May 12 edition

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MAY 12–18, 2022

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LOWCOUNTRY LOWDOWN

LOLITA HUCKABY

Nothing like a deadline

PRESORTED PERMIT NO. 97 BEAUFORT, SC 29902

COVERING BEAUFORT COUNTY

Deadline approaches for impact fee agreement Work remains to settle differences between county, municipalities

By Tony Kukulich When the Beaufort County Council voted to delay the third and final reading of a motion to repeal all impact fees assessed by the county, they agreed to reconsider the matter during the council’s June 13 meeting. The delay was intended to give

the county’s municipalities like Beaufort, Port Royal and Bluffton time to align their impact fee policies with the county policy. With a month left before the county again considers the motion, it’s unclear if the delay provided enough time for the differences between the municipalities and the county

to be ironed out. It’s equally unclear how the council will react if the necessary intergovernmental agreements (IGA) between municipalities and the county aren’t signed by the deadline. “I think we’re in a spot where we’re going to get it worked out,” said Port Royal Mayor Joe DeVito.

“I do. I’m optimistic. The timeline is what is making it difficult, especially at this time of year.” During a May 3 joint council meeting held by the City of Beaufort and the Town of Port Royal, Beaufort Mayor Stephen Murray

SEE IMPACT PAGE A5

County, Port Royal reach deal to keep Sands boat ramp open

I

BEAUFORT f there’s one thing as sacrosanct around here as trees, its boat landings. And when some officials start messing around with them, it makes news. Case in point: Beaufort County staff’s recent announcement that the county didn’t intend to maintain the VERY popular Sands boat landing in Port Royal after July 1. The county staff began questioning ownership of some of its 25 public landings last year as part of an effort to develop a master plan for recreation sites. According to the county legal department, there were questionable titles to at least five of the landings including the Sands, Brickyard Point on Lady’s Island, Wimbee Creek in the Lobeco area, Wallace Landing on St. Helena and Russ Landing on Hunting Island. Some folks even questioned why the questionable landings were all north of the Broad River, but we’ll mark that up to NOB vs. SOB paranoia. The questions prompted former county attorney Lad Howell to venture out to a county council meeting and assure the elected ones – and their staff – that the county indeed owns those properties if for no other reason that “prescriptive easement,” as in, the public’s used them for so long, without objection, they’re deemed “public.” The county staff then sent a letter to their colleagues in Port Royal setting a July 1 deadline for their maintenance responsibilities of the

SEE LOWDOWN PAGE A4

Beaufort resident Bobby Newton prepares his catboat Tuesday for participation in the 16th annual Catboat Rally at the Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club in Beaufort. Catboats originated as working boats in New England in the late 19th century, and the design has gained popularity among racers and recreational sailors. Photos by Tony Kukulich.

Catboats come to Beaufort

By Tony Kukulich

V The Silent Maid, a 33-foot catboat from Bay Head, N.J., is docked Tuesday at the Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club in Beaufort. The boat is in town to participate in the 16th annual Catboat Rally.

isitors to the Beaufort waterfront on Saturday will get an up close look at a unique maritime event Saturday afternoon. The 16th annual Catboat Rally will be conducted over three days, Thursday, May 12 through Saturday, May 14. A field of 10 catboats will race from Savannah to Hilton Head Island on Thursday. The following day, the boats will race from Hilton Head to Beaufort. The event will culminate with three buoy races Saturday in the Beaufort River.

WANT TO WATCH?

What: 16th annual Catboat Rally – 3 buoy races in the Beaufort River When: Around noon, Saturday, May 14 Where: Best place to watch is the Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park

Woody Norwood, race committee chair, advised that the Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park will be the best spot for viewing Saturday’s races.

SEE BOATS PAGE A4

Port Royal hotel to be converted to apartments

By Tony Kukulich A California-based developer plans to convert a recently purchased Port Royal hotel into apartments that will be rented at discounted rates. The former Days Inn located at 1660 Ribaut Road was acquired by Vivo Living at the end of April and will be rebranded as Vivo Port Royal. The purchase price was not disclosed. Vivo Living specializes in converting low-demand hotels and other buildings into

Workmen move out furniture from the former Days Inn on Friday afternoon in Port Royal. The former chain motel will be converted to apartments. Photo by Bob Sofaly.

affordable apartment complexes for renters. Their stated mission is to “solve America's housing affordability crisis through adaptive reuse while reducing traffic, waste and sprawl.” The apartments are expected to rent at 10 percent to 20 percent below market rates. “Vivo aims to reduce traffic, waste and sprawl by carefully selecting each location to

SEE HOTEL PAGE A7

SPORTS

ARTS

INSIDE

8th grader Graeme Angus captures high school state singles crown.

ONE WEEKEND ONLY: USCB center For The Arts hosting Annie, Jr.

PAGE A12

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Lowcountry Life A2 News A2–7 Legal Notices A6 Health A8–9 Education A10–11 Sports A12

Arts Military Voices Faith Directory Classifieds

A14 A16 A17 A17 A18 A19


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LOWCOUNTRY LIFE & NEWS

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Beaufort’s Paul Jaquith captured this photo of the Space X Starlink Falcon 9 at 5:42 a.m., May 6. To submit a Lowcountry Life photo, you must be the photographer or have permission to submit the photo to be published in The Island News. Please submit high-resolution photos and include a description and/or names of the people in the picture and the name of the photographer. Email your photos to theislandnews@gmail.com.

VETERAN OF THE WEEK

Doug ‘Jake’ Jaquays

DOUG ‘JAKE’ JAQUAYS

Beaufort’s Doug “Jake” Jaquays, 72, enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in Cleveland in 1967 straight out of high school. After boot camp at Parris Island and Infantry training he was assigned to duty in Vietnam. He served in Quang Tri province, just 12 miles south of the DMZ. Constantly engaged in combat operations, Jake

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

In response to Denise Sullivan’s letter

Jim Dickson is known to be an interesting, kind gentleman who has a talent for writing. I can't imagine anyone describing him as "rude" or as someone who puts down or insults people who do not agree with him. Ms. Sullivan, unfortunately, used the r-word – racist – to further her rant against Jim. Of course that word is meant to provoke anger against this man, even though it is not true. What will she do next to get him "fired?" Perhaps picket the newspaper with signs

calling for his termination? This is ridiculous. I didn't want to become part of this discussion, but I also didn't want Ms. Sullivan's remarks to go unchallenged. Mr. Dickson is a well liked and admired resident of our community. I can only imagine how shocked our neighbors were to read her assault on this talented writer who has an exemplary reputation among those who know him. Disparaging Jim with her remarks was bad enough. Calling him a "racist" was so outrageous, I felt compelled to respond to her attack. – Pat Lundgren, St. Helena Island

REGISTER TO VOTE

From staff reports The deadline to register online to vote in time for the June 14 S.C. primaries is May 15. The League of Women Voters Beaufort urges all eligible U.S. citizens who are not currently registered and who will be 18 years old by Nov. 8, 2022 to register to vote online as soon as possible at scvotes.gov, the League of Women Voters’ VOTE411.org website or via the accompanying QR code. If you are already registered to vote, you can use these same sites to access information on

primary candidates, your district voting place, and voting hours. You can also get information on absentee voting rules. The primaries are June 14 and the general election is Nov. 8.

ON THIS DATE

May 12-13

1862: Robert Smalls stole the CSS Planter. On the night of May 12, 1862, three white crew members of the CSS Planter – Capt. C.J. Relyea, pilot Samuel H. Smith and engineer Zerich Pitcher – went ashore in Charleston, leaving Smalls, the ship’s wheelman, and the enslaved

crew members unattended. Around 3 a.m., Smalls and his crew fired up the ship’s boilers and sailed to a wharf to pick up their waiting family members, then sailed past Confederate forces at Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie. Smalls, impersonating the captain, wearing his wide-brimmed straw hat to hide his face, used the proper coded signals

PAL PETS OF THE WEEK Cat of the Week: Looking for a family he is! Yoda and his curly tail are eager to find their next home. He is a lover boy who wants to spend his day cuddling in your lap or playing hide-andseek. He would make a great addition to any household, and would enjoy a cat sibling. He is a year old, neutered, up to date on vaccines, and microchipped.

