November December 2016
Priceless
Honey & Spice
Scrooge
Takes the Stage
In A Christmas
Carol Ballet
& Everything Nice A Missionary Tea to
Delight in
the Lord
Same-day and walk-in care for your whole family.
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FROM THE EDITOR
M
Established March 1, 2000
Jenny Starling Foss Editor
Joe McGlamery
Many stories have been written about Christmas. Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol is probably one of the most widely known. Plays, operas and films have featured the story. Rarely has the classical Christmas tale been performed as a ballet. And never in the Statesboro area. This year Jurijs Safonovs, Director of the Averitt Center for the Arts Youth Ballet program, has created an original ballet to be performed at the Emma Kelly Theater November 18 & 19 at 7:00 p.m., and November 20 at 2:00 p.m. The ballet features students from the Youth Ballet along with professionals from the Neos Dance Theatre of Ohio; a real holiday treat for the community. Cheesecake is a great Christmas treat and there’s no better cheesecake in the area than those concocted by Honey Catering in Millen. Lazar Brown Oglesby and her sister Mary Beth Brown are the culinary masters of Main Street with Honey’s Café, Dolan’s BBQ and Honey Catering. Read about how food has always equaled fellowship for these sweet sisters. There are some great events coming up this holiday season. First Baptist Church Women’s Ministry will host a Missionary Tea on December 4th starting at 4:00 p.m. Ladies from the church and the community volunteer to decorate tables of eight for Christmas. This is the second year the ladies have gathered to share in this fellowship of women supporting missions with a tea party. The Zach S. Henderson Library will soon be home to an extraordinary exhibit of rare documents and manuscripts on loan from the Remnant Trust, a non-profit foundation that collects rare first and second editions that deal with individual liberty and human dignity. The Statesboro community is invited to view the exhibit and participate in special events for free spring semester 2017. The election will probably be over when you read this. In honor of our great nation, I’d like to share a vintage seasonal greeting from former president Ronald Reagan. I think it still rings true today: “Christmas is a time for giving, and as we reach out to family and friends, I hope we’ll also open our hearts to those who are lonely and in need, citizens less fortunate than ourselves, brave soldiers working to preserve peace from the tip of Alaska to the shores of Lebanon, to the DMZ in Korea, families maintaining a constant vigil for their missing in action, and millions forbidden the freedom to worship a God who so loved the world that He gave us the birth of the Christ Child so that we might learn to love each other. I know they would welcome your expressions of love and support.” Have a Blessed Holiday Season!
Publisher
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Erica Sellers Advertising & Marketing Director
Frank Fortune Deanna Keene Adam Pittman Contributing Photographers Statesboro Magazine is proudly produced by:
FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION, PLEASE E-MAIL: esellers@StatesboroMagazine.com FOR EDITORIAL QUESTIONS, PLEASE E-MAIL: editor@StatesboroMagazine.com MAILING ADDRESS: PHYSICAL ADDRESS: P. O. Box 1084 16 Simmons Statesboro, GA Shopping Center 30459 Statesboro, GA 30458 p: 912.489.2181 f: 912.489.8613
November December 2016
Priceless
SC RO OG E
TAKES THE STA
IN A CHRISTM GE
CAROL BA AS LLET March/April 2016 • 45
Jenny Foss, Editor
4 • Statesboro Magazine
Honey & Spic
e & EVERYTHIN G NICE A MISSIONAR Y TEA
TO DELIGHT IN
THE LORD
Proud publishers of Statesboro Magazine, Weddings by Statesboro Magazine, and GSU’s official football program – FLIGHT!
Featured Contributors Frank Fortune Frank is the national award winning freelance photographer who holds the distinction of shooting 17 years’ worth of covers for Statesboro Magazine. He retired from Georgia Southern after having been responsible for capturing the University’s history on film and video for 30 years. Throughout his career Frank’s enjoyed all aspects of photography, including sports, still-life, landscape, and architecture. He and his wife, Mandy, are the proud parents of teens, Jack and Cate.
Heidi Jeffers
Warmest thoughts and best wishes for a wonderful holiday and a very Happy New Year!
Heidi Jeffers is the Vice President of Franchise Development for the TORMENTA FC Professional Development League soccer team located in Statesboro. A specialist in Sports Marketing and Sports Tourism, Heidi joined TORMENTA FC in December 2015, after having served as the Executive Director of the Statesboro Convention and Visitors Bureau for five years. She has over 25 years of economic development experience in logistics, industrial, retail, commercial and tourism development.
TRUE Blue From Eagle Nation is a column brought to you by Georgia Southern University, where we cherish our place in the larger Statesboro community. In each issue, we hope to bring interesting and informative stories to the readers of Statesboro Magazine. Doy Cave is the Marketing Content Manager in the Office of Marketing and Communications at the University, and resides with his family in Statesboro.
SPIRITUAL PATHWAYS Bill Perry grew up in Live Oak, Florida, a small town just south of Valdosta, GA. After graduating from Stetson University, he earned three degrees from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. In 2004, he retired as pastor of First Baptist Church of Statesboro after serving that congregation for 22 years. He and his wife, Margaret, registrar of Statesboro High School before her retirement in 2005, have two daughters, five grandsons, and one granddaughter. Bill has been very much involved in community life in Statesboro. He is an avid reader and has been a runner since 1973.
THE VIEW FROM HERE Ric Mandes, a popular essayist, retired after 27 years as Director of Public Relations and Development for Georgia Southern. His memories about growing up and living in South Georgia inspire his writings. He’s a published author and former newspaper columnist for the AJC.
November/December 2016 • 5
THE THIRD ANNUAL
STATESBORO MAGAZINE’S FABULOUS FAVORITES
NOMINATIONS WILL BE HELD DECEMBER 1-22, 2016 AND FINAL VOTING WILL TAKE PLACE JANUARY 5-20, 2017 WINNERS ANNOUNCED IN OUR MARCH/APRIL ISSUE! WWW.STATESBOROMAGAZINE.COM/FABULIST
Contents
About the Cover Jurijs Safonovs, founding director of the Statesboro Youth Ballet has adapted Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol for the stage. He’s captured here being a Scrooge with Tiny Tim, portrayed by SYB dance student Olyana Deckard. Photographed by Adam Pittman.
November December 2016
Priceless
SC RO OG E
TAKES THE STAGE
IN A CHRISTMAS
CAROL BALLET
THE CULTURE
Honey & Spice
& EVERYTHING NICE
A MISSIONARY TEA TO
DELIGHT IN
THE LORD
A Christmas Carol An Original Ballet by Jurijs Safonovs Written by Jenny Starling Foss
12
Photography by Adam Pittman ���������������������������������������������������������
Honey & Spice & Everything Nice Written by Jenny Starling Foss Photography by Frank Fortune ����������������������������������������������������������
14 IN EVERY ISSUE
14
The Mission Tea Written by Jenny Starling Foss Photography by Deanna Keene ��������������������������������������������������������
20
The Remnant Trust An Echo of the Past in the Present
4
Written & Photographed
From the Editor ���������������������������������������������������������
Calendar of Events ����������������������������������������������������
8
SPECIAL SECTIONS
News & Notes �������������������������������������������������������
10
Look Around ����������������������������������������������������������
62
Transitions ��������������������������������������������������������������
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by Jenny Starling Foss �����������������������������������������������������������������������
28
36 Annual Giving ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 38 Holiday Gift Guide ������������������������������������������������������������������������ 40 Holiday Recipes ������������������������������������������������������������������������������
FEATURED COLUMNISTS Circulation Statesboro Magazine is published bi-monthly (six issues a year) at a $20.00 annual subscription rate by Statesboro Publishing Company, Inc. Standard postage paid at Statesboro, GA. To subscribe, email Statesboro Magazine Editor, Jenny Foss at jfoss@StatesboroMagazine.com or call 912.489.2181. The cover and contents of Statesboro Magazine are fully protected by copyright laws of the United States and may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, without the written consent of Statesboro Magazine. We are not responsible for loss of unsolicited inquiries, manuscripts, photographs, transparencies or other materials. Such materials will not be returned unless accompanied by return postage. Address letters and editorial contributions to Statesboro Magazine, P.O. Box 1084, Statesboro, GA 30459. Copyright © 2016 by Statesboro Publishing Company, Inc. All rights reserved.
Tormenta FC Written by Heidi Jeffers ���������������������������������������������������������������������
True Blue Written by Doy Cave �������������������������������������������������������������������������
59
The Spiritual Pathway Written by Rev. Dr. H. William Perry ���������������������������������������������������
The View from Here Written by Ric Mandes ����������������������������������������������������������������������
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November/December 2016 • 7
Calendar
November Sunday
monday
Tuesday 1
Wednesday 2
Thursday 3
Friday
Saturday
4
5
Rocking Out
First Friday
Little Women
Alzheimers Kick-Off
Open Mic Night
Youth Theater
7:30 AM
5:30 PM – 8:30 PM
7:00 p.m.
Sea Island Bank
Downtown Statesboro
Emma Kelly Theater
Little Women Youth Theater 7:00 p.m. Emma Kelly Theater
66
13
20
7
10
11
12
Veterans Day Concert
GS vs UL Lafayette
Veterans Day
International Festival
7:00 p.m.
