt run them off the schools power
grid. Educators solved the problem by giving each student laptop
batteries that could be recharged at home and used at school,
Horne said.
Walking tall
Local company has large stake in worlds tallest structures
November 15, 2006
By
MIKE ROSIER
Index-Journal staff writer
Even before it is completed, sometime in the fall of 2008, the
Burj Dubai will be the most imposing structure ever constructed
on the face of the Earth.
Standing at an unbelievable 2,313 feet, it will dwarf the worlds
current tallest building the Taipai 101 in Taiwan
by an amazing 648 feet. The building could contain as many as 200
floors, some residential and some for business use, and will
feature an observation deck somewhere near its pinnacle high
above the Persian Gulf. It will be the ultimate expression of mans
ambition to build bigger, larger and, most importantly it seems,
higher.
But the Burj (meaning Tall Building) Dubai -- located
on the Persian Gulf in Dubai, one of the seven United Arab
Emirates -- would never have taken a step off of the pages of the
numerous artistic impressions floating around on the
Internet if not for an innovative product produced just off of
Maxwell Avenue right here in Greenwood.
Its a product that allows developers the freedom to build
even higher and faster.
Mark S. Mull is the Eaton product line manager of the companys
Busway production facility off Maxwell Avenue (one of several
facilities the company operates here.)
He has been to Dubai and seen for himself the scope and scale of
the construction.
Its very rewarding to be associated with a project of
this size and prestige, Mull said Tuesday. Being able
to be recognized as a supplier there will help us down the line
as a reference, for when this (tower) gets beat by the worlds
next tallest building.
A Busway is an electrical product that is similar to electrical
cables used to distribute power throughout commercial and
industrial buildings. By using epoxy-coated copper bars -- rather
than cables -- Eaton is able to minimize the product size while
maximizing its efficiency.
Its a replacement for electrical cables, Mull
said. Instead of multiple wires you have one bar. For
bigger power systems you need multiple bars. You can also plug in
protective devices, like a circuit breaker or a fuse, and tap
into power sources much like an electrical outlet would do.
As a result, developers are able to build their towers even
faster and to much greater heights. The first Greenwood-produced
pieces for the Burj Dubai project shipped last week.
It saves space and saves installation time, Mull
said. The big thing is that you can effectively distribute
power up through the building and tap off power much easier than
with cables.
Eaton also supplied Busways for the worlds current tallest
building, the Taipai 101 in Taiwan. That success gave the company
more viability in its competition overseas.
Our customers view an American-made product to be of better
quality, Mull said. We were able to provide the large
amount of product they required, and at a competitive price.
The Burj Dubai -- already 75 stories high -- is a massive project
in and of itself, but it is just one of the many large-scale
constructions in the burgeoning development going on in Dubai
City, Dubai.
Eaton itself has already completed several huge orders, including
the Jumeriah Beach Towers (30 high-rise hotel structures, each
reaching 40 stories high), with numerous others in the planning
phase (among them the Burj Mall Hotel, Al Bassam Tower, the Dubai
Airport Expansion and Dubai Festival City).
There are even plans for an underwater hotel in the Persian Gulf
near the other already-completed aquatic developments such as
The World and the three man-made Palms-shaped resorts
(Jumeirah, Jebel Ali and Deira).
With all the construction, there are rumors that somewhere in the
neighborhood of 25 percent of the worlds large construction
cranes now call the Middle East home.
Everywhere you look there are cranes, Mull said.
Its different over there. Over here the airport
vehicle might be an old Chevrolet something or other. Over there
its a BMW 7-Series.
Eatons electrical division has reaped the benefits of being
in the right place in the right time, and with the perfect
product. A portion of the company that once brought in somewhere
around a half-million dollars worth of business now hauls in
amounts in excess of $5 million.
One of the little-known facts about Dubai is that less than
20-percent of its overall revenue is generated from the sale and
production of oil. Instead, the tiny emirate has looked to
tourism and economic avenues to bolster its growth. The results
speak for themselves.
We went from about $500,000 to about $5 million this year
in just the United Arab Emirates alone, Mull said. Thats
just something that we would typically have just looked at
opportunities here in the United States. We had to go outside to
look for greater growth opportunities. There are just areas
springing up wildly over there.