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MAY 12–18, 2022

earned two meritorious combat promotions and was awarded a Bronze Star Medal for valor in combat. He also received a Purple Heart Medal for combat wounds. After Vietnam he transferred back to Parris Island, and after being injured during DI training, he was assigned to the Support battalion. He separated from active duty in

1971 as a Sergeant and was later promoted to Staff Sergeant in the Reserves. He spent the next 30 years as a home builder here in Beaufort. – Compiled by John Chubb, American Legion Post 9. For nominations, contact jechubb1@gmail.com.

Reporter

Tony Kukulich

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SALES/BUSINESS Marketing Director

Amanda Hanna

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Advertising Sales Betty Davis

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843-252-9076

Depressed by Denise Sullivan I'm not sure what stirred Denise Sullivan with such vitriol about Jim Dickson and his recent Opinion pieces in The Island News. My own reactions were positive, and I'm gratified that The Island News is willing to publish viewpoints from all sides. What I find disturbing, even depressing, is Ms. Sullivan's wish to stifle ideas she doesn't like. Her suggestion that Mr. Dickson is racist because he used a cave in Mexico metaphor is frankly malignant, as is her statement

that he is "just another Republican who has no positive platform." I fail to see the benefit of canceling people because of their political or social thoughts. Perhaps Mrs. Sullivan would feel more at peace in a country where only certain ideas are allowed public expression. My thanks to The Island News for supporting a free press. – Roger Hatcher, St. Helena Island

In-Person absentee voting starts Monday

From staff reports In-person absentee voting for the June Statewide Primaries (Tuesday, June 14) will start on Monday, May 16, 2022. The absentee precincts will be open, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. The absentee precincts are located: • In Beaufort – 15 John Galt Road, Beaufort, S.C. 29906

at two Confederate checkpoints, including at Fort Sumter itself, and other defense positions. When the Planter cleared the Confederate defenses, just before dawn, Smalls raised a white flag and delivered the ship – and its 17 black passengers (nine men, five women and three children) to the blockading Union fleet.

In Bluffton – 61B Ulmer Road, Bluffton, S.C. 29910 • On Hilton Head Island – 539 William Hilton Parkway, Hilton Head Island, S.C. 29928 On Saturday, June 11, the offices will be open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. for in-person absentee voting. The last day for in-person absentee voting is Monday, June 13, from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Editor’s Note: If you know of any significant dates pertaining to history, business, social life, etc., in the City of Beaufort, the Town of Port Royal, the old Beaufort District, the Sea Islands or anywhere else in northern Beaufort County that you feel we could or should add to our list, please let us know at TheIslandNews@gmail.com.

Dog of the Week: Skye is a petite pup filled with kisses and love to give. She has been with us for a short time and has already stolen the hearts of our staff and volunteers. She does not miss the sound of a squeaky toy or treat bag with those big ears. She is a year old, spayed, up to date on vaccines, and microchipped.

If you are interested in adopting Yoda, Skye or any of our other pets, call our adoption center at 843-645-1725 or email us at info@ palmettoanimalleague. org to set up an appointment.

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DISCLAIMER

All content of The Island News, including articles, photos, editorial content, letters, art and advertisements, are copyrighted by The Island News and Island News Publishing, LLC, 2020, all rights reserved. The Island News encourages reader submissions via email to theislandnews@gmail.com. All content submitted is considered approved for publication by the owner unless otherwise stated. The Island News is designed to inform and entertain readers and all efforts for accuracy are made. Guest columns do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of The Island News, its publisher or editors. Content published from Care Magazine® is intended as a reference and options source only, not as a guide to self-treatment or substitute for profession medical advice. It is provided for educational purpose only. Readers assume full responsibility for how this information is used. The Island News reserves the right to refuse to sell advertising space, or to publish information, for any business or activity the newspaper deems inappropriate for the publication. Letters to the Editor should consist of fewer than 275 words and be emailed with a name and contact information to TheIslandNews@gmail.com.


NEWS

Beaufort protesters rally against overturning Roe vs. Wade By Mike McCombs A week after the leak of a draft opinion indicating the U.S. Supreme Court is set to overturn Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 decision making abortion legal, between four and five dozen protesters took part in a rally Monday evening in front of Beaufort City Hall to support women’s right to abortion. The event was organized by several groups, including Indivisible Beaufort, League of Women Voters Beaufort and local members of the Democratic Party. Protesters lined the street on both sides of Boundary Street where it intersects Ribault Road. Most in the crowd – made up primarily of women, though there were a handful of men and children – carried home-

From S.C. Department of Natural Resources If a deer fawn is found alone in the woods, leave it there, according to the S.C. Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR). Its mother has not abandoned it; she is probably nearby. Removing a fawn from the forest is also illegal because the animal is being taken outside the legal season for taking deer, which is the hunting season. Many people who come upon a solitary spotted fawn in the woods or along a roadway mistakenly assume the animal has been deserted by its mother and want to take

made signs. A few wore shirts bearing slogans, and one even dressed as a “Handmaid” from A Handmaid’s Tale, a dystopian novel by Canadian Margaret Atwood where a totalitarian society subjects fertile women to child-bearing slavery. Beaufort resident Emily May thought the turnout was “fantastic.” She was one of a handful to protest earlier in the week in much smaller numbers. “I hope to get out here more,” May said. “Despite this being a red state and despite these (potential) laws, we have to show that there really is a voice.” May said the difference in opinion on abortion is more than a typical red-state, bluestate divide.

“It’s more specific. Cities and counties is what it comes down to. They have to organize against this,” she said. “The difference between a red state and a blue state might be just a few points. There are clearly people here that don’t want to see these changes. “If we can reach just a few people with these protests, to let them know, even if they are the minority here, that there are other people who feel the same way they do, we can start to make a difference.” May said those in the Lowcountry who support a woman’s right to choose will have to do far more than protest if they hope to have an impact. “Honestly, right now, the thing to do is to call your state senator (or representa-

tive),” she said. “It may seem hopeless, but we have to call our state senators, because that’s whose going to matter. And then, of course, you have to vote.” While the occasional passerby made the effort to voice their opposition to the protesters, the majority of drivers who reacted simply honked their horns in support. However, a couple of vehicles did circle back, passing several times to yell profanities. “I do worry (about safety), it’s about being aware of your surroundings,” May said. “Luckily we’re getting more honks than people calling us murderers. I’ll take that.” Mike McCombs is the Editor of The Island News and can be reached at TheIslandNews@gmail.com.

Several children were present Monday near Beaufort City Hall at the intersection of Ribaut Road and Boundary Street where protesters rallied against the possibility of the U.S. Supreme Court overturning Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 decision making abortion legal. Photo by Bob Sofaly.

SCDNR: Leave ‘lost fawns’ alone

A "spotted" fawn that appears abandoned is merely awaiting a visit from its mother. South Carolinians are advised by SCDNR to leave it there. Photo courtesy of SCDNR. the apparently helpless creature home to care for it. Young fawns like this have not been

abandoned and are still in the care of a doe. The apparently “helpless”

deer fawns born during April, May and June in South Carolina will begin daily movements with their mothers in about three or four weeks. Human handling and disturbance of fawns can cause a doe to shy away or even desert her offspring. Also, a bleating response by the fawn can summon nearby predators It’s part of nature's plan for a doe deer to leave her fawn or fawns alone for their first few weeks of life. The reason for this unusual maternal action is that the fawn at this age is better protected away from the doe. The presence of the doe nearby would attract predators because the

doe lacks the protective coloration of the fawn, and the older and larger doe has a much stronger odor. A fawn that appears abandoned is merely awaiting a visit from its mother. A doe, after brief periods of feeding and grooming her fawn, will spend much of her day feeding and resting somewhat removed from her young. The fawn ordinarily stays bedded down as if sleeping, but will occasionally move short distances to new bedding sites. Each spring and summer, SCDNR gets many calls from people who have discovered these “lost” deer. Young fawns are without a doubt cute and

cuddly, but if taken into captivity they grow into semitame adult deer that can become quite dangerous. Adult buck deer, no matter how they were raised, are especially dangerous during the breeding season. Even does raised by humans are unpredictable. Occasionally, “tame’ deer seriously injure people and, in cases where the deer are a threat to humans, the deer sometimes have to be killed. People often ask SCDNR if it needs deer fawns for its research projects. Although SCDNR is actively engaged in deer research, current studies do not involve captive animals.