7:30 PM Homecoming
Observance 10:30 AM
10 AM – 4 PM
Emma Kelly Theater
Paulson Stadium
Emma Kelly Theater
Mill Creek Park
17
18
19
14
21
8
15
22
9
16
23
Shopping by Lantern Light
8 • Statesboro Magazine
29
Carol Ballet
7:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
Emma Kelly Theater
Emma Kelly Theater
24
25
Thanksgiving Day
TMT Farms Display
Charlie Olliff Square
28
A Christmas
Carol Ballet
Christmas Lights
5:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
27
A Christmas
Opens 6 PM – 11:30 PM
30
26
Calendar
December Sunday
monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday 1
Friday
Saturday
2
3
First Friday
GS vs Troy
Holiday Celebration
1:00 PM
5:30 PM – 8:30 PM
Paulson Stadium
Downtown Statesboro
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Choral Christmas
OTC Winter Break
Georgia Southern
Concert
Dec 7 – Jan 9
Commencement
GS Dept. of Music
9 AM – 11 AM – 1 PM
3 PM & 6 PM
Paulson Stadium
First United
Celtic Christmas
Methodist Church
7:30 p.m. Emma Kelly Theater
11
12
13
14
Winter Showcase
First Baptist Church’s
Chamber Orchestra
Journey to Bethlehem
Youth Strings
6 PM – 8 PM
Youth Chorale
Freddie Blitch Farms
15
16
17 17
7:00 p.m. Emma Kelly Theater
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Christmas
New Years Eve
November/December 2016 • 9
News & Notes
Sponsored by:
J
The Johnson Firm, P.C. Attorneys & Counselors
Y O U H AV E A C H O I C E Attorney Francys Johnson
www.francysjohnson.com | 912.225.1600 | 51 East Main Street
Doing Justice, Loving Mercy, Walking Humbly. — Micah 6:8
Georgia Southern’s 43rd Annual A Day for Southern is Another Success
Pictured (L-R) Kevin Bostian, executive director of Georgia Southern Athletic Foundation; Taylor Thompson, Georgia Southern student and member of Georgia Southern Women’s Golf team; University President Jaimie Hebert, Ph.D., Ashley Hines Ellis, A Day for Southern community chair and executive vice president of BBWH Insurors; Salinda Arthur, vice president of University Advancement; Dylan John, Georgia Southern graduate student and president of Student Government and Gloria Morgan, director of annual giving for Georgia Southern.
Georgia Southern University has had another successful year with the 43rd annual A Day for Southern fundraising campaign, which has raised $1,945,416. This is the nineteenth year A Day for Southern has raised more than $1 million. “At Georgia Southern, academics and student successes are, and will always be, our primary mission,” said University President Jaimie Hebert, Ph.D. “A Day for Southern provides a wonderful opportunity for Georgia Southern and the Statesboro-Bulloch County community to come together to celebrate our strong partnership and help to ensure the continued success of our programs and community outreach, and, most importantly, our students.” Statesboro and Bulloch County businesses, along with Georgia Southern faculty, staff, retirees and alumni, donated to the cam-
paign as a way to show their support for the University. The gifts received support University programs not fully funded through state dollars, allow students to achieve academic excellence, and support outreach centers such as the Center for Wildlife Education, the Georgia Southern Museum, the Garden of the Coastal Plain and state-of-the-art facilities and programs that attract and support research and scholarships. Supporters of A Day for Southern are encouraged to give to the areas at the University for which they are most passionate, whether it is a scholarship fund, a college within the University, athletics or one of a variety of student programs and services. Gifts, no matter the size, can be made year-round through GeorgiaSouthern.edu/GIVE.
Brannen Smith Joins FMB as VP/Commercial Banker Statesboro native Brannen Smith has joined Bulloch County’s only locally owned and directed bank as Vice President of Commercial Lending. Smith brings with him 11 years of experience in the banking industry. Smith is a graduate of the Georgia Banking School at the University of Georgia, graduating as the Graduate of Distinction of 2015 and is currently a student at the Graduate School of Banking at LSU. FMB President Brett Morgan says he is “proud to have a seasoned lender with Brannen’s background join our bank. Not only does he have excellent credit and lending experience, he is focused on the customer relationship, which is a primary goal of our community bank. He is involved in our community and committed to improving the quality of life in Statesboro and Bulloch County.” Founded 68 years ago, FMB is now Bulloch County’s only locally owned and managed bank. It offers a full range of consumer and business deposit and credit services. FMB services are fully available online, and the institution maintains three ATMs, two full-time branch locations in Statesboro, and another in Brooklet. 10 • Statesboro Magazine
Moore Named Vice President for Economic Development Lori Durden, President of Ogeechee Technical College (OTC), recently announced that Jan Moore has been named the College’s Vice President for Economic Development (VPED). Durden was the previous Vice President for Economic Development, prior to accepting the appointment as president of the College. Moore had served as acting VPED before moving to the position permanently. “Jan’s extensive experience in both higher education and economic development gives her a unique perspective. I have full faith in her ability to collaborate, strengthen, and expand the work of the College and the community,” stated Durden. Moore, who previously served as Dean of Students at OTC, also worked with the Bulloch County Board of Education’s Central Office, where she served as Special Education Supervisor/Behavior Intervention Specialist. She holds an Education Specialist degree and Masters of Education, both in School Psychology and both from Georgia Southern University, and a Bachelor’s Degree in Economics from the University of Georgia. Moore’s work experience in education also includes six years as School Psychologist with the Bryan County Board of Education. Additionally, she is the current mayor of Statesboro and the first female city official ever to be elected in the City’s history. She served eleven years as Business Editor of the Statesboro Herald. Moore is an executive board member of the Lynda Brannen Williamson Foundation, serves on the Member Services Advisory Council and the Executive Committee for the Georgia Municipal Association, and was a member of the Georgia Southern University Presidential Search and Screen Committee in 2015/16.
Pope, Morgan, Cromley and Lambert Join FMB Board Farmers & Merchants Bank chairman Gerald Edenfield announced the addition of two Bulloch county business leaders, Jeff Pope and Brett Morgan, to the FMB board of directors. Brooklet farmer Lee Cromley and hotel developer Doug Lambert have also joined the board as advisory members. According to Edenfield, “These four community-minded individuals believe in Bulloch County and will strengthen its future by helping lead its only locally owned bank. We are excited to have them join our board and I look forward to serving with them.”
Boddiford Achieves Third National FFA Finalist Title SEB High FFA Member Named National American Star Awards Finalist Knapp Boddiford, an affiliate member of the Southeast Bulloch High School National FFA Organization Chapter, is one of four American Star Awards national finalists in the area of Agriculture Placement. This is his third national FFA title. He attended the Picture (L-R) Brian Elrick, SEBHS FFA Faculty, Susannah 89th National FFA Lanier, SEBHS FFA Faculty, American Star Awards Finalist Convention & Expo Knapp Boddiford, along with parents Susan Boddiford and October 20-22, in Joe Boddiford. Indianapolis, where the 2016 National American Star Winner was named in his area and in three additional categories (Agriculture Placement, Agribusiness, Agriscience, and Farmer). There were a total of 16 finalists across the four categories, and Boddiford was the only one from Georgia and the southeastern United States. Boddiford received $2,000 for being named a finalist. Previously he won the National Proficiency Award for Fiber and Oil Crop Production in 2013, and the National Proficiency Award for Diversified Crop Placement in 2014. FFA members who have earned their American FFA Degrees are eligible for the American Star Awards. Boddiford has achieved his American Degree, which is the highest achievement level in FFA. Less than 2,000 members a year, out of a membership base of more than 600,000, ever achieve this status. A 2013 graduate of SEBHS, Boddiford has remained affiliated with his alma mater’s FFA Chapter. FFA active membership continues for three years after graduation, and students may either join a collegiate chapter or remain affiliated with their high school as they complete FFA degree and competition programs. He has been active in the Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College (ABAC) FFA chapter, where he is a senior majoring in Diversified Ag with a concentration in Ag Business.