For additional information on the Burj Dubai construction and
other projects in Dubai, travel to www.burjdubaiskyscraper.com
or www.emaar.com.
Fujifilm learns to waste not, want not
Companys sludge will be turned into profitable chemicals
November 15, 2006
By
MEGAN VARNER
Index-Journal Senior staff writer
In a step to preserve the green in Greenwood and
other communities around the state, Fujifilm Manufacturing U.S.A.
Inc. unveiled a new facility Tuesday that will transform some of
the companys waste byproducts into marketable chemicals.
Company officials cut the ribbon on the aluminum sludge and waste
conversion facility at Fujifilms Greenwood complex, which
will convert aluminum sludge a waste byproduct of the
pre-sensitized printing plate manufacturing process into
sodium aluminate and aluminum sulfate.
Fujifilm and its partner company, the Georgia-based C&S
Chemicals, will be selling those chemicals for use in municipal
and industrial wastewater treatment, Fujifilm officials said.
C&S Chemicals is involved in the manufacturing and
distribution of aluminum sulfates and sodium hydroxide products.
As weve produced the (pre-sensitized printing)
plates, weve always been thinking about how to convert the
sludge into a more meaningful product, said Johnny Udo,
director of the Medical Imaging and Screen Products Division, as
well as environmental, health, safety and regulatory compliance
with Fujifilm.
C&S Chemicals Inc. has been in business since 1980 and
is a very successful business, having dedicated over 20 years to
providing its customers with quality aluminum products, Udo
said. We are looking forward to many years of success with
C&S Chemicals as our business partner in this venture.
The aluminum sludge, a chalk-like substance, will go through a
series of chemical treatments at the conversion facility to
become sodium aluminate or aluminum sulfate.
Officials estimate that treating 3,000 tons of aluminum sludge
will yield about 2,000 dry tons of aluminum sulfate and about
2,500 tons of sodium aluminate.
C&S and Fuji have worked together for the past five
years in recycling efforts. With this on-site facility, well
be able to maximize our recycling potential here in Greenwood,
said Rob Chandler, president with C&S Chemicals.
Chandler said C&S and Fuji have a strong commitment
to recycling and protecting the environment, adding the
conversion facility is in line with those values.
The facility will recycle aluminum sludge into aluminum
sulfate, which has many environmental uses in the water and
wastewater treatment industry, Chandler said. Local
municipalities can use aluminum sulfate produced here to remove
phosphorus from municipal wastewater streams.
Fujifilm-South Carolina President Nick Sekiguchi added that
recycling the sludge also keeps the product out of local
landfills.
We avoid sending 3,000 tons per year of aluminum sludge to
the Greenwood County landfill, the county landfill cells last
longer and our partner company, C&S Chemicals, has increased
business, Sekiguchi said. In this case, everyone
wins.
Sekiguchi said the Fujifilm Global organization in 2002
instituted a Green Policy, which has a fundamental
focus on sustainable development.(It is)
something we consider a most important issue for our planet, the
human race and all business entities in the 21st century,
he said. This means that in product development, we must
consider the products entire life cycle, from raw materials
to final disposition.
The Aluminum Sludge Conversion Facility is a prime example
of our approach to sustainable development.
Bobby R. Bailey
Bobby
Rudolph Bailey, 74, of 726 Fairforest Drive, died Monday, Nov.
13, 2006.
Born in Laurens County, he was a son of Olivia Cooper Bailey and
the late Rudolph Land Bailey. He was retired from Moore Business
Forms and was a US Navy veteran of the Korean Conflict. He
attended Sandridge Baptist Church.
Surviving is a daughter, Elizabeth Ann Freedman of Mountain City,
GA; two sons, William Rudolph Bailey of Mountain City, GA, and
Robert W. Bailey of Lakemont, GA; a sister, Gwendolyn Bailey
Saylors Adams of Greenwood; six grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren.
A private memorial service will be held later.
Harley Funeral Home and Crematory is in charge of arrangements.
Online condolences may be sent to the family by visiting www.harleyfuneralhome.com.
Billy Creswell, Jr.