EASY AS 1 - 2 - 3

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between now and May 31.

Pay in advance by May 31 with a credit card, HSA/FSA account, or PayPal. Vouchers can be used up to six months from the time of purchase.

Schedule Your Mammogram Call (843) 522-5015 to make an appointment for your mammogram and bring your voucher to your appointment as proof of purchase.

Buy Now, Schedule Later BUY NOW, SCHEDULE LATER

In recognition of Women’s Health Month, Beaufort Memorial has partnered with MDsave to provide $99 mammograms. Promotional pricing applies to 2-D or 3-D screening mammogram vouchers purchased through MDsave between May 1-31. If other procedures or views are necessary at the time of the exam, there may be additional charges for the patient and/or their insurance plan.

MAY 12–18, 2022

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NEWS

Beaufort’s support for Ukraine continues to build

From staff reports Since the City of Beaufort’s unofficial adoption of the City of Ostroh in Ukraine, Beaufort Mayor Stephen Murray has kept in regular contact with Ostroh Mayor Yurii Yahodka. This past week, Murray coordinated a video call with Yahodka during a joint meeting of all three Beaufort-area Rotary clubs. Speaking through an interpreter, Yahodka said that Ostroh, located on the west-

ern edge of Ukraine less than 200 miles from the Polish border, was still out of the war zone. The war, Yahodka said, has slowed the economy in his region, making it harder to support the refugees flowing in from the war zone. “We try to help the refugees, but sometimes there is not enough food,” he said. “That is why your help with ready-made food is very good for us. It is a great help.” On that front, Murray has

coordinated the donation of 100,000 ready to eat meals from a company in Mullins, S.C. A shipping company agreed to pick up the meals and deliver 80 pallets worth of food and deliver it to the Port of Charleston. Once the food arrives in Europe an aid agency with experience working in Poland will handle the distribution of the food to those in need. To date, the city has raised about $66,000 for relief efforts in Ostroh.

TASTE OF BEAUFORT

Beaufort Mayor Stephen Murray addresses the combined Rotary clubs Wedensday, May 4, for a teleconference with Mayor Yuri Yahodka of Ostroh, Ukraine, seen in the background with a translator. Beaufort adopted Ostroh as its “sister city” and has been supplying humanitarian aid. Photo by Bob Sofaly.

Charleston to celebrate Robert Smalls

From staff reports The City of Charleston is hosting an event Friday to celebrate the 160th anniversary of Beaufort’s Robert Smalls commandeering the CSS Planter and sailing it and it’s enslaved crew, along with the families of Smalls and his crew to freedom, turning the ship over to the Union forces blockading Charleston Harbour. The event, entitled “The

Boats

from page A1 Lochlan Ireland dives into his ice cream cone while cousin Callen Stauffer watches during the annual Taste of Beaufort on Saturday at Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park. Photos by Bob Sofaly.

Sgt. Dana Rominsky of the Parris Island Marine Corps Rock Band belts out a song while bassist Lance Cpl. Andre Phanor, far left, gets his groove on during the annual Taste of Beaufort on Saturday at Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park. Just out of camera range are Gunnery Sgt. Andres’ Trujillo on lead guitar; Lance Cpl. Blaine Mitchell on drums and Lance Cpl. Austin Plumer.

Lowdown from page A1

Sands landing. Based on the research of this same county legal staff, the property actually belongs to Safe Harbor Port Royal, the world-famous marina company which has purchased a good part of the town’s waterfront to develop a new marina. Luckily, county, town and Safe Harbor representatives reached an agreement over the weekend and the Sands boat ramp will, indeed, remain open with a new paving job, thanks to the Port Royal

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town council. Now if the county and Port Royal, plus the other municipalities could just come to some agreements on those much-more-complicated development impact fees. General Assembly wrapping things up COLUMBIA – Last week this column mentioned the state legislators were grinding down to the session’s deadline with bigger fish to fry. Turns out to be, those “bigger fish” included passing a ban on Carolina Squats and killing Sen. Tom Davis’ Compassionate Care Bill,

aka the medical marijuana legislation. Yes, the ban on Carolina Squats, those jacked-up-inthe-front vehicles you see on the road, intimidating other drivers and creating dangerous blind spots for their drivers, passed and as of this writing, is heading to Gov. Henry McMaster’s desk for signing. The medical marijuana bill, on the other hand, which was presented as a way to help those suffering from various medical pains, was killed in the S.C. House by a 59-55 vote. And the vote was on a procedural issue questioning a

“We come from sailing other boats all our lives,” Norwood said. “We’re coming together and the competition is very intense. It’s pretty special.” The first race on Saturday is expected to reach downtown Beaufort around noon, though the start time will be dependent on the wind and weather. The second race will start from the waterfront park shortly after the completion of the first race and will finish in front of the Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club. The final race will start and finish at the yacht club. Catboats were originally developed in New England as workboats. They reached their peak around the turn of the 20th century. Their design is distinguished by several unique features. They average around 18-feet in length and are nearly half as wide as they are long. The wide beam makes the boats stable and easy to sail. They have a single mast near the bow, much further forward than many other sailboat designs. Their shallow draft allows them to operate in shallow coastal waters where they were used for fishing, crabbing, oystering and lobstering.

constitutional point, not even the merits of the bill, which, by that point, had more than 1,000 amendments added to it by legislators wishing to make sure it got killed. As of this writing, Davis says he’s looking for ways to attach the wording to other remaining House bills as a way to get it passed. Saying goodbye BEAUFORT – While we ponder another year in South Carolina without medical marijuana for people in pain who need it, we can also ponder the loss of two “longtime” business establishments.

Charleston Salute to Civil War Hero Robert Smalls” is being held at noon Friday, May 13, at the Pineapple Water Fountain in the rear of the City Gallery at 34 Prioleau Street. Attendees are invited by Charleston Mayor John J. Tecklenburg and Michael Boulware Moore, a direct descendant of Smalls. Special guests include Elizabeth Sackey, Mayor of

Accra, Ghana; former Beaufort Mayor Billy Keyserling; Bernard Powers, Director of the Center For The Study Of Slavery In Charleston at the College of Charleston; and Tonya Matthews, President and CEO of the International African American Museum. In the event of rain, the event will be held inside the City Gallery. For more information, call the City of Charleston at 843-579-7530.