Jaycees Donate $3,400 to Food Bank The Statesboro Jaycees quarterly community fundraiser held on August 6th, “Jaycees Night Out!” raised $3,400 for the Statesboro Food Bank. A ceremonial check was presented to the Food Bank by club members Pictured (L-R) Front Row: Joe Bill Brannen, Kim Forstrom, following the Meagan Johnson, Erica Sellers. Back Row: (L-R) Frank Parker, September 13th Don Poe, Christina Larson, Kyle Williams, Peyton Fuller meeting. Sponsors for the event included Locos Grill & Pub Statesboro, 40 East Grill, Statesboro Millhouse, Gnat’s Landing of Statesboro, Ranco Tent Rentals- Augusta & Savannah Special Events, Alton Smith-State Farm Agent, and BORO DD. November/December 2016 • 11
A Christmas Carol
An Original Ballet by Jurijs Safonovs
J Written by Jenny Foss Photography by Adam Pittman
Just a few days before Christmas Eve in London in 1843, Charles Dickens self-published the bleak story of accountant Edenezer Scrooge, a “greedy and covetous old sinner,” whose name has become synonymous with “miser.” In Dicken’s story, A Christmas Carol, Scrooge is visited by the ghost of his former business partner, Jacob Marley, who has been wandering the earth in chains for seven years because of his own parsimonious nature, and who warned Scrooge to change his greed and selfishness or suffer the same fate. Scrooge is then visited by the ghosts of “Christmas Past, Present, and Yet to Come,” and taken on a journey that changes his heart just in time for Christmas. Since then A Christmas Carol has become a classic reminder of how an obsession with money and profit can kill the spirit of love and generosity, celebrated during the Christmas season together with the birth of Christ. In the 173 years since Dicken’s first published his cautionary tale, A Christmas Carol has never been out of print. It has been adapted for the stage in plays, operas, and in many feature films. For the first time on Friday and Saturday, November 18th & 19th, Statesboro area residents will be treated to an original A Christmas Carol ballet, written, directed, and
12 • Statesboro Magazine
choreographed by the founding director of ized this, I got excited.” Statesboro’s Youth Ballet, Jurijs Safonovs. Since this summer when auditions were A native of Latvia, Safonovs is celebrating held, Safonovs has been working tirelessly his fifth anniversary with the Youth Ballet. to perfect the new ballet. Working with the Hired in the summer of 2012 by former ex- story by Dickens, Safonovs is adding his own ecutive director of the Averitt Center for the interpretations of the classic message through Arts, Tim Chapman, Safonovs came to States- dance. He has created an original musical boro by way of the Virginia Ballet where he score by listening to countless CDs of Christserved as principal dancer beginning in 2002. mas carols and hymns, working to match the The Virginia Ballet sponsored Safonovs’ green dance moves exactly to the movements in the card and allowed him to emigrate from Lat- music. via after graduating from the Riga Choreog“This is definitely a classical ballet producraphy School and dancing professionally with tion with innovations that are interesting and the Latvian National Opera and the Latvian that help tell the story with special effects, inNational Ballet Theatre, the biggest and oldest ventive props and sets, and a chorus of singballet company in Latvia. ers from the Statesboro Youth Chorale,” said Safonovs is trained in the Vaganova method Safonovs. of ballet, a “modern method” started in St. PeHe is assisted in producing the ballet by tersburg 100 years ago. During the time of the wife Jennifer who is helping with choreograSoviet Union, the system of how to teach the phy and staging. “Jennifer tells me what looks Vaganova method of ballet was unionized and best from an artistic director’s prospective. You standardized in all the republics. will see her influence throughout the show,” The Vaganova method is he said. named for Agrippina VaSince Safonovs directs “In our fifth season, we now ganova (1879 – 1951), the and dances in the show have 150-200 dancers in woman responsible for the as Ebenezer Scrooge, he the region from as far away method of ballet taught in counts on Jennifer to help as Dublin, Georgia, who Russian schools since 1921. with the overall vision of have been trained in the VaHer methods of teaching, the performance. In turn, ganova Method of ballet.” training and technique were Jennifer is directed by a combination of several – Jurijs Safonovs Safonovs as she plays the elements of French, Italpart of Mrs. Cratchit, the ian, and other Russian balwife of Scrooge’s employee let principles. The Vaganova Method com- Bob Cratchit, with whom Scrooge eventually bines elements of the French romantic ballet’s enjoys a celebration of Christmas. lyricism and the Italian ballet’s athleticism to A professional ballerina, Jennifer regularly improve the old imperial Russian method of dances leading roles in classical ballets with teaching. the Neos Dance Theatre of Mansfield, Ohio. Famous dancers trained in the Vaganova A native of Akron, she has danced in many method such as Nureyev, Baryshnikov, Pav- productions with Neos including as the Snow lova, and Balanchine, show incredible flexibil- Queen and the Sugar Plum Fairy in the Nutity and extension of movement. cracker. Safonovs has been teaching the Vaganova The role of Bob Cratchit will be played by method to area dance students for the past five Robert Wesner known to many Statesboro years. Each season, his students showcase their dance enthusiasts as the founder and artistic talent with holiday and spring performances. director of the Neos Dance Theatre. Wesner The first holiday performance by the States- has performed here several times with the boro Youth Ballet was the Nutcracker. Neos Company and in solo roles as a guest “The Nutcracker is the most popular ballet in of the Statesboro Youth Ballet. Wesner’s wife the U.S. We have produced it here on a large Brooke, co-founder of Neos, will dance the role scale with great feedback and good reviews. It of a beautiful belle, bringing her own expertise is something we will continue to perform ev- and professionalism into the show. The cast has been rehearsing since August every other year,” said Safonovs. While researching other possible holiday ery Saturday and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 performances for the Youth Ballet, Safonovs p.m. During the weeks leading up to the perforcame across Dicken’s popular Christmas story. mance, cast members will be rehearsing eight “A Christmas Carol has not been done many hours a day, into the night, for the two hour pertimes as a ballet,” Safonovs said. “Once I real- formance that will have an intermission.
Safonovs has reached out to community members to help with building sets, painting backdrops, and assembling props. “A custom backdrop has been built specifically for this show by Gary Dart, who is retired from Georgia Southern and has produced many theatrical versions of A Christmas Carol,” said Safonovs. “Artists Scott Foxx and Kelly Berry, along with the Averitt Center’s technical director Robert Faller, have been instrumental in interpreting the vision for the show. We have had several meetings where we worked toward a perfect look for the staging. I think our patrons will be excited and impressed with the creative affects.” Veteran Averitt Center costumer Melinda Roell is creating new costumes for the cast. “Melinda works very hard,” said Safonovs. “She is very good at translating from an idea to a pattern or costume. She has done this before for many ballets and plays,” he said. “We also borrowed a few costumes from Sarah McCarroll who runs the costume shop at Georgia Southern,” said Safonovs. “We are very fortunate to have a great partnership with Georgia Southern when it comes to lending us period costumes for our productions. Having professional costumes helps to elevate the performance,” he said. “The greatest credit for the performance must go to Tim Chapman” said Safonovs. “It was his idea to look at A Christmas Carol. We were looking for something different for a holiday show and Tim mentioned this story from having seen movies and theater productions. Carol Thompson, our interim director of the Arts Center has also been very responsive and supportive,” he said. “In our fifth season, we now have 150-200 dancers in the region from as far away as Dublin, Georgia, who have been trained in the Vaganova Method of ballet,” said Safonovs. “From the beginning of the Statesboro Youth Ballet, I have been dedicated and committed to classical ballet performance.” His dedication has a resulted in the realization of a new vision – the first live ballet performance of A Christmas Carol to be produced in the southeast, debuting November 18th at the Emma Kelly Theater. S
Editor’s Note: For tickets visit www.averittcenterforthearts.com or call 912.212.2787
November/December 2016 • 13
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16 • Statesboro Magazine
Honey and Spice and Everything Nice
T Written by Jenny Foss Photography by Frank Fortune
They specialize in cheesecake and barbeque. Their restaurants form bookends to the main highway running through Millen, Georgia. The first one you pass headed north through town is a small brown nonassuming block building with a Dolan’s BBQ sign out front. You know it by the smoke and the smell of cooking meat rising from the pit. Further down at the second traffic light, adjacent to a filling station, stands Honey’s, a favorite spot for locals serving down-home Southern cooking on the lunch bar, where you can still get a meat and three, plus tea and dessert for ten dollars. Honey’s Café and Dolan’s BBQ and the very busy Honey Catering are owned and run by sisters from Garfield, Georgia: Lazar (Laz-air) Brown Oglesby and Mary Beth Brown. Both were raised on the family farm, along with 11-years-younger “baby brother” Dolan E. “D” Brown, IV. “D” carries the name passed down from father to son for four generations. Granddaddy Brown is known as Dolan, Dad is Eddy. All farmers. All like to cook and to entertain friends. “Our mama and grandmamas are excellent cooks, too,” said Lazar. “I can remember cracking eggs and making cakes with them, whatever they would let me do in the kitchen.” Lazar enjoyed the hospitality and the festive atmosphere that surrounded meals and special events on the Brown family farm, too. “My granddaddy, Dolan, would use any reason to have a gathering at the farm,” Lazar said. “Dove shoots, fish fries, barbeques, it didn’t matter, any excuse to cook and have people over. We had a “kitchen house” on the farm and granddaddy would cook for everyone, and even use the kitchen house to make jelly.” That early exposure to the hospitality of entertaining influenced Lazar to declare by age ten that she wanted to own a restaurant one day. She worked at local restaurants, LeighAnn’s Wrapsody, the Soda Fountain in Brooklet, and Statesboro Brews, honing her culinary skills. Lazar enrolled in Georgia Southern’s Hotel and Restaurant Management program to pursue a degree, but found that she spent most of her time wishing she was in the kitchen, cooking, testing and inventing recipes. She graduated from Ogeechee Tech’s Culinary Arts Program and worked as the Executive Chef of Beaver Creek Plantation for five years. At Beaver Creek she gained experience in event planning and catering for groups ranging from 50 to 500. After leaving Beaver Creek, Lazar ran a 10-seat soda fountain and her own catering business out of the Charm Barn in Millen. With the encouragement of husband, Johnny Oglesby, a fulltime fireman, Lazar moved to “the station” after a year and a half. She needed November/December 2016 • 17
a larger catering kitchen to keep up with the event bookings that were coming in. Meanwhile sister Mary Beth, four years younger than Lazar, had enrolled in Georgia Southern and graduated with a degree in Hotel and Restaurant Management. “I liked the entertainment and resort aspects of the hospitality industry,” Mary Beth said. “I worked for the Ritz Carlton at Amelia Island for several years. I learned that a hotel is open 24 hoursa-day, 365 days-a-year.” “Mary Beth called me and said she wanted to come home and asked me if I needed any help,” Lazar said. “I told her to come on home and we’d find something for her to do.” Last 18 • Statesboro Magazine
November they purchased Dolan’s Barbeque and installed a pit just like their grandfather’s. Both admit it takes a team to run everything. The sisters have a strong work ethic instilled by their parents and practiced on the farm scouting cotton and doing other chores. “I was scouting 800 acres of cotton when I was 13-years-old,” Lazar said. “I had a summer job driving my Grand Am that we nicknamed ‘Red Dragon’ down dirt roads and through sand pits in my snake boots.” The sisters grew up in similar fashion and have complementary personalities, but there are differences. Of the two, Mary Beth is the world traveler and Lazar is the homebody.