McCORMICK
William Marshall Billy Creswell, Jr., 74,
resident of 302 Virginia Street, died Nov. 14, 2006 at Self
Regional Medical Center in Greenwood.
Born in McCormick County, Dec. 30, 1931, he was a son of the late
W. Marshall and Parrie Watkins Creswell. He was a graduate of
Lander College.
Billy was active in his fathers business, W.M. Creswell
Garage and formerly worked in real estate. He also served as
Clerk of Court of McCormick County and was retired after 33 years
of service from the S.C. National Guard.
A member of Pressly Memorial Associate Reformed Presbyterian
Church, he was an Elder and former Deacon of the church.
Being an avid bridge player, he was a member of Savannah Lakes
Wednesday Night Bridge Club and the Thursday Night Bridge Club.
Surviving are three brothers, George N. and wife, Betty Lou
Creswell of Greenville, S. Reid and wife, Donna Creswell of
Callison and Patrick W. Creswell of McCormick; nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be conducted at 4 p.m. Friday at Pressly
Memorial Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church with Rev.
Eldredge Kelley officiating.
Burial will be in the McCormick City Cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Jeffrey Creswell, Richard Creswell, Reid
Creswell, Thomas Martin, Todd Wall, William Crowell, Brad Kay and
John Hofman.
The family is at the home on Virginia Street and will receive
friends at the church from 3 to 4 Friday afternoon. The body is
at Blyth Funeral Home in Greenwood and will be placed in the
church at 3 p.m. Friday.
Memorials may be made to McCormick County Senior Center, PO Box
684, McCormick, SC 29835 or to Pressly Memorial ARP Church, c/o
Wilma Flanagan, 213 Holiday, McCormick SC 29835.
For online condolences please visit www.blythfuneralhome.com.
Blyth Funeral Home & Cremation Services is assisting the
Creswell family.
Patricia Ann Dunlap
ABBEVILLE
Patricia Ann Dunlap, 41, of 7017 Pisgal Drive, Columbia,
SC, died Sunday, Nov. 12, 2006. She was the daughter of Lucious
and Geneva Dunlap of 17 Taylor Town Road, Abbeville, SC.
Visitation is Wednesday, Nov. 15, 2006, at the Abbeville &
White Mortuary, Inc. from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Services will be Thursday, Nov. 16, 2006 at St. Peters A.M.E.
Church, Abbeville, SC, at 2 p.m. with Reverend Ray Hoskins
officiating. Interment will be at Forest Lawn Memory Gardens.
The family is at the home of her parents.
Online condolences can be made awmort@wctel.net.
Judy Gambrell
HODGES
Judy Kirkland Gambrell, 54, of 401 Due West Road, wife of
Tommy Gambrell, died Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2006 at Hospice Care of
the Piedmont in Greenwood.
Born in Greenwood County, she was a daughter of Katherine
Mitchell Kirkland of Hodges and the late Arthur Clarence
Kirkland. She was a member of Providence Baptist Church and
attended Southside Baptist Church of Honea Path. She was a former
employee of Kemet Industries and Grimes Aerospace.
Surviving are her mother of Hodges; husband of the home; two
brothers, Jerry Kirkland of Gray Court and Charles Kirkland of
Abbeville; three sisters, Myra K. Brown and Janet Kirkland, both
of Greenwood and Kathy Pate of Wilmington, NC; and several nieces
and nephews.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Thursday at Greenwood Memorial
Gardens with Rev. Kile Antone and Dr. Byron W. Jones officiating.
The family will receive friends at the graveside immediately
following the service. Memorials may be made to Hospice of the
Piedmont, 408 W. Alexander Ave., Greenwood, SC 29646. The family
is at the home of her mother, 309 Due West Road, Hodges.
Parker-White Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.
Odessa H. Manley
Odessa
Hastings Manley, 76, formerly of Wisewood Apts., widow of Marvin
Dewitt Manley, died Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2006 at NHC Health Care
Center.
Born in Greenwood, she was a daughter of the late William H. and
Lillie Belle Cannon Hastings. She was retired from Greenwood
Mills, Durst Plant and was a member of Augusta Highway Baptist
Church, where she was a member of the Senior Ladies Sunday School
Class.