“They’re relatively easy to sail,” Norwood said. “That was needed because the people who were doing the work needed to be working as well as sailing the boat. It had to be relatively simple, and it is.” One of the best examples of a classic catboat, the Silent Maid, is in the Lowcountry to participate in the races. Captain Henry Colie spent 16 days sailing the Silent Maid down the Intracoastal Waterway from Bay Head, N.J., to participate in this week’s rally, a distance he estimated at 800 miles. It’s his second time doing so. “It’s a lot of fun,” Colie said. “The boat has many different gears. Either we can sail her with two people or we sail her with 17 depending on the sail area to match that. We race her or cruise her. It’s a good all-around boat. There’s a lot of volume down below. Catboats are known for being bigger than they are. They’re very predictable.” Unlike modern catboats that feature fiberglass hulls, the Silent Maid has a hull made from western red cedar over an oak frame. At 33-feet long, it’s significantly larger than many catboats. That extra length means it’s faster than the shorter boats. It’s capable of running at six to seven knots while the smaller boats will do four to five

knots. To keep the race fair, it will be handicapped by a later starting time than the rest of the field. Catboats have gained popularity in recent years among racers and recreational sailors for their classic design aesthetic and easy handling. A new catboat will set its owner back around $65,000, while used boats can be found for as little as $10,000. All of the boats involved in the race will fly the flag of Ukraine in a show of support for the people in that war-torn county. The owner of the Silent Maid has gone a step further. A donation of $1,000 to support Ukrainian war refugee relief will be made for every selfie taken with the Silent Maid and posted with the tag #silentmaid. There is a daily donation limit of $5,000. To win a sailboat race, the crew must keep their focus, Norwood said. Sailing skills and knowledge of the local waters also play key roles. He added, “It’s the boat that makes the fewest mistakes that wins.”

You read in The Island News two weeks ago that Harvey’s barber shop is going to move off Bay Street to Lady’s Island. Now, if you want to eat Greek food, you’re already out of luck. After 18 years, the Athenian Gardens served its last gyro and piece of spanakopita two weeks ago. The owners are planning a trip to visit family in Greece and facing other issues that leave it uncertain whether they’ll reopen. In the meantime, the posters of Greek villages are gone and the building, owned by Beaufort Memorial Hospital, is bare. Also leaving Ribaut Road

Tony Kukulich is a recent transplant to the Lowcountry. A native of Wilmington, Del., he comes to The Island News from the San Francisco Bay Area where he spent seven years as a reporter and photographer for several publications. He can be reached at tony.theislandnews@gmail.com. is the Friends of Caroline Hospice Thrift Closet, one of the area’s best thrift stores. After 17 years of recycling some people’s discards into other people’s treasures, the shop is clearing out. Hopes are, they’ll find another location where they can continue to raise money for Friends of Caroline Hospice. Lolita Huckaby Watson is a community volunteer and former reporter/editorial assistant/columnist with The Beaufort Gazette, The Savannah Morning News, Bluffton Today, Beaufort Today and The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.). She can be reached at bftbay@gmail.com.


NEWS

STREET MUSIC A small, private plane overran the runway on an aborted takeoff Tuesday evening, May 10, 2022, and came to rest in the marsh off the end of the runway at Beaufort Executive Airport. Photo courtesy of Beaufort County.

Plane aborts takeoff at Beaufort Executive Airport Incident results in no injuries

Waylon Thibideaux and the Day Walkers from New Orleans, La., kicked off the Spring season of Port Royal’s Street Music Concert Series on Saturday evening on Paris Avenue. The weather was near perfect as children began dancing to the Zydeco music. The next free, family friendly concert will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 21, featuring Memphissippi Sounds playing their own blend of “Mississippi Hill Blues,” rock, soul and Hip Hop. Photo by Bob Sofaly.

Beaufort Memorial offering $99 mammograms From staff reports In recognition of Women’s Health Month, Beaufort Memorial is offering the opportunity to purchase screening mammograms for $99 through MDsave now through May 31. Both 2-D and 3-D mammograms are available and can be purchased online at BeaufortMemorial. org/SaveOnMammos. Patients who purchase the $99

Impact from page A1

was adamant about his position on impact fees. “I just want to say clearly, and I think I speak for the council, we are in support of impact fees,” Murray said. “We have been collecting them for 20 years.” While both Devito and Murray have pledged their support for a resolution to the issues related to the IGA, the two sides – the municipalities and the county – appear to still be far apart. “I can respect – from a political standpoint – putting a deadline on there,” Murray said. “But I’ll just be frank and say there’s a lot work to do between now and June 13th to make sure that we’ve got accurate information; that the public is aware of exactly what we’re doing and that it goes through a legal process so that we’re on a solid legal foundation once we put these in place.” According to Chris Ophardt, Beaufort County public information officer, the county engaged in a study to revise its impact fee policy in 2020. New IGAs need to be signed in order to enact the revised fees recommended by the study, and in November 2021 draft IGAs were distributed to the municipalities. At this point, Ophardt said, the process stalled. Beaufort was the first mu-

mammogram voucher by the end of May will be able to schedule their screening appointments in either Beaufort or Okatie any time in the next six months. Patients who wish to purchase a $99 screening mammogram should: • Visit BeaufortMemorial. org/SaveOnMammos between now and May 31 and select a service and

preferred location (Beaufort or Okatie). Pay online with a major credit card, debit card, FSA or HSA card and receive a voucher. Call 843-522-5015 to schedule an appointment any time in the next six months. Present the voucher at the time of the appointment.

We don’t believe that any one person in local government should have control over millions of dollars of public money without any kind of public oversight.” – Beaufort Mayor Stephen Murray nicipality to respond to the county with comments on the IGA. Murray sent an email to the county outlining a number of concerns with the terms of the IGA on March 24. As of Friday, May 6, Murray had yet to receive a response from the county. “From March 24, we’ve had no response from the county and no updated IGA,” Murray stated. “It feels a little unfair if they decide to move forward with the repeal if we don’t have an open and efficient line of communication between both parties.” Murray outlined three principal concerns with the IGA in his March 24 memo. The first was the 1 percent administrative fee that the municipalities are allowed to collect for managing the collection and distribution of impact fees for the county. Analysis completed by Beaufort staff revealed that the 1 percent fee did not cover expenses, and a 5 percent

administrative fee was suggested. The second issue was that the IGA gave unilateral authority to the county administrator to change the impact fee program without any municipal consent. “We think that if we’re going to sign an IGA that clearly lays out terms, if those terms are going to change, both parties should have an opportunity to come to the table and be heard,” Murray said. Murray’s third concern was that the IGA afforded the county administrator unilateral power to direct collected impact fees toward specific projects of county administrator’s choosing. “We don’t believe that any one person in local government should have control over millions of dollars of public money without any kind of public oversight,” Murray explained. “We’ve asked for county council to

Patients can save on mammograms at Beaufort Memorial Hospital until May 31. Photo courtesy of Beaufort Memorial Hospital. vet the projects; prioritize the projects and give the public an opportunity to be heard. County council would remain the authority to release these impact fees toward specific projects.” Port Royal Town Manager Van Willis also had concerns over the tight timeline involved in meeting the county’s June 13 deadline and he shared Murray’s discomfort with allowing the county administrator an unchecked ability to modify project list funded by each impact fee, but those weren’t his only issues related to impact fees. “We contributed well over $2 million to the Northern Beaufort County Impact Fee program and we have one project for $140,000,” Willis said. “We understand the regional importance of projects, but we have a responsibility to the folks that pay those impact fees that we see some sort of equitable distribution in our municipality.” Willis added that Port Royal will provide its comments on the draft IGA to the county by June 13. “They’re going to have to make some accommodations for the concerns of the municipalities in the redrafting of those agreements if they want us to participate in this impact fee program,” he said. The municipalities were not the only entities critical of the county’s handling of impact fee issues. The Beaufort County Board of Education issued a terse statement regarding the county’s repeal

of school impact fees during the April 25 council meeting. The statement, signed by Board of Education Chair David Striebinger and Beaufort County School District Superintendent Frank Rodriguez, contested the council’s assertion that the board failed to support the school impact fee. “During the discussion a county official pointed to the lack of in-person school board members' attendance as an indication the school board was not avidly supporting impact fees,” read the statement. “REALLY? A multimillion-dollar funding source was rejected because no member could attend this meeting? Five years of unwavering support and multiple votes was not enough?” The statement went on to question the county’s motivation behind the repeal and referred to a “fog of misunderstanding, conflicting statements, and hidden agendas.” The school impact fee was approved in July 2021 and applied only south of the Broad River. Ophardt said the fee was aimed squarely at the rapid population growth in Bluffton, but the towns of Hilton Head and Bluffton had not yet agreed to assess the fee. As such, it was only charged in the unincorporated areas of the county. A lawsuit was filed against the county by Pulte Home Company, LLC alleging the fee was illegal because it was not applied equally across the region.