Mary Beth likes structure, answering all the emails, making lists and she doesn’t mind spending time on the computer. Lazar is the free spirit, creative, artsy one. She doesn’t like to sit at the computer, but will do Facebook and takes great photos of their catering displays and other food specialties. Lazar’s trademark is her signature cheesecakes. She has taken five years to perfect the recipe. She has a saying, “If the food tastes good by itself, it will taste even better with cheesecake!” Her cheesecakes are not like New York cheesecakes; dry and crumbly. Honey’s cheesecakes are light and fluffy, sweeter than the New
York variety with a sensational variety of toppings: Fruity Pebbles, Tiramisu, pumpkin, pecan pie, key lime, bananas foster with a flaming top and the best-selling salted caramel, to name a few. She has the standard strawberry, blueberry and cherry glazed ones, too. But, none of her cheesecakes are standard. The demand for Lazar’s cheesecakes has grown and they are now featured in the Daily Grind in Statesboro and Berni’s in Swainsboro. She and Mary Beth are still working on shipping the cheesecakes, but they are so busy with catering, it’s not their main focus right now. They are developing a way for organizations to use the cheesecakes as fundraisers – whole and in individual servings packed into mini Mason jars. It takes five hours for each large one to bake. Lazar can prepare 8-12 at one time. She takes a lot of advance orders. Both sisters agree that presentation is an important aspect of catering. “The food must look as good as it tastes,” Lazar said. “Even if presentation costs more, we go the extra mile,” said Mary Beth. “We take our food very personally,” Lazar said. “We care so much. We both believe in being here when it’s open.” “We touch everything that’s prepared at our restaurants,” said Mary Beth. “Not many owners can say that, but we feel like we have invested so much of ourselves.” That personal attention to detail has gotten Honey Catering noticed. Last year Honey Catering and Café was chosen by the Millen Chamber of Commerce as Business of the Year. Lazar has been featured on The Dish, a culinary TV show produced by Ana Christina of WJBF in Augusta, Georgia. Most recently, Honey Catering was chosen by readers of the Statesboro Herald as Best of the Boro for 2016. Honey’s Catering, Honey’s Café and Dolan’s Barbeque have a website, Facebook page and Lazar has started a blog about her adventures in preparing, serving and creating food. The women’s parents, Pam and Eddy Brown, Lazar and Johnny’s sons Jackson and Jacob, and others of the family get involved in large catering events, along with the restaurant staff and friends. “We have a fun kitchen,” said Lazar. “We laugh a lot and have a good time.” “We laugh more than yell, with this many women in the kitchen,” said Mary Beth. “Food is just a big part of our lives. We’re the kind of people who, while we’re eating breakfast, we’re talking about what we’re going to have for dinner. Food to us means being together.” S November/December 2016 • 19
The Mission Tea
B
“Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer. Share with the Lord’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality.” Romans 12: 12-13 (NIV) Written by Jenny Foss Photography by Deanna Keene
Be Joyful in Hope When Deb Hagan, local realtor and director of the Women’s Ministry at First Baptist Church, was looking for inspirational ways to engage the women of the church in new activities, she brought the idea of a tea to benefit missions to the ladies of the congregation. The Christmas Mission Tea was an event that Hagan had experienced eight years prior at other churches served in the Atlanta area by she and her husband Keith, administrative pastor at First Baptist. A working mother of four, who homeschooled all of her children, Hagan felt that the tea would be a great way for the women of the church to get to know each other better, to share their talents, and to foster relationships. In addition to being a fundraiser for missions, Hagan and the Women’s Ministry committee including Deanna Keene, Mandy Fortune, Christy Earl, Emily Fennell, Amanda Wheeler, Melanie Brady, and Ashley Galo, ask women, some church members and some members of the broader community, to decorate tables for eight in the Christmas theme.
20 • Statesboro Magazine
November/December 2016 • 21
The hostesses are responsible for bringing tion to being the event’s chairperson last year. “She brought extra serving pieces and decplates, cups and saucers, teapots, creamers and sugars, water glasses, flatware, serving trays orations for the ladies to use,” said Fortune. and any other essentials for serving tea. They “She swapped out napkin rings and changed also bring seasonal decorations to form a cen- serving pieces, helping everyone with their setterpiece for the table. There will be 32 tables up. They were so excited!” “Even though there was one theme [Christtotal this year. mas] all of the tables were Last year was the first different. Each hostess time the Women’s Min“Love allows women brought her own special istry hosted the Mission talents for decorating. It Tea in the Perry Fellowship to use God’s gifts in was really beautiful,” ForHall. Eileen Daily of Milmany, many ways.” tune said. len, Georgia, was the event - Deb Hagan This year, Daily’s mother chairperson. is in hospice and she won’t “It was right up her alley,” be able to contribute the said Mandy Fortune. “She did a fantastic job of coordinating everything.” time required to oversee the organization of the tea. Deb Hagan has stepped in to chair the Patient in Affliction Daily, who also homeschooled all four of event. There are a couple of month’s preparaher children, decorated her own tables in addi- tion before the tea that Hagan will oversee. 22 • Statesboro Magazine
Faithful in Prayer “I basically contact all the hostesses and get them signed up. We have a special breakfast about a month prior to the tea to thank our hostesses and to share details of the event,” said Hagan. The fellowship hall is open the day before the Sunday afternoon tea to give volunteers plenty of time to decorate their tables. In addition to decorating, the hostesses will serve tea to the ladies at their tables. “Also we ask all of our hostesses to join the committee in being in prayer for the tea, the attendees, and the beneficiaries of the missions,” Hagan said. Tickets are sold through the Women’s Ministry at the church for $10 per person. Ladies six-years-old and up are encouraged to attend. Proceeds cover the cost of dainty sandwiches and sweets and all the accoutrements of tea. A
love offering is collected to benefit missions. Share with the Lord’s people who are in need. A portion of the love offering will go to the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for Missions, a Southern Baptist tradition named for missionary Charlotte Digges “Lottie” Moon who spent nearly 40 years as a missionary to China (1873-1912). A well-educated woman, Moon was reared in Virginia and became a well-respected teacher and evangelist, laying a foundation of traditionally solid support for missions among Baptists in America. Today Lottie Moon personifies Baptist missions. This year’s tea will also benefit Statesboro missionary Cierra Crowe. Crowe grew-up in First Baptist Church and worked for a time at Berry College in Rome, Georgia, before departing for Africa. At 19-years-old, she is now serving in the Kabowa community of Uganda, with Delight in the Lord Missions. Delight in the Lord Ministries, Inc., is a non-profit organization founded by Crowe. She first visited Uganda for three months on a mission trip during the summer of 2015, and fell in love with Uganda’s culture and people. She returned this year and is spending six months learning the local language, which is Luganda, and starting small backyard Bible studies and a tutoring program that includes after-school snacks for the children. She will return to Statesboro this fall to share her experiences with plans to return to Uganda in 2017. Practice Hospitality “At the tea we ask the hostesses not to promise all the seats at their tables to friends,” said Fortune. “We really want this to be a way for women to get to know others that maybe they haven’t met before. We want to get them out of their comfort zone and into fostering new relationships. We had such positive feedback from last year, we are doing as many tables as the room can hold this year,” she said. “Our desire this year is to allow the ladies to spend more time getting to know each other. One take-away from last year is that we all wished we had more time to visit.” Started as a way to foster fellowship among women, the Christmas Mission Tea also has a broader implication for the Women’s Ministry Committee, the hostesses and attendees. “It’s not all about what you can get out of it,” said Hagan, “but also about what you can give. Love allows women to use God’s gifts in many, many ways.” S
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The Remnant Trust
An Echo of the Past in the Present Written & Photographed by Jenny Starling Foss
I
If you had the opportunity, would you be interested in examining a first edition copy (c. 1729) of Sir Isaac Newton’s The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy? What about Machiavelli’s The Prince (c. 1640)? Would you be interested in finding out what it feels like to
28 • Statesboro Magazine
hold a Sumerian cuneiform tablet from 2200 B.C.? If you are a lover of history, literature or science, then you will have the opportunity to examine first and second edition written treasures from the past when the Zach S. Hen-
derson Library at Georgia Southern exhibits a coveted collection of rare manuscripts on loan from the Remnant Trust. Friends of the Henderson Library, through fundraising efforts like the annual Farm-toTable dinner, are able to help build the ex-
cellent information resources and services for students and faculty at Georgia Southern. The money raised also allows the Friends to procure special exhibits, like the Remnant Trust’s rare books and documents, for the benefit of the wider community.
“The Friends also actively seek opportunities to bring unique and exciting educational programming to the University and the Statesboro-Bulloch County communities. The money raised by the Friends enabled us to contract with The Remnant Trust at Texas
Tech University for an exhibit during Spring Semester 2017 of some of the rarest and important manuscripts, first editions, and early edition works dealing with individual liberty and human dignity,” stated Chief Librarian Bede Mitchell, Ed.D.
November/December 2016 • 29
The Remnant Trust is a public educational foundation that collects the manuscripts to share with colleges, universities and other organizations for use by students, faculty, scholars and the general public. Visitors to the exhibit are encouraged to touch, feel and read the rare books and documents. The Friends will hold a special event when the manuscripts arrive to aid in unpacking the extraordinary works. The Remnant Trust sends a curator along with the exhibit to assure the materials arrive in perfect condition for display. The treasure trove of literary works will be on display at the Library and made available for faculty to use in teaching classes. 30 • Statesboro Magazine
“Further, we are partnering with the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences to co-sponsor six spring lectures in the Great Minds Series. In delivering the lectures, Georgia Southern faculty members will help us to understand the significance and influence of these great works in the evolution of human thought and understanding. The exhibits and lectures are being developed with both the University and the Statesboro-Bulloch County communities in mind, and will be free and open to everyone,” said Mitchell. Several of the lectures have already been scheduled with a location yet to be determined. All of the lectures will begin at 5:30 p.m.: January 31, Wanton Wenches and Nasty
Women Vindicating Women’s Rights from 1792 – 2016 by Anastatia Sims. March 7, Plantation Dreams: Locke, Confucius and The Making of the Low Country by Robert Batchelor. April 5, Tocqueville and American Liberty by Johnathan O’Neill. April 19, Jonathan Edwards, Andrew Fuller, and the Recasting of Calvinism in Fuller’s The Gospel Worthy of All Acceptance (1785) by Timothy Whelan One or two other lectures may be added to the list. To get an updated schedule of events, visit www.class.georgiasouthern.edu or www. library.georgiasouthern.edu. Public school teachers who would like to plan a trip to the Library for students may email Dr. Mitchell at wbmitch@georgiasouthern.edu.