Surviving is a daughter and son-in-law, Wanda and David Vaughn of
Waterloo; a stepdaughter, Linda Collier of Greenwood; a stepson,
Charles Putnam of Greenwood; and a granddaughter, Jennifer Vaughn
of Washington, DC.
Services will be at 3 p.m. Thursday at the Harley Funeral Home
Chapel with the Rev. E.A. Cooper and the Rev. Kenny Griffith
officiating. Burial will be in Greenwood Memorial Gardens.
Pallbearers will be Arthur Radcliffe, Russell Brewer, Ray
Holladay, Richard Brown, Jerry Baker, Mickey Boland, Milton
Golden and Glen Kingsmore.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home on Thursday
from 2 to 3 p.m.
The family is at the home of her daughter, Wanda Vaughn, 997
Ridgewood Harbor Road, Waterloo.
Online condolences may be sent to the family by visiting www.harleyfuneralhome.com.
Phyllis Porter
Phyllis
Jean Williams Porter, 76, formerly of 107 Devon Court, Wellington
Green, widow of Gene E. Porter, died Friday, Nov. 10, 2006 at
Ormond Memorial Hospital, Ormond Beach, FL.
Born in Dayton, OH, she was a daughter of the late Daniel M. and
Audrey Moore Williams and was retired from Self Memorial Hospital
Credit Union.
She was preceded in death by a son, Steven Porter.
Surviving is a daughter, Linda Bouffard of Ormond Beach, FL; a
son, Gary Porter of Loveland, OH; three grandchildren and five
great-grandchildren.
Services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at Oakbrook Memorial Park
Chapel Mausoleum.
Memorials may be made to the American Heart Association,
Memorials & Tributes Processing Center, PO Box 5216, Glen
Allen, VA 23058-5216.
Harley Funeral Home and Crematory is in charge of arrangements.
Online condolences may be sent to the family by visiting www.harleyfuneralhome.com.
Marvin Kenneth Rogers
MOUNT
CARMEL Marvin Kenneth Rogers, age 43, of 142 Ike
Road, Mt. Carmel, SC, died Nov. 11, 2006 in Mt. Carmel. He was
born in Abbeville County and was the son of Gennie Rogers
Middleton. He was a member of Spring Grove Baptist Church,
attended McCormick High School and was a logger.
Surviving in addition to his mother are his stepfather, Isaac
Middleton of the home; four sisters, Mable Harris, Jackie
Middleton and Belinda Middleton, all of Mt. Carmel and Mary
Middleton of Calhoun Falls, SC.
Services will be Thursday, Nov. 16, 2006 at 2 p.m. at Spring
Grove Baptist Church with Rev. Roy Andrews officiating.
Burial will be in the church cemetery. The family is at the home
of his mother, Gennie Middleton, 142 Ike Road. Brown and Walker
Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.
CORRECTION
For the obituary for John Paul Rush Jr. in Tuesdays paper, surviving siblings were omitted from the information given to The Index-Journal. Survivors include a brother, Marvin Rush and a sister, Wygenia R. Moore, both of Greenwood.
Greenwoods
Josh Norman has done it all
to help get his team to playoffs
November 15, 2006
By
RENALDO STOVER
Index-Journal sports writer
If you go to the Class AAAA Division II playoff game between the
Greenwood Eagles and the Ridge View Blazers Friday night at J.W.
Babb Stadium, no, thats not Mr. T playing five different
positions on the field.
Josh Norman, a senior on the squad, has shown off his talents and
his creative hairstyle throughout the season for the Eagles.
I cant say enough about Josh and the job that hes
done for us this year, Eagles coach Shell Dula said. Hes
played the vast majority of offense and defense, returned punts,
kickoffs and plays on our kickoff coverage team.
Our coaches have done an outstanding job of getting him
some rest on offense and defense. If you play a guy both ways and
coaches are selfish, then you really get into a problem. Josh has
done a great job because he has gotten plenty of rest.
Selected to play in the North-South game at the end of the
season, Norman is a solid contributor on both sides of the ball
as a wide receiver and a defensive back.
Josh plays full speed. Hes a hard worker and he works
hard while providing excellent leadership by example by playing
the majority of the game, Dula said.