By Mike McCombs A small, private plane aborted its takeoff at around 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, and came to rest in the marsh at the end of the runway of the Beaufort Executive Airport on Lady’s Island. According to Beaufort County Sheriff’s Office (BCSO) spokesperson Bob Bromage, there were no injuries. According to a later release by Beaufort County, the single-engine, fixed-wing aircraft was carrying a pilot and a passenger, and there were no fuel spills or hazards. Along with the BCSO, Lady's Island-St. Helena Fire District responded. According to the release, recovery of the plane is under way, and the airport will remain closed until the aircraft is removed from the marsh. "I would like to thank Chief Bruce Kline and the Beaufort County Sheriff Deputies for their quick response and coordination with the FAA," Airport Director Jon Rembold said in the news release. Mike McCombs is the editor of The Island News and can be reached at TheIslandNews@gmail.com. According to Ophardt, the Pulte lawsuit prompted the county council to renew its efforts to get the IGAs signed. “The council advised Eric (Greenway – County Administrator), ‘Hey, we really need to push these IGAs if we’re going to push any updates to impact fee because we open ourselves up to the exponential cost of lawsuits if we can’t get everybody on the same page.’” The statement from the school board may have had its intended impact. During Monday’s Beaufort County Caucus meeting, Vice Chair Paul Sommerville said he hopes the council will be open to the possibility of resurrecting the school impact fee sooner rather than later. The county is negotiating with the municipalities, said Ophardt, while Murray said the ball is in the county’s court. "We will continue to have good faith discussions with the municipalities,” Greenway said. “State law on county impact fees gives us only so much flexibility. All discussions are fluid, but for the good of the citizens of Beaufort County, I hope we have IGAs signed by June 13." Tony Kukulich is a recent transplant to the Lowcountry. A native of Wilmington, Del., he comes to The Island News from the San Francisco Bay Area where he spent seven years as a reporter and photographer for several publications. He can be reached at tony.theislandnews@gmail.com. MAY 12–18, 2022

A5


NEWS

County receives Hunting Island update

From staff reports Hunting Island State Park Manger Brandon Goff recently updated the Community Services Committee of the Beaufort County Council regarding conditions at the park, the status of park initiatives and the park’s emergency action plan for hurricanes. "This update to council and our citizens watching showed the great things happening out at Hunting Island State Park," said Phil Foot, Assistant County Administrator for Public Safety. "I am sure you will be pleased to hear about all the work that has taken place over the winter." Hunting Island sees an estimated 1 million visitors a year. It is a 5,000-acre secluded semitropical barrier island located 15 miles east of Beaufort. In addition to the lighthouse, Hunting Island's four miles of beachfront has several trails for hiking and biking. "I started with the Park Service 17 years ago, and I've had an opportunity to live in some fantastic places from

the mountains to the coast," said Goff. "I spent a large portion of my career on Edisto Beach and was born and raised in South Carolina just outside Myrtle Beach and Conway. I have a vested interest in South Carolina and the coast." The park’s iconic lighthouse was closed in February after engineers deemed it unsafe for visitors and for staff. It will remain closed for the foreseeable future. The Legislature recently approved $3 million that will go toward structural repairs for the only publicly accessible lighthouse in South Carolina. Currently, the project is in the design phase. The park’s campground has 125 camping spots and averages about 89 percent capacity. The campground generates 40 percent of the park's revenue. In 2016, Hurricane Mathew destroyed many campsites that the park service cannot replace due to erosion and other factors. “What we’re trying to do is

The Hunting Island Lighthouse in Hunting Island State Park is closed indefinitely. Photo by Tony Kuklich, The Island News. take the 125 campsites that we have and offer the best possible experience we can,” Goff said. “While we under-

stand that we’re not able to accommodate as many, our job now is, with fewer sites, we should be able to offer a

FROM THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. FURTHERMORE, YOU ALSO MAY BE SUBJECT TO A PERSONAL MONEY JUDGMENT FOR THE COSTS AND ATTORNEY’S FEES INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER IN THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING IF THE COURT FINDS THAT THERE IS COMPLETE ABSENCE OF A JUSTIFIABLE ISSUE OF EITHER LAW OR FACT RAISED BY YOUR OBJECTIONS OR DEFENSES. YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO CURE YOUR DEFAULT AT ANY TIME BEFORE THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE, BY PAYMENT OF ALL PAST DUE LOAN PAYMENTS OR ASSESSMENTS, ACCRUED INTEREST, LATE FEES, TAXES, AND ALL FEES AND COSTS INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER AND TRUSTEE, INCLUDING ATTORNEY’S FEES AND COSTS, IN CONNECTION WITH THE DEFAULT. Any response or inquiry should be made in writing to King Cunningham, LLC, Attn: Jeffrey W. King, Esq. who is serving as Trustee in this matter, at the following address: 1000 2nd Ave S, Ste 325, North Myrtle Beach, SC 29582.

NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE AND REQUIRE FORECLOSURE OF YOUR TIMESHARE INTEREST TO PROCEED THROUGH THE JUDICIAL PROCESS. AN OBJECTION MUST BE MADE IN WRITING AND RECEIVED BY THE TRUSTEE BEFORE THE END OF THE THIRTY-DAY TIME PERIOD. YOU MUST STATE THE REASON FOR YOUR OBJECTION AND INCLUDE YOUR ADDRESS ON THE WRITTEN OBJECTION. IN A JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING THAT RESULTS FROM YOUR OBJECTION, YOU MAY BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT AND PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. FURTHERMORE, YOU ALSO MAY BE SUBJECT TO A PERSONAL MONEY JUDGMENT FOR THE COSTS AND ATTORNEY’S FEES INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER IN THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING IF THE COURT FINDS THAT THERE IS COMPLETE ABSENCE OF A JUSTIFIABLE ISSUE OF EITHER LAW OR FACT RAISED BY YOUR OBJECTIONS OR DEFENSES. YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO CURE YOUR DEFAULT AT ANY TIME BEFORE THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE, BY PAYMENT OF ALL PAST DUE LOAN PAYMENTS OR ASSESSMENTS, ACCRUED INTEREST, LATE FEES, TAXES, AND ALL FEES AND COSTS INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER AND TRUSTEE, INCLUDING ATTORNEY’S FEES AND COSTS, IN CONNECTION WITH THE DEFAULT. Any response or inquiry should be made in writing to King Cunningham, LLC, Attn: Jeffrey W. King, Esq. who is serving as Trustee in this matter, at the following address: 1000 2nd Ave S, Ste 325, North Myrtle Beach, SC 29582.

better service. That’s what we’re striving to do.” The campground roads have all been repaved, and the shoulders are currently being improved. An additional lane has been created to mitigate some traffic backup on heavy check-in days. The campground has instituted dynamic pricing in which pricing changes based on season, availability and demand. The park is enforcing check-out and check-in times to allow park employees to do a better job cleaning campsites, making repairs and maintaining a higher standard for the park. The beach renourishment initiative is complete. The Park Service continues to meet the obligations associated with the project, like the monitoring of piping plover and red knot populations. Hurricane Mathew and the beach renourishment project have severely limited the parking available at the park. The Park Service plans to work with Beaufort County to identify possible mitigation

plans. Ideas under consideration include establishing a shuttle service from a location that can support parking and signs notifying visitors early in the drive that there is no parking. The repaving on Highway 21 and king tide mitigation efforts have reduced the number of places you can park along the side of the road. Several restrooms on the southern part of the beach were destroyed by Hurricane Matthew. Portable bathrooms have been in use since then. The park will be requesting funding for permanent restrooms as the next major infrastructure project. Hunting Island State Park has Standard Operating Procedures and Emergency Operations Plans in case of a hurricane or other disaster. The Park is nested with the county and has a good working relationship with points of contact exchanged. To watch a video of Goff’s presentation, visit https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=Vci4wO6JpME.