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W Winter Recipes
Hot Toddy 1 teaspoon honey 2 fluid ounces boiling water 1 1/2 fluid ounces whiskey 3 whole cloves 1 cinnamon stick 1 slice lemon 1 pinch ground nutmeg
Warm up with these cozy recipes and festive food ideas for the holidays. Start your party off with a great appetizer or end your dinner with an amazing sweet treat. These six easy recipes are guaranteed to add flavor to any gathering, and were chosen to save you time in the kitchen so you can spend more time enjoying your guests. Enjoy!
Pour the honey, boiling water, and whiskey into a mug. Spice it with the cloves and cinnamon, and put in the slice of lemon. Let the mixture stand for 5 minutes so the flavors can mingle, then sprinkle with a pinch of nutmeg before serving.
Berry Vinegar 3 cups cider vinegar 1 cup raspberries 2 tablespoons white sugar
Combine vinegar, berries and sugar together in a medium glass mixing bowl. Mix gently and pour mixture into bottles. Cover tightly and store at room temperature.
Spicy Cranberry Chutney 1/4 cup dried apricots, finely chopped 1/2 cup brown sugar 1/2 cup raisins 1 cup water 3 cups fresh cranberries 1 Granny Smith apple - peeled, cored and chopped 1 teaspoon grated lemon zest 1/4 cup fresh lemon juice 1/4 cup chopped crystallized ginger 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes In a saucepan, combine apricots, brown sugar, raisins and water; bring to a boil. Reduce heat to simmer and stir while simmering for 5 minutes. Stir in cranberries, apple and lemon zest; simmer for 10 minutes more. Stir lemon juice, ginger and pepper flakes into the mixture before removing from heat. Serve chilled or at room temperature.
36 • Statesboro Magazine
Winter Recipes
Baked Corn
SugarCoated Pecans
1 qt. fresh or frozen creamed corn 1 (15.25 ounce) can whole kernel corn 1 (14.75 ounce) can cream-style corn 1/2 cup sour cream 1 cup butter or margarine, melted 2 eggs 1 (12 ounce) package corn muffin mix
1 tablespoon egg white 2 cups pecan halves 1/4 cup sugar 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon In a bowl, beat egg white until foamy. Add pecans and toss until well coated. Combine sugar and cinnamon; sprinkle over pecans and toss to coat. Spread in a single layer on an ungreased baking sheet. Bake at 300 degrees F for 25-30 minutes or until browned, stirring occasionally. Cool on waxed paper.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Combine the whole-kernel corn, creamstyle corn, sour cream, melted butter or margarine, beaten eggs and corn muffin mix. Mix well and pour into one 9x13 inch baking pan. Bake at 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) for 35 to 45 minutes.
Delicious Pumpkin Bread 3 1/4 cups all-purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking soda 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg 2 cups solid pack pumpkin puree 1 cup vegetable oil 1/2 cup chopped walnuts (optional)
1 1/2 teaspoons salt 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon 3 cups white sugar 2/3 cup water 4 eggs
Grease and flour three 7 x 3 inch pans. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Measure flour, sugar, baking soda, salt, and spices into a large bowl. Stir to blend. Add pumpkin, water, salad oil, eggs, and nuts. Beat until well combined. Pour batter into prepared pans. Bake for approximately 1 hour. November/December 2016 • 37
Giving Back
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When you share a small act of kindness, a smile, or even a friendly wave with someone this holiday season, you’re giving something of yourself. The warm feeling those small acts create for you during the holidays can be expanded. You’ll find that the more you give, the more you receive in peace, love and understanding throughout the year. One way to pass on those generous gestures to others is by volunteering with one of Bulloch County’s many non-profit organizations. These businesses exist to make life better for others who are not as fortunate, to support the elderly and infirmed, to raise money for medical research, and to provide shelter for those who need it most. Keep your giving spirit going year round by contributing to one of these worthy organizations by lending your time, your talents and your needed financial support.
The Food Bank, Inc.
400 Donnie Simmons Ways, Statesboro, GA 30458 statesborofoodbank.org | info@statesborofoodbank.org 912-489-FOOD (3663) Monetary Donations will go towards the purchase of new refrigeration and freezers. Also newly used refrigerators and freezer would be greatly appreciated. We are in need of purchasing a heavy duty, double-axle utility trailer, closed utility trailer, newly used pick-up truck, and newly used box truck. Food needs are cans of green beans, yams, turnip green, clam shells, and food handler disposable gloves, and large paper grocery bags. 38 • Statesboro Magazine
Statesboro-Bulloch County Breast Cancer Foundation
www.statesboropinkpower.org 912-764-PINK PO Box 2983, Statesboro, GA 30459 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sbcbc/ Holiday Needs: Need runners and volunteers for the 2017 Pink Power Run. Go to www.pinkpowerrun.com for more info.
Habitat for Humanity of Bulloch County
201 Johnson Street, P. O. Box 1253, Statesboro, GA 30459 HabitatBulloch.org 912-489-2076 Holiday Needs: New materials to help us build more homes including lumber, plumbing fixtures, heat & air conditioning units, electrical wire, light fixtures, interior doors, siding, nail guns, and miscellaneous tools.
CASA: Child Advocacy Services SEGA, Inc.
515 Denmark Street, Statesboro, GA 912-764-4849 casaogeechee.org Holiday needs: We need volunteers and donations. The median cost to provide a CASA volunteer to one child is $1070 per year. To make a donation call 912-764-4849 or visit casaogeechee.org
United Way of Southeast Georgia
www.unitedwaysega.org 912-489-8475 515 Denmark St. Suite 2300, Statesboro, GA 30458 Holiday Needs: For the community to support us financially so that we, in turn, can provide the financial assistance to our partner agencies including American Red Cross, Boys & Girls Club of Bulloch County, Boy Scouts of America, and Food Bank. Visit our website for a full list of partners.
Safe Haven
P.O. Box 2494, Statesboro, GA safehavenstatesboro.org Safe Haven is a program of Citizens Against Violence, Inc., a nonprofit, 501(c)(3) corporation. It is the emergency safe house for adult and child victims of domestic violence serving Bulloch, Candler, Effingham, Jenkins, Screven and Washington counties. Holiday needs: toiletries and cleaning supplies, monetary and clothing and home furnishing donations.
Statesboro Regional Art Association statesbororegionalart.com Averitt Center for the Arts 33 East Main Street, Statesboro, GA
Holiday needs: The SRAA presents a silent auction of original art created by local artists to benefit the Humane Society of Statesboro and Bulloch County on Saturday, February 4, 2017 from 7-9 pm at the Averitt Center for the Arts, third floor gallery. Tickets are $12 per person and may be purchased in advance on First Friday Jan. 6 and Feb. 3, 2017, at the Averitt Center, or at the event on Feb. 4
American Cancer Society, Inc.
201 South Main Street|Suite A, Statesboro, GA 30458 912-764-7410|800-227-2345 | www.cancer.org Holiday needs: Relay teams/Corporate Sponsors/Office Volunteers/Holiday Memorials for your special loved one. Sign up for the April 28, 2017 event. For more information contact Kay Nay at 912-764-7410 or kay.nay@cancer.org. November/December 2016 • 39
e h T y a d i l Ho t f i G e d i u G 2016
40 • Statesboro Magazine
Bernard’s Jewelers 23999 Hwy 80 East | Statesboro, GA 30458 912-764-5379 | www.bernardsjewelers.net Item A. Beloved Disney Princess films inspired the creation of this collection. From Cinderella’s carriage to the rose from Beauty and the Beast, every piece gives a graceful nod to these magical stories. No matter how old you are, you never stop dreaming of being a Princess, and now it’s your turn. Item B. Wide selection of Citizen Watches available.
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Savannah Music Festival 912-525-5050 www.savannahmusicfestival.org Item C. Give the Gift of Live Music! Tickets and gift cards for the 2017 season are now available! The 2017 festival will be held March 23 – April 8, 2017. Call the box office today at 912-525-5050 or visit our website at www.savannahmusicfestival.org to get your tickets!
Azure’s Gourmet & Sweets statesboromarket2go.locallygrown.net Item D. Azure’s Gourmet & Sweets Pecan Pralines can be purchased and they make great stocking stuffers for Christmas! Visit Azure at the Farmers Market on Saturdays in Downtown Statesboro, also!
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Split Ends Salon 301 S. Zetterower Ave. | Statesboro, GA 912-489-2642 Item E. Explore our REDKEN Products! Find haircare and hairstyling products for every type of hair.
November/December 2016 • 41
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Walker Boutique 2425 Northside Drive West (Hwy. 80), Statesboro 912-764-4438 1198 Merchants Way, Statesboro | 912-623-2080 114 B Parker Avenue, Brooklet | 912-842-9886 www.WalkerBoutique.com Item A. Fall in love with our new arrivals! Shop in store and online. Item B. We carry a variety of handbag collections such as this Brighton Bag to express your personal style. Item C. Tyler Boe is a refreshingly chic collection of sportswear designed for today’s modern, yet refined woman. Creations are driven by color, enhanced by the touch and feel of each garment. Item D. Kendra Scott Jewelry uses captivating color and unique designs to create a look that’s luxurious at an affordable price for every woman and every occasion. Whether on the soccer field or a black tie event, Kendra Scott Jewelry designs offer something for every lifestyle. Item E. We carry designer bracelets, necklaces, earrings and Designs by Devra. If the options are too many, we offer gift cards for your special someone.