Although he spent his junior year on one side of the ball, being
a dual threat is nothing new to Norman.
I played both ways on JV in 10th grade, Norman said.
I missed it during my 11th-grade year, but this year, we
switched up the scheme and coach Dula liked me going both ways,
so we started doing that.
Offensively, Norman said he has worked on his drive and getting
off the ball to help the Eagles.
Im really facing a lot of jams, so Im just
using quick moves to get off the ball, Norman said. If
the team is looking for me to make a play in a big area, Ive
got to come out and do it for them.
Some defenders try to line up tight and get a hand on him when
the ball is snapped, but Norman said he actually has an advantage
by playing defensive back as well.
Its a big advantage because if you stand somebody up,
then you know which way their hips are going to go, he
said. And if you get their hips turned, then youve
got them beat.
As far as which side of the ball he prefers, Norman is more
inclined to being physical on the defensive side. I like to
be aggressive and go downfield and be physical and see what kind
of hit I can get, Norman said. Hes one in a line of
family members to suit up for the Eagles.
If youre looking for Josh on Friday night, he wears the No.
6 jersey. His brother Phillip wears the No. 2 jersey, while his
cousin, Zach, wears the No. 30 jersey. Its pretty clear
that football is a family affair when you also toss in cousin
T.J. Baylor.
Yeah, were deep, Norman said. Basically
all my brothers and some of my cousins played when they went to
school here.
If you still have trouble finding Josh on the sidelines during
the game, just look for the guy with the mohawk with the designs
in it.
Im the only one with this style, but to tell you the
truth, I sMid if I was going to do it then I had to go all out,
Norman said. Its really just us as a senior class
being crazy and I think every senior has one, and if they havent
gotten one, then theyre going out to get one this week.
Basically, were just having fun.
Dula has no problem with his Eagles having a little good-natured
fun, especially when they go hard every play. As far as his
personal take on the mohawk, Dula laughed when saying he had no
idea about it. He compared it though to other cuts hes seen
throughout his years of coaching.
To me its a little bit a sign of unity and
camaraderie. Of course, everybodys not doing it, the
coach said. I think for our football team and from our
perspective, its just the fact that our kids enjoy each
other so much and its them sticking together, you might say.
Parties,
not the raids should be big concern
November 15, 2006
When
a Greenwood party was raided in August and several teen-agers and
adults were arrested on alcohol and drug charges, the strangest
thing happened. At a time when youd think parents would be
happy that somebody was looking out for the welfare of their
youngsters. the opposite occurred. Some of them - and other
adults - blamed the sheriffs office for raiding the party
and the newspaper for printing the news about the raid and the
charges.
Since that time there have been at least a couple of other
situations where arrests have been made in similar circumstances.
The latest was last Friday night where nine persons were arrested
and at least half of them were juveniles, some intoxicated.
THEY ARE FACING ALCOHOL and drug charges.
Deputies say they encountered 15 to 20 teens and noticed a very
strong smell of marijuana in the home.
These recent raids could lead some to think that alcohol and drug
violations among teens is rising in Greenwood.
Chances are, though, its nothing new. There have been
indications of this kind of activity around town for a number of
years.
Sheriff Dan Wideman, in fact, said, You have to be careful
when you analyze statistics like arrest rates. Although the
numbers may appear to indicate that our teen drinking and drug
problem has shot through the roof, its more likely that were
just getting better at locating alcohol and drug abuse and
intervening. Thats good.
Everyone in Greenwood should be supporting the effort of the
sheriffs department to solve the problem instead of
pointing fingers.
ITS COUNTERPRODUCTIVE to censure the
sheriffs office for doing what it should be doing. It helps
keep youngsters from hurting or killing themselves - or someone
else - while they are under the influence of drugs or alcohol,
not to mention long-term trouble with the law and/or health.
One thing that should have gotten everyones attention about
the most recent party and raid. That was one sentence in the
report: No parents were at home at the time of the party .....
The overall situation in Greenwood is a sad commentary on us all.
Everyone here should be concerned, not that the sheriff is doing
his job, but because such parties are being held in Greenwood in
the first place. Add to it that so many underage kids participate
and it becomes that much more worrisome. Or should.