LIEN BEING FORECLOSED IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. FURTHERMORE, YOU ALSO MAY BE SUBJECT TO A PERSONAL MONEY JUDGMENT FOR THE COSTS AND ATTORNEY’S FEES INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER IN THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING IF THE COURT FINDS THAT THERE IS COMPLETE ABSENCE OF A JUSTIFIABLE ISSUE OF EITHER LAW OR FACT RAISED BY YOUR OBJECTIONS OR DEFENSES. YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO CURE YOUR DEFAULT AT ANY TIME BEFORE THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE, BY PAYMENT OF ALL PAST DUE LOAN PAYMENTS OR ASSESSMENTS, ACCRUED INTEREST, LATE FEES, TAXES, AND ALL FEES AND COSTS INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER AND TRUSTEE, INCLUDING ATTORNEY’S FEES AND COSTS, IN CONNECTION WITH THE DEFAULT. Any response or inquiry should be made in writing to King Cunningham, LLC, Attn: Jeffrey W. King, Esq. who is serving as Trustee in this matter, at the following address: 1000 2nd Ave S, Ste 325, North Myrtle Beach, SC 29582.

TO CURE YOUR DEFAULT AT ANY TIME BEFORE THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE, BY PAYMENT OF ALL PAST DUE LOAN PAYMENTS OR ASSESSMENTS, ACCRUED INTEREST, LATE FEES, TAXES, AND ALL FEES AND COSTS INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER AND TRUSTEE, INCLUDING ATTORNEY’S FEES AND COSTS, IN CONNECTION WITH THE DEFAULT. Any response or inquiry should be made in writing to King Cunningham, LLC, Attn: Jeffrey W. King, Esq. who is serving as Trustee in this matter, at the following address: 1000 2nd Ave S, Ste 325, North Myrtle Beach, SC 29582.

LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND INTENT TO SELL Name and address of Purchaser: CARRIE JO SHARP & BRIAN COLYER SHARP, 87 VIRGINIA AVE UNIT A, PALMYRA, VA 22963-6240 A fee simple undivided 0.0147723220820258 % ownership interest in the Project as tenants(s) in common with the holders of other undivided interests in and to the timeshare property known as MBV VACATION SUITES, as established by that certain Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions and Vacation Ownership Instrument for MBV Vacation Suites, recorded at Book 3406, Pages 1312- 1365, et seq., of the records of the R.O.D. Office for Beaufort County, South Carolina, as amended or supplemented (the “Declaration”), having Interval Control Number U1609-W14B. Deed recorded in Book 3620, Pages 379, Mortgage in Book 3620, Pages 384. Total amount presently delinquent $32,673.92, Attorneys fees $350.00, Costs $457.33. You are currently in default under certain provisions of the above referenced mortgage and timeshare instrument. As provided for in paragraph 4. of the aforementioned mortgage, the lien-holder has chosen to proceed with a non-judicial foreclosure procedure in accordance with Article 3 of Chapter 32 of Title 27 of the Code of Laws of South Carolina. PURSUANT TO SECTION 27-32-325, S.C. CODE ANN., 1976, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE HEREBY ADVISED OF THE FOLLOWING: IF YOU FAIL TO CURE THE DEFAULT OR TAKE OTHER APPROPRIATE ACTION WITH REGARD TO THIS MATTER WITHIN THIRTY CALENDAR DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE, YOU WILL RISK LOSING YOUR INTEREST IN THIS TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH A NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE. HOWEVER, UNDER THE NONJUDICIAL PROCEDURE, YOU WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT OR PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED EVEN IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. YOU MAY OBJECT TO THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE AND REQUIRE FORECLOSURE OF YOUR TIMESHARE INTEREST TO PROCEED THROUGH THE JUDICIAL PROCESS. AN OBJECTION MUST BE MADE IN WRITING AND RECEIVED BY THE TRUSTEE BEFORE THE END OF THE THIRTY-DAY TIME PERIOD. YOU MUST STATE THE REASON FOR YOUR OBJECTION AND INCLUDE YOUR ADDRESS ON THE WRITTEN OBJECTION. IN A JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING THAT RESULTS FROM YOUR OBJECTION, YOU MAY BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT AND PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. FURTHERMORE, YOU ALSO MAY BE SUBJECT TO A PERSONAL MONEY JUDGMENT FOR THE COSTS AND ATTORNEY’S FEES INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER IN THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING IF THE COURT FINDS THAT THERE IS COMPLETE ABSENCE OF A JUSTIFIABLE ISSUE OF EITHER LAW OR FACT RAISED BY YOUR OBJECTIONS OR DEFENSES. YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO CURE YOUR DEFAULT AT ANY TIME BEFORE THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE, BY PAYMENT

OF ALL PAST DUE LOAN PAYMENTS OR ASSESSMENTS, ACCRUED INTEREST, LATE FEES, TAXES, AND ALL FEES AND COSTS INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER AND TRUSTEE, INCLUDING ATTORNEY’S FEES AND COSTS, IN CONNECTION WITH THE DEFAULT. Any response or inquiry should be made in writing to King Cunningham, LLC, Attn: Jeffrey W. King, Esq. who is serving as Trustee in this matter, at the following address: 1000 2nd Ave S, Ste 325, North Myrtle Beach, SC 29582. NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND INTENT TO SELL Name and address of Purchaser: JOSEPH MICHAELS & MARILYN L. WEISSMAN, 33 SURREY LN, ROCKVILLE CENTRE, NY 11570-1853 A fee simple undivided 0.0147723220820258 % ownership interest in the Project as tenants(s) in common with the holders of other undivided interests in and to the timeshare property known as MBV VACATION SUITES, as established by that certain Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions and Vacation Ownership Instrument for MBV Vacation Suites, recorded at Book 3406, Pages 1312- 1365, et seq., of the records of the R.O.D. Office for Beaufort County, South Carolina, as amended or supplemented (the “Declaration”), having Interval Control Number U1502W51B. Deed recorded in Book 3682, Pages 2316, Mortgage in Book 3682, Pages 2321. Total amount presently delinquent $24,690.34, Attorneys fees $350.00, Costs $457.33. You are currently in default under certain provisions of the above referenced mortgage and timeshare instrument. As provided for in paragraph 4. of the aforementioned mortgage, the lien-holder has chosen to proceed with a non-judicial foreclosure procedure in accordance with Article 3 of Chapter 32 of Title 27 of the Code of Laws of South Carolina. PURSUANT TO SECTION 27-32-325, S.C. CODE ANN., 1976, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE HEREBY ADVISED OF THE FOLLOWING: IF YOU FAIL TO CURE THE DEFAULT OR TAKE OTHER APPROPRIATE ACTION WITH REGARD TO THIS MATTER WITHIN THIRTY CALENDAR DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE, YOU WILL RISK LOSING YOUR INTEREST IN THIS TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH A NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE. HOWEVER, UNDER THE NONJUDICIAL PROCEDURE, YOU WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT OR PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED EVEN IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. YOU MAY OBJECT TO THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE AND REQUIRE FORECLOSURE OF YOUR TIMESHARE INTEREST TO PROCEED THROUGH THE JUDICIAL PROCESS. AN OBJECTION MUST BE MADE IN WRITING AND RECEIVED BY THE TRUSTEE BEFORE THE END OF THE THIRTY-DAY TIME PERIOD. YOU MUST STATE THE REASON FOR YOUR OBJECTION AND INCLUDE YOUR ADDRESS ON THE WRITTEN OBJECTION. IN A JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING THAT RESULTS FROM YOUR OBJECTION, YOU MAY BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT AND PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING

NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND INTENT TO SELL Name and address of Purchaser: ALAN JOHN MUNKACSY & SARAH JANE MUNKACSY, 180 SEAGLASS DR, MELBOURNE BEACH, FL 329513275 A fee simple undivided 0.0147723220820258 % ownership interest in the Project as tenants(s) in common with the holders of other undivided interests in and to the timeshare property known as MBV VACATION SUITES, as established by that certain Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions and Vacation Ownership Instrument for MBV Vacation Suites, recorded at Book 3406, Pages 1312- 1365, et seq., of the records of the R.O.D. Office for Beaufort County, South Carolina, as amended or supplemented (the “Declaration”), having Interval Control Number U1608-W38B. Deed recorded in Book 3596, Pages 1965, Mortgage in Book 3596, Pages 1970. Total amount presently delinquent $17,700.28, Attorneys fees $350.00, Costs $457.33. You are currently in default under certain provisions of the above referenced mortgage and timeshare instrument. As provided for in paragraph 4. of the aforementioned mortgage, the lien-holder has chosen to proceed with a non-judicial foreclosure procedure in accordance with Article 3 of Chapter 32 of Title 27 of the Code of Laws of South Carolina. PURSUANT TO SECTION 27-32-325, S.C. CODE ANN., 1976, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE HEREBY ADVISED OF THE FOLLOWING: IF YOU FAIL TO CURE THE DEFAULT OR TAKE OTHER APPROPRIATE ACTION WITH REGARD TO THIS MATTER WITHIN THIRTY CALENDAR DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE, YOU WILL RISK LOSING YOUR INTEREST IN THIS TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH A NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE. HOWEVER, UNDER THE NONJUDICIAL PROCEDURE, YOU WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT OR PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED EVEN IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. YOU MAY OBJECT TO THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH THE

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NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND INTENT TO SELL Name and address of Purchaser: TRACY NICHOLAS EASTER & COLETTE RAE EASTER, 2881 FORT PICKENTS RD, LA GRANGE, KY 40031 A fee simple undivided 0.0147723220820258 % ownership interest in the Project as tenants(s) in common with the holders of other undivided interests in and to the timeshare property known as MBV VACATION SUITES, as established by that certain Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions and Vacation Ownership Instrument for MBV Vacation Suites, recorded at Book 3406, Pages 1312- 1365, et seq., of the records of the R.O.D. Office for Beaufort County, South Carolina, as amended or supplemented (the “Declaration”), having Interval Control Number U1602-W3B. Deed recorded in Book 3723, Pages 1725, Mortgage in Book 3723, Pages 1730. Total amount presently delinquent $17,694.44, Attorneys fees $350.00, Costs $457.33. You are currently in default under certain provisions of the above referenced mortgage and timeshare instrument. As provided for in paragraph 4. of the aforementioned mortgage, the lien-holder has chosen to proceed with a non-judicial foreclosure procedure in accordance with Article 3 of Chapter 32 of Title 27 of the Code of Laws of South Carolina. PURSUANT TO SECTION 27-32-325, S.C. CODE ANN., 1976, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE HEREBY ADVISED OF THE FOLLOWING: IF YOU FAIL TO CURE THE DEFAULT OR TAKE OTHER APPROPRIATE ACTION WITH REGARD TO THIS MATTER WITHIN THIRTY CALENDAR DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE, YOU WILL RISK LOSING YOUR INTEREST IN THIS TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH A NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE. HOWEVER, UNDER THE NONJUDICIAL PROCEDURE, YOU WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT OR PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED EVEN IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. YOU MAY OBJECT TO THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE AND REQUIRE FORECLOSURE OF YOUR TIMESHARE INTEREST TO PROCEED THROUGH THE JUDICIAL PROCESS. AN OBJECTION MUST BE MADE IN WRITING AND RECEIVED BY THE TRUSTEE BEFORE THE END OF THE THIRTY-DAY TIME PERIOD. YOU MUST STATE THE REASON FOR YOUR OBJECTION AND INCLUDE YOUR ADDRESS ON THE WRITTEN OBJECTION. IN A JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING THAT RESULTS FROM YOUR OBJECTION, YOU MAY BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT AND PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE

NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND INTENT TO SELL Name and address of Purchaser: TIMOTHY EDWARD GARD & CHRYSTAL SANDERS JONES, 8203 LAKESIDE DR, ORE CITY, TX 75683 A fee simple undivided 0.0147723220820258 % ownership interest in the Project as tenants(s) in common with the holders of other undivided interests in and to the timeshare property known as MBV VACATION SUITES, as established by that certain Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions and Vacation Ownership Instrument for MBV Vacation Suites, recorded at Book 3406, Pages 1312- 1365, et seq., of the records of the R.O.D. Office for Beaufort County, South Carolina, as amended or supplemented (the “Declaration”), having Interval Control Number U1201-W6B. Deed recorded in Book 3609, Pages 1818, Mortgage in Book 3609, Pages 1823. Total amount presently delinquent $12,659.98, Attorneys fees $350.00, Costs $457.33. You are currently in default under certain provisions of the above referenced mortgage and timeshare instrument. As provided for in paragraph 4. of the aforementioned mortgage, the lien-holder has chosen to proceed with a non-judicial foreclosure procedure in accordance with Article 3 of Chapter 32 of Title 27 of the Code of Laws of South Carolina. PURSUANT TO SECTION 27-32-325, S.C. CODE ANN., 1976, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE HEREBY ADVISED OF THE FOLLOWING: IF YOU FAIL TO CURE THE DEFAULT OR TAKE OTHER APPROPRIATE ACTION WITH REGARD TO THIS MATTER WITHIN THIRTY CALENDAR DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE, YOU WILL RISK LOSING YOUR INTEREST IN THIS TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH A NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE. HOWEVER, UNDER THE NONJUDICIAL PROCEDURE, YOU WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT OR PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED EVEN IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. YOU MAY OBJECT TO THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE AND REQUIRE FORECLOSURE OF YOUR TIMESHARE INTEREST TO PROCEED THROUGH THE JUDICIAL PROCESS. AN OBJECTION MUST BE MADE IN WRITING AND RECEIVED BY THE TRUSTEE BEFORE THE END OF THE THIRTY-DAY TIME PERIOD. YOU MUST STATE THE REASON FOR YOUR OBJECTION AND INCLUDE YOUR ADDRESS ON THE WRITTEN OBJECTION. IN A JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING THAT RESULTS FROM YOUR OBJECTION, YOU MAY BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT AND PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. FURTHERMORE, YOU ALSO MAY BE SUBJECT TO A PERSONAL MONEY JUDGMENT FOR THE COSTS AND ATTORNEY’S FEES INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER IN THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING IF THE COURT FINDS THAT THERE IS COMPLETE ABSENCE OF A JUSTIFIABLE ISSUE OF EITHER LAW OR FACT RAISED BY YOUR OBJECTIONS OR DEFENSES. YOU HAVE THE RIGHT