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University Store • 912-478-5181 • www.gsustore.com 91 Georgia Ave. | Statesboro, GA 30458 Item A. Navy Gus beanie 21.99 | Navy and white stripe scarf with logo 22.99 Item B. Grey, gold and navy ear band with logo 15.99 | Navy and gold stripe Gus ear band 15.99 Item C. Georgia Southern logo ornament 24.99 | Gold Sweetheart Circle ornament 29.99 Item D. Rooftop Santa Georgia Southern ornament 34.99 | Snowman with Eagles scarf and top hat 32.999 Item E. Navy and gold stocking 38.99 | Squishem bear with scarf 24.99 Item F. 3 Piece logoed grill set 49.99 | Navy GS mug with academic logo 14.99 November/December 2016 • 43
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Brer Rabbit in Bulloch County Walking the Back Roads Story & Illustrations by Drew Cottril Books are available at the Averitt Center Rosengart Gallery located at 41 West Main Street, Statesboro, drewcottril.com, and on Amazon Books. Item A. Brer Rabbit in Bulloch County is a fun book on walking the back roads and the folks one meets. One Amazon Book review stated “Brer Rabbit is a friend. This is a fun, delightful book with not only a great story line, but important things are said with engaging characters. It is not a “spiritual” book, but TRUTH is clearly expressed. Everyone of us is “odd” and “unique,” yet can get along beautifully, enjoy great friends, enjoy our surroundings...enjoy life. Thank you, Drew, loved every bit of Brer Rabbit.”
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Renasant Bank 173 Northside Drive E. | 912-489-9500 335 South Main Street | 912-764-8900 www.renasantbank.com Item B. Ask about our Visa® Gift Cards and let them choose what they want.
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Professional Eye Care Vision Source 214 Savannah Avenue | Statesboro, GA 30458 912-764-5609 | www.visionsource-drdeal.com Item C. Choose from a wide variety of fashion-forward frames Item D. Sunglasses make a great gift for that person who has everything in your life Item E. Find high-quality, name-brand frames to fit your individual style 44 • Statesboro Magazine
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Colonial House of Flowers 100 Brampton Ave., Suite 1i www.colonialhouse.net 912-764-6097 Item A. Olive tree in Terracotta cash pot, $19.95 Item B. Library of Flowers Collection, American Small Batch Perfumery Bottled by Margot Elena
Southern Family Dental Group 108 Gentilly Road | Statesboro, GA 30458 912-764-6861 | www.southernfamilydentalgroup.com Item D. Sonicare - $200 (depends on model) Item E. Teeth Whitening valued at $300
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Averitt Center for the Arts Rosengart Gift Shop and Gallery www.averittcenterforthearts.org/ rosengart-gallery 912-212-2786 | 41 West Main Street | Statesboro, GA Item C. Shop the Rosengart Gallery & Fine Arts to find local fine arts, foods, music, books, and more! Hours are Tuesday through Friday 10AM – 6PM and Saturday 10AM – 4PM.
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Braswell Food Company 226 North Zetterower Ave | Statesboro GA 30458 912-764-6191 | www.braswells.com Item F. Variety of corporate baskets, holiday party hostess gifts, and specialty preserves, jams, jellies, fruit butters, honey, salad dressings, marinades, wine sauces, mustards, relishes, condiments, and teas.
November/December 2016 • 45
Lori Grice Photography 34 East Main Street | Statesboro, GA 912-764-7274 | www.lorigrice.com Item A. Gift Certificates – Everyone on your list would love a Lori Grice gift certificate. A creative gift that keeps on giving!
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TC Outdoors 1242 Northside Drive East | Statesboro, GA 30458 912-489-3474 | www.tc-outdoors.com Item B. The Benelli sweatshirt, $59.99 Item C. Calcutta Travelers: $24.99 for 30 oz ; $19.99 for 20 oz
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The Warehouse 8550 US-301, Statesboro, GA 912-681-4465 Item D. Everything to decorate your home! We have furniture, fabric, and flooring! Call us or visit our show room for free estimates and instock and special ordering Item E. We offer a variety of home décor and home statement pieces.
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46 • Statesboro Magazine
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Bright Ideas 1410 Northside Drive East 912-764-9288 Item A. We carry a variety of home furnishings and décor for every room in your home. Item B & C. Home accessories and gifts for all occasions! Item D. Bright Ideas has all your lighting needs. Visit our showroom!
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Savannah Plastic Surgery Located in Statesboro Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and Dental Implant Center 4451 Country Club Road, Suite B | Statesboro, GA 30458 Dr. Carl Pearl available Wednesdays 1:30 pm – 4:30 pm 1-800-424-8478 | www.savannahplasticsurgery.com Item E. BOTOX ® Cosmetic is the only approved treatment to temporarily improve the appearance of both moderate to severe frown lines between the brows and crow’s feet lines in adults. Call for our Holiday special! Item F. Coolsculpting® - Unique technology uses controlled cooling to freeze and eliminate unwanted fat cells without surgery or downtime. The procedure is FDA-cleared, safe, and effective. The results are lasting and undeniable. G
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Stella 1098 Bermuda Run, Statesboro, GA 912-681-7008 Item G. Shop Stella style with a Boho-Chic collection of clothing and accessories. Get your bling on with our favorite rings, bracelets, and statement necklaces and pair with the perfect boot or sneaker!
November/December 2016 • 47
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The Recovery Book, 2nd Edition Willingway 311 Jones Mill Rd. | Statesboro, GA 30458 912-764-6236 | www.willingway.com Item A. Give the gift of The Recovery Book this holiday season! The Recovery Book, written by Dr. Al Mooney, is available for purchase. Visit willingway.com’s online recovery store to order.
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L.A. Waters Furniture & Mattress Center 300 Lovett Rd. & Downtown Statesboro 912-764-5431 | 800-468-6925 www.lawaters.com Item B. Smith Brothers of Berne Swivel Glider Reclining Chair in Leather and Antique Brass Item C. Start sleeping better tonight with Serta iComfort mattress with adjustable base. Visit our showroom!
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Georgia Citrus www.georgiacitrus.com statesboromarket2go.locallygrown.net Item D. Share the taste of Bulloch County Grown Citrus with out of town Family and Friends. Visit Georgia Citrus at the Farmers Market on Saturdays in Downtown Statesboro and via the Market To Go our website.
48 • Statesboro Magazine
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H.L. Franklin’s Healthy Honey Pure, Raw, & Unfiltered Local Honey 127 N. Main St., Suite 101 Statesboro GA 30458 www.franklinfoodsllc.com 800.260.4995 Item A. 5 oz gift jars, $6. Visit our website for additional gift ideas!
May June 2016
July August 2016
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September October 2016
Priceless
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Statesboro Magazine 16 Simmons Shopping Center |Statesboro, GA 912-489-2181 www.statesboromagazine.com Item B. Give the give of community this holiday season with a subscription to Statesboro Magazine. Whether local or afar, if they love Statesboro, they’ll love Statesboro Magazine!
Happy Holidays!
November/December 2016 • 49
This little triumph over knee pain brought to you by Optim Orthopedics.
Knee pain can steal the rhythm from our regular routines. At Optim Orthopedics, we have the region’s largest team of specialists in modern, minimally-invasive and non-surgical joint procedures. Call us so we can help relieve your knee pain and get you back to you. And into great shape. 50 • Statesboro Magazine
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We make appointments available fast.
Looking for a doctor who can see you quickly? We can help! At East Georgia Primary Care, we often can see you on the same day you call us. We treat adults, providing preventive care, treating routine illnesses and helping patients manage serious chronic conditions such as diabetes, heart disease and COPD. To schedule an appointment, call 912-764-2273 and ask about same-day appointments. Mark Crick, M.D. Board Certified in Internal Medicine
4451 Country Club Road, Suite 3A Statesboro East Georgia Regional Medical Center is owned in part by physicians. Member of the Medical Staff at East Georgia Regional Medical Center.
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Check Out All of the Great Events From the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences at Class.Georgiasouthern.edu November/December 2016 • 53
Christ mas at First Bapt ist
ourney to JBETHLEHEM
Celebrate Christmas with the Music and Worship Ministries of First Baptist Statesboro. Enjoy an evening of music and stories about the birth of Jesus Christ. Worship Center Sunday, December 13th at 6:30 pm
Journey to Bethlehem
Step back in time Wednesday, December 16 from 6:00 pm-8:00 pm to experience in to experience life in Bethlehem, complete with a live Step backlife in time nativity. An outdoor experience designed for families of young children. Bethlehem, complete Freddie Blitch Farms with a live nativity. An (Follow the lighted directional signs from Veteran’s Parkway at Westside Road) outdoor experience designed for families of Christmas Eve Services young children. Family Service at 5:00 pm Freddie Blitch Farms by The Christmas Story in Scripture & Carols: A Live Nativity Pageant presented th 6:00-8:00 PM (Follow the lighted directional the FBC 4 Graders. signs from Veteran’s Parkway at Wednesday, Candlelight Communion Service at 6:30 pm No childcare provided for either service. Services in the Worship CenterRoad) December 14, 2016 Westside
Shop Local for the Holidays! Tues.–Fri.: 10 – 6 Saturday: 10 – 4 Closed Sunday & Monday
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Downtown, Sylvania December 1, 2016, 5:00PM - 8:00PM Registration and Vendor Information: 912.564.7878 or info@screvencounty.com Presented By: Screven County Chamber of Commerce and Sylvania’s Better Hometown www.screvencounty.com November/December 2016 • 55
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TormentaFC s Heidi Jeffers
Tormenta FC Sets the Bar for PDL Soccer Marketing
I
If you wore magenta, waved a scarf, sat in the stands, or got an autograph from a Tormenta FC player this season, chances are you were engaged by the Franchise Development Team. The team of marketing professionals on staff with Tormenta FC created quite a stir in the Premier Development League this season by engaging fans with intense sports marketing campaigns aimed at creating a fantastic fan base and a first-class soccer franchise for Statesboro and the southeast. To accomplish its mission, The Development Team works within the realms of sports tourism and sports entertainment, sharing games, promotions and special events through social media, print, radio, television and digital marketing outlets. Tormenta FC uses these resources to release player interviews, game day news and fan updates resulting in over 2,000,000 marketing impressions on Facebook and Twitter in 2016. All markets played a huge role in reaching Tormenta FC’s goal of promoting a soccer lifestyle in Statesboro. A pacesetter in marketing in the Premier Development League, Tormenta FC creates ways for social media users around the world to connect with team players, coaches, and the Statesboro community. Events, press conferences, interviews, news and magazine articles, video interviews, radio and television coverage are used in conjunction with social media to raise awareness of the team.
The Tormenta FC Development Team knows that in order to create a profound, legitimate feel and passion towards the game of soccer, utilizing these resources to the fullest is a must. Local media partners helped to frame the 2016 inaugural soccer season as a major new component of sports in the Southeast region. During games this season, the Development Team employed social media as a way for fans to access live play-by-play updates. Important plays during home and away games were posted live on Twitter, (scores, shots, saves, yellow/ red cards, substitutions, injuries, etc.). Videos of exciting plays and goals on social media created a play-by-play feel for followers. Tormenta FC understands the power of video promotion in today’s changing and expanding markets. Filming over 100 video segments to date; each video was carefully edited as a whole to make best use for all marketing
outlets and social opportunities. Through video promotion, Tormenta FC showcased all aspects of the franchise. From announcing the franchise debut to a 2017 season forecast, the team provides and markets video opportunities through television, livestream broadcasts, websites, and social media outlets. Stay tuned for exciting events in November with Tormenta FC on Facebook and @TormentaFC on Twitter. The Ibis Cup will bring in soccer talent from all over the Southeast on November 12-13. Watch for the Fabulous Fan Trivia Nights in November and December. Don’t forget about our early-bird season ticket prices for the 2017 season; special prices last until December 1st. Player tryouts are just around the corner; Tormenta FC will be hosting its first tryout on December 17th in Statesboro. For more FAN-tabulous soccer fun, visit www.TormentaFC.com. Remember -- PROS START HERE! November/December 2016 • 57
T F I G a s i n o i t a Educ . y a w a e k a t n that none ca n Proverb — America
True Blue GS s Doy Cave
It Doesn’t Take a Fortune to Make a Difference
O One of the biggest obstacles to philanthropy is the idea that you aren’t wealthy enough to make a significant impact on the world. Christopher Johnston, associate vice president of Trusts, Estates and Gift Planning at Georgia Southern University, has spent a great deal of his career dispelling this notion. “When we say in philanthropy, ‘There is no gift too small,’ we truly mean that,” he said. Johnston provides potential donors with a variety of giving options that allow them to provide for themselves during their lifetimes, as well as for their families’ and their favorite philanthropic organizations’ in the future. He deals specifically with estate gifts that are realized after the donor’s death. While these gifts usually involve careful consideration and planning, they
aren’t reserved for older donors. “You can live very, very well while you’re here on this earth, but when you go, you can’t take it with you,” he said. “Do you want the government to take a large portion of that? Or the state? Or would you prefer that you strategically plan where it goes through a legacy gift that will benefit your family as well as your philanthropic organization?” Sara Alice Bradley Darby, who passed away in February of 2015, wasn’t considered a wealthy woman, but she left the University a very special gift in memory of her parents. Darby attended Georgia Southern in the ‘40s, back when it was known as Georgia Teachers College, and was very involved in service organizations and social clubs. She was known as a
vivacious and friendly person, with an eclectic sense of fashion, and loved her time as a student. After graduation, she married her childhood sweetheart, Robert Darby, who became an architect. The two spent the bulk of their lives in Jacksonville, Florida, where they raised two sons and were active in the community. For more than 15 years, Darby put away money each month toward investments to benefit the University, and to remember her parents, who taught her the value of an education. Her father, Cliff Bradley, intensely believed in education, and faced many obstacles in obtaining his own. After a flu epidemic killed his father, his mother and most of his siblings, Bradley lived with relatives in Leefield, Georgia, working on their family farm. He didn’t have the resources to attend school, so he walked more than 12 miles from Leefield to Statesboro to meet with Ernest V. Hollis, president of Georgia Southern, then known as First District A&M School. Hollis allowed Bradley to earn his education by working several on-campus jobs to cover his tuition and board. And though he didn’t finish his degree at the school in order to raise his family, Bradley was a lifelong learner who impacted the generations that followed him. “Both of them, especially my grandfather, thought that education was of premier importance to anybody,” said F. Leonard Darby, Bradley’s grandson. “He did everything he could to have an education at Georgia Southern.” Before her death, Sara Alice stipulated that her investments, which had grown considerably over time, be given to Georgia Southern and used for students like her father, who didn’t have the money to cover the cost of their education. Darby, who oversaw his mother’s estate, worked with Johnston to create the A.C. Bradley and Wildred Donaldson Bradley Scholarship, which will benefit qualifying students from Bulloch County studying agriculture or sustainability related fields in the biological sciences. In addition, part of the funds were used to create an award of the same name, which will support local students engaged in work at the Georgia Southern Botanic Garden. For Sara Alice and donors like her, Johnston says philanthropy is as simple as finding your passion, finding the possibilities and finding a place to give. A popular way to leave a gift is to leave a bequest in a will or list the organization as a beneficiary in a trust, retirement account or life insurance policy. There are so many ways to give, no matter your income bracket. You don’t need a fortune to make a difference — a truly lasting difference — in someone’s life. November/December 2016 • 59
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The Spiritual Pathway s Rev. Dr. H. William Perry
Keeping Christmas Uncluttered
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A small church in a little town needed new hymnals, and didn’t have the money to purchase them. In a deacons’ meeting the decision was made to see if the local merchants would contribute funds so new hymnals could be bought. The pastor and chair of the deacons were appointed to go and talk with the storeowners. They went first to Rountree Pharmacy and were shocked when the druggist agreed to buy all the hymnals they needed, on one condition: that he be allowed to place advertisements in the hymnals. Upon reporting this condition to the deacon group, a full-blown discussion, exploring the pros and cons, ensued. Since the church was
desperate for the new hymnals, they agreed that the pharmacy could put advertisements in them. When the pastor and deacon reported the decision, the pharmacist promised they would have the hymnals by Christmas. The day before the Christmas service, the box of hymnals arrived. The pastor glanced through them, and was surprised to see no advertising. But the next morning when the congregation turned to the first Christmas carol, here’s what they sang: Hark! the herald angels sing, Rountree’s pills are just the thing; Peace on earth and mercy mild; two for adults and one for a child.
Do I need to remind you that it’s easy for other things to get all mixed up at Christmas? Sometimes it’s little things, like what can happen in the Christmas pageant. I heard about one pageant where a boy, Ralph, was disgruntled because he was not selected to play the part of Joseph. He reluctantly agreed to be the innkeeper. But with revenge on his mind, he made this reply when Joseph knocked on the inn’s door seeking a room. “Sure, come on in, we have plenty of room!” Not to be outdone, Joseph walked in, took a look around, and shook his head, saying, “Stay in this dump? I’d rather stay in a stable!” In another pageant the angel forgot her lines. She was supposed to say, “Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy,” but ended up saying, “Hey, have I got good news for you!” That’s a pretty good comeback. I like to hear what the children say when they try to remember the gifts the Wise Men brought to Jesus. Instead of calling them “gold, frankincense, and myrrh” most anything is liable to come out of young mouths. My favorites are “gold, commonsense, and fur,” and “gold, Frankenstein, and mermaids.” Worse than mixing up the words of Christmas carols and pageants, is how we get all mixed up on what Christmas is all about. The primary message of Christmas is that from beyond time and space God has entered human history in the form of a baby born in a stable to a humble couple in an obscure village outside of Jerusalem. God entered our history because of His love for all people. So He came on a mission. He invites us to experience personal fulfillment through a personal relationship with this baby who grew up to be a man, Jesus. As was true in the first century, our responses are to be wonder, joy, peace, love, and awe; but none of this comes to pass unless we take opportunities to get back to the basics.I’m reminded of the story I heard years ago of the wealthy couple who had their first baby. They were so happy they invited scores of their friends to come to their mansion for a special celebration that would involve the baby’s christening. When their minister arrived and it was time for the ceremony, they couldn’t find the baby. Everyone panicked, and they looked everywhere. Finally the nanny found the baby on the bed in the guestroom under the coats and furs and pocketbooks and scarves of the guests. Be careful during this holiday season, for your own clutter may cover up the world’s most significant baby. And that clutter could cause you to miss the reason for the season. November/December 2016 • 61
LOOK AROUND Bulloch First Bank Groundbreaking Market District 10:00 a.m. Friday, September 30, 2016 Photography by Jeremy Wilburn
62 • Statesboro Magazine
LOOK AROUND Roxie Remley Fine Arts Center Grand Opening 5:00 p.m. Friday, September 9, 2016 Photography by Jenny Foss
November/December 2016 • 63
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64 •hgr_statesboro.ad_final.indd Statesboro Magazine 1
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Mobility, function, freedom await you. Stop by today and meet your local clinicians. Practice Manager Tim Fleming A lifelong Georgia resident who graduated from Georgia Southern University in 2002, Tim is dedicated to helping people in Statesboro & surrounding areas regain their independence with restored mobility.
6/4/12 10:42 AM
The View From Here s Ric Mandes
The Carpenter
R Ronnie Alderman has been a carpenter all his life. And why not? Every day he follows in the footsteps of his Lord and Savior, who Himself was a man of the same trade. Wherever Ronnie goes, his Lord is his Shepherd. Now retired from his 31 years as a member of the Georgia Southern Plant Operation’s staff, Ronnie is sharing his talents and gifts as a craftsman turning planks of wood into chambers of an extra bedroom, giving balance to front doors, or creating memory rooms for trophies and medals. His touch is remarkable. As an artist with broad sweeping strokes, Ronnie can bring a new and refreshing look to a den or foyer. And then the powerful thrust of his imagination turns a barn leaning from the force of history into a mighty manor. And no wasted motion as Ronnie and his son get the job done. If Ronnie is moving toward a site with a hammer in his hand or gripping a secure package of heavy nails or a saw, then one can be assured that is the exact action taking place. All the while this man of God remains humble – ease of voice, a terrific listener, the gift of direct eye contact; and with that artist’s mind he entraps a client’s needs or wishes or dreams. Lean and handsome and spiritually driven, Ronnie Alderman is a walking definitive of manners and caring. Be assured he balances his gifts with wit and humor, when action is complemented with a hearty laugh starting out with an impish grin. All this from just a great guy whom I first met in the early ‘80’s when he represented the Georgia Southern Plant Operations each Monday morning at the 9:00 a.m. president’s staff meeting. From that moment a friendship was forged, allowing me the presence of a man of God, and the blessing of making calls across the years of “Help, Ronnie!” While his brother Max, an ordained minister, travels the globe delivering God’s message, Ronnie lights candles at home. For those who
have not met Ronnie, attend morning worship at Statesboro’s First Baptist. When the choir stands for an anthem, look into the men’s section and you will find it easy to make note of Ronnie. He is the dude with his arms raised or fists pumping with voice uplifted. He is again affirming his commitment to the Master. One of the hallmark illustrations of Ronnie’s caring mindset took place in the home of retired Georgia Southern President Zach Henderson who served Georgia Southern for 41 years. His wife, Marjorie, had called Fred Shroyer, Plant Operations Director, request-
ing his stopping by and assisting with a door frame. Fred asked Ronnie to go by the Henderson’s home. As Ronnie was leaving with mission accomplished, Dr. Henderson, whose mind was now clouded with dementia, looked at Ronnie and asked clear as a bell, “Young man. Do you play the harmonica?” Ronnie replied, “Yes sir I do. I have one with me right now.” To which Dr. Henderson said to his bride, “Honey, bring me my harmonica.” And there on a Thursday afternoon, Ronnie joined the president in a soulful rendition of Amazing Grace, a harmony Godsent. November/December 2016 • 65
TRANSITIONS
Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, saith your God. - Isaiah 40:1 Mr. Don Rickey Barrow
08.03.16
Mr. Matthew Trenton “Trent” Graham
09.10.16
Mr. Richard Napier Nash
09.25.16
Mrs. Nancy Beasley
09.26.16
Mrs. Inez Waters Grovenstein
09.10.16
Mrs. Rebecca “Becky” Nessmith
08.23.16
Mr. Donald Augustus “Swifty” Berry
08.24.16
Mr. Frank James Haman
09.25.16
Judge William Josiah “Joe” Neville
09.15.16
Mrs. Mary Lou Lee Best
09.10.16
Mrs. Phyllis Giles Hardeman
09.15.16
Mr. Donovan Warren Newsome
08.28.16
Mr. James W. Blakely
09.14.16
Mr. Nathan “Nate” Hirsch
08.28.16
Mr. Michael Edwin Newton
09.01.16
Mr. Lawrence Bonhomme
09.25.16
Mr. Donnie Paull Hodges
09.10.16
Minister Bernice Oliver
08.12.16
Mr. James C. “Skeet” Boyett
09.10.16
Mr. Quinton Holloway
09.10.16
Mrs. Peggy Mixon Post
07.21.16
Mr. Mikell C. “Mike” Boyett
09.20.16
Mrs. Frances Annette “Anne”
09.27.16
Mrs. Lorraine Ryals Pugliano
08.24.16
Mr. Edwin “Eddie” Bradley
09.05.16
Faircloth Hooks
Rev. John Willie Roberts
09.25.16
Ms. Mary Earthese Bradley
09.26.16
Mr. Virgil L. Horton, Sr.
08.04.16
Mr. Hugh “Perk” Robins
09.01.16
Mrs. Elizabeth Montez Royal Branbnen
09.22.16
Mr. Joseph Henry “Joe” Howard, II
09.09.16
Mrs. Carman Suzette “Suzie”
08.28.16
Mr. Tom Watson Bridges, Jr.
08.06.16
Mother Bernese Jackson
08.05.16
Bodlovick Robinson
Mrs. Shirley Ann Groover Brown
09.16.16
Mr. Quincy Jackson
09.09.16
Mra. Minnie Lee Robinson
09.04.16
Mrs. Setphanie Burrell Brunson
09.06.16
Mr. Bruce Irving Jenkins
08.04.16
Mrs. Patricia Robinson
09.07.16
Mrs. Milkie Gordon Burns
08.17.16
Mr. Rufus “R.J.” Johnson
08.13.16
Mr. Jamese Walter Sabb
09.04.16
Mrs. Martha Tootle Cain
09.16.16
Mr. Paul Jones
09.02.16
Mr. James Philo Salinski
09.09.16
Mr. David Michael Capps
09.15.16
Mrs. Ethel Jones
09.04.16
Mr. Payton Gibson Salzman
09.11.16
Mrs. Mary Hendrix Clark
08.08.16
Mr. Gerald Jordan
08.28.16
Mrs. Josephine Johnson Sapp
08.22.16
Mrs. Eubie Driggers Cook
08.23.16
Mrs. Dorothy Howard Lanier
08.05.16
Mrs. Erlene D. Schneider
08.09.16
Mr. Jerry Clyde Davis
08.02.16
Mrs. Rubye Nell Livingston Lastinger
09.10.16
Ms. Mattie Ruth Scott
09.09.16
Mr. Albert James “A.J.” Davis
09.21.16
Mr. Steve L. Logan
09.15.16
Mrs. Josephine Wells Smith
08.26.16
Mr. James Davis, Jr.
08.22.16
Mr. Wilie Austin Lowe
09.09.16
Mrs. JoAn Theresa Sowell
08.03.16
Mr. Bryan Wesley Deal
08.31.16
Mr. Donald Claxton Lowery
08.31.16
Mr. Darien Spells
09.24.16
Mr. Devon Deloach
08.07.16
Mrs. Donna Jean Fail Mangrum
08.21.16
Mrs. Norma Dean Griffin Stallings
08.16.16
Mr. Robert “Bob” Dick
09.08.16
Mrs. Audrea Michell Lambert Marks
08.23.16
Mr. William Austin Stokes
09.12.16
Ms. Karen Odum Dillard
08.25.16
Mr. Ralph Marsh
09.06.16
Mrs. Dorothy Hinson Taylor
08.10.16
Mrs. Stella Morris Lee Donahue
08.01.16
Ms. Peggy Mixon McBride
09.06.16
Mr. Francis Randall Taylor
09.28.16
Mr. Henry Lafayette Durden, III
09.19.16
Mrs. Claudia Harris McCray
08.23.16
Mr. Larry M. Thjompson
09.13.16
Deacon Ernest Edenfield
08.12.16
Ms. Michele Ann Williams McDowell
08.12.16
Mr. Charlie L. Thomas
08.28.16
Mr. Robert Henry Fields, Jr.
09.25.16
Mr. Robert McGhee
08.11.16
Mr. William Austin Veech
08.30.16
Mr. Lyman Fields, Sr.
09.24.16
Mrs. Matilou Turner McKee
08.03.16
Mrs. Loria Merchelle Lester Wadley
08.18.16
Mrs. Sheila G. Robins Fleming
08.13.16
Mrs. Martha Mikell
08.17.16
Ms. Mary Wallace
09.06.16
Mrs. Margaret Ann Futch
08.07.16
Mrs. Virginia Audrey Shuman Miller
08.20.16
Mrs. Eva Akins Waller
09.20.16
Mr. Willie Henry Gilliard
08.10.16
Mr. James Mitchell Mincey, Sr.
09.03.16
Mr. Charles “Chuck” Williams, Jr.
09.03.16
Mr. Harry Joseph “Frog” Girardeau
08.19.16
Mrs. Mary Womack Mons
08.21.16
Mr. Herbert Williams, Sr.
08.02.16
Mr. Clisby Allen Gordham, Sr.
08.24.16
Mr. Matthew Royce “Matt” Muhmel
08.07.16
Ms. Henry Mae “FeFe” Wilson
08.02.16
66 • Statesboro Magazine
Thanks Team Young/Stroup for Bending Over Backwards to Represent Citizens Bank and Support Safe Haven! Brandilyn Stroup - Jonathan Young Dancing With The Statesboro Stars 2016
Sandersville
818 S. Harris St. Sandersville, GA 31082 (478) 552-6121 www.cbots.com
Sandersville
132 S. Harris St. Sandersville, GA 31082 (478) 552-5116 www.cbots.com
Statesboro
425 Commerce Dr. Statesboro, GA 30461 (912) 871-2971 www.cbots.com
Simple Banking, The Community Service Way.
Our team just got stronger.
Pictured: Molly Sisson, Financial Consultant, Synovus Securities, & VP, Synovus Trust Company, N.A.; Ray McKinney, Financial Consultant, Synovus Securities, Inc.; Anna Davis, Registered Sales Assistant, Synovus Securities, Inc.; Carroll Kirkland, Financial Consultant, Synovus Securities, Inc.
We are pleased to welcome Ray to our Sea Island Bank and Synovus Securities team. Now, our customers in Statesboro have access to even more financial planning knowledge, expertise and comprehensive wealth solutions. Call them today to discover how years of combined experience and service can benefit you.
seaislandbank.com | 912.489.9306
Investment products and services provided by Synovus are offered through Synovus Securities, Inc. Synovus Trust Company, N.A. GLOBALT Investments, a separately identifiable division of STC and Creative Financial Group. The registered broker-dealer offering brokerage products for Synovus is Synovus Securities, Inc. member FINRA/SIPC. Synovus Securities, Inc. is a subsidiary of Synovus Financial Corp and an affiliate of Synovus Bank. Synovus Trust Company, N.A. is a subsidiary of Synovus Bank. NOT FDIC INSURED
NO BANK GUARANTEE
MAY LOSE VALUE
Banking products are provided by Synovus Bank, Member FDIC. Divisions of Synovus Bank operate under multiple trade names across the Southeast.