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NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND INTENT TO SELL Name and address of Purchaser: MALIKA HARRIS , 1837 S 68TH ST, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19142 A fee simple undivided 0.0073861610410129 % ownership interest in the Project as tenants(s) in common with the holders of other undivided interests in and to the timeshare property known as MBV VACATION SUITES, as established by that certain Declaration of Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions and Vacation Ownership Instrument for MBV Vacation Suites, recorded at Book 3406, Pages 1312- 1365, et seq., of the records of the R.O.D. Office for Beaufort County, South Carolina, as amended or supplemented (the “Declaration”), having Interval Control Number U1305-W31E. Deed recorded in Book 3941, Pages 2074, Mortgage in Book 3941, Pages 2079. Total amount presently delinquent $30,006.23, Attorneys fees $350.00, Costs $457.33. You are currently in default under certain provisions of the above referenced mortgage and timeshare instrument. As provided for in paragraph 4. of the aforementioned mortgage, the lien-holder has chosen to proceed with a non-judicial foreclosure procedure in accordance with Article 3 of Chapter 32 of Title 27 of the Code of Laws of South Carolina. PURSUANT TO SECTION 27-32-325, S.C. CODE ANN., 1976, AS AMENDED, YOU ARE HEREBY ADVISED OF THE FOLLOWING: IF YOU FAIL TO CURE THE DEFAULT OR TAKE OTHER APPROPRIATE ACTION WITH REGARD TO THIS MATTER WITHIN THIRTY CALENDAR DAYS AFTER RECEIPT OF THIS NOTICE, YOU WILL RISK LOSING YOUR INTEREST IN THIS TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH A NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE. HOWEVER, UNDER THE NONJUDICIAL PROCEDURE, YOU WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT OR PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED EVEN IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. YOU MAY OBJECT TO THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE THROUGH THE NONJUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE AND REQUIRE FORECLOSURE OF YOUR TIMESHARE INTEREST TO PROCEED THROUGH THE JUDICIAL PROCESS. AN OBJECTION MUST BE MADE IN WRITING AND RECEIVED BY THE TRUSTEE BEFORE THE END OF THE THIRTY-DAY TIME PERIOD. YOU MUST STATE THE REASON FOR YOUR OBJECTION AND INCLUDE YOUR ADDRESS ON THE WRITTEN OBJECTION. IN A JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING THAT RESULTS FROM YOUR OBJECTION, YOU MAY BE SUBJECT TO A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT AND PERSONAL LIABILITY FOR THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED IF THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE RESULTING FROM THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE IS INSUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE AMOUNT OF THE LIEN BEING FORECLOSED. FURTHERMORE, YOU ALSO MAY BE SUBJECT TO A PERSONAL MONEY JUDGMENT FOR THE COSTS AND ATTORNEY’S FEES INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER IN THE JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE PROCEEDING IF THE COURT FINDS THAT THERE IS COMPLETE ABSENCE OF A JUSTIFIABLE ISSUE OF EITHER LAW OR FACT RAISED BY YOUR OBJECTIONS OR DEFENSES. YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO CURE YOUR DEFAULT AT ANY TIME BEFORE THE SALE OF YOUR TIMESHARE ESTATE, BY PAYMENT OF ALL PAST DUE LOAN PAYMENTS OR ASSESSMENTS, ACCRUED INTEREST, LATE FEES, TAXES, AND ALL FEES AND COSTS INCURRED BY THE LIENHOLDER AND TRUSTEE, INCLUDING ATTORNEY’S FEES AND COSTS, IN CONNECTION WITH THE DEFAULT. Any response or inquiry should be made in writing to King Cunningham, LLC, Attn: Jeffrey W. King, Esq. who is serving as Trustee in this matter, at the following address: 1000 2nd Ave S, Ste 325, North Myrtle Beach, SC 29582.

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MAY 12–18, 2022


NEWS

Harvey & Battey celebrates 100 years of serving clients in Beaufort

By Mike McCombs What do you do when it’s your 100th birthday? You throw a party, of course. That’s what Harvey & Battey did. The Beaufort law firm has now been serving clients in the Lowcountry for 100 years. And they threw a party Saturday, May 7, at their offices. “There were a lot of former clients and family, between 200 and 300 people there,” Harvey & Battey senior partner Colden Battey said. “It was a good party.” Battey, 86, has been practicing with the firm for the past 60 years. “The law practice has gone from a small thing to a big deal, from three of us to nine lawyers,” Battey said. “We changed just like the town has changed in the last 60 years. The firm has grown with the town.” Battey said in the earlier years, the firm did work mostly in real estate and trial work. Now, he said, decades later, there is a lot more estate planning. Bill Harvey, a partner in Harvey & Battey and attorney for the City of Beaufort, said the firm’s ability to change and adapt, particularly as the whole practice of law has changed with technology, has been the hallmark of a strong

Friends, family and clients of Harvey & Battey help the Beaufort law firm celebrate it’s 100th birthday Saturday, May 7, at the firm’s office. Photo by Jeff Evans, The Island News. organization. “I don’t think necessarily the people have changed,” Harvey said. “Their needs and desires have become more technologically sophisticated. But the underlying needs and desires have not changed. Beaufort is still a warm and wonderful community to live in and a pleasure to serve.” The technology may have changed, but Battey agreed one thing hasn’t. And that, he said, is the key to the firm’s success. “The clients. The best thing a law firm can do is have a satisfied client,” Battey said. “The firm has been continuous for 100 years. A lot of firms come and go. But the

service we provide our clients has allowed us to be here 100 years. And the service we provide our clients is still strong. I think we’ll be here quite a while longer, too.” Harvey & Battey has been a prominent firm in Beaufort since the beginning. W. Brantley Harvey, Sr. opened his law practice in Beaufort in 1922. Elected in 1928, he also served as a State Senator for 28 years. His son, Brantley Harvey, Jr., joined the firm in 1955. He served in the S.C. House of Representatives from 1958 to 1974 and was Lt. Governor from 1975 until 1978. Battey came aboard in 1963, completing the trio. He spent time on the Beaufort

At the time of the firm’s 100th birthday, the attorneys of Harvey & Battey are (front row from left) Ashley Amundson, Gene Parrs, Colden Battey, Jr., William Harvey, Kevin Dukes, Austin Blake, (rear from left) David Tedder, Tom Davis, Sam Scoville and Tom Holloway. Photo courtesy of Harvey & Battey. County Council and was its chairman. Tom Davis came aboard in 1985. He has been a State Senator since 2008. There are now nine lawyers in the firm. “You have to work to reach this milestone,” Harvey said. “You have to have a dedication to integrity. That’s the hallmark of this organization, You have only one integrity. You can lose it very quickly.” The Beaufort City Council passed a resolution at Tuesday evening’s meeting recognizing, honoring and cele-

brating Harvey & Battey’s 100 years in Beaufort. “We’ve reached a milestone that very few businesses achieve,” Harvey said. “I think we’re as strong now as we’ve ever been. That takes the dedication of everybody to do what we’ve done and to be in this position.” With 60 years in the firm under his belt, Battey has slowed down a bit, but he said he’s nowhere near quitting. “I go in and do things for a few clients, three days a week,” he said. “I’m not as

active as I was, but I still do things.” Battey said he initially had no idea how long he was going to be here, “but having grown up in Beaufort, there is no place I’d rather (have been).” Harvey echoed the sentiment. “This is the only place I ever wanted to practice my profession.”

ness hours at 8 a.m., Friday, May 13. For more information, please call the Bluffton Office at 843-255-6020 or Beaufort at 843-255-6000.

Public test of precinct scanners for June primaries set for Monday

ers include Willie Turral, Republican candidate for Beaufort County Auditor; Josh Scallate, candidate for County Council District 4; David Bartholomew, candidate for County Council District 2; and incumbent Beaufort County Sheriff P.J. Tanner. Seating is limited, so attendees should arrive early. Members on the Beaufort TEA Party list will be checked and given priority admittance. Each candidate will speak and a “Question and Answer" period will be held only after all candidates have spoken. For more information, visit www.BeaufortTEAParty. com or email BeaufortTEAParty@gmail.com.

(SCDNR) Law Enforcement Division will be hold courtesy boat inspections from 10 a.m. to noon at the Lemon Island Boat Landing. SCDNR officers will perform a quick, but thorough, inspection of your boat to make sure you have the required safety equipment and proper boat and motor registration for your watercraft before you launch. These inspections are completely voluntary and are not required before launching. Boaters who take advantage of the inspection, and are found not to be in compliance with safety regulations or registration requirements, will not be ticketed during the complimentary inspections. Instead, boaters will be given an opportunity to correct the problem before they launch their boat. SCDNR officers will also be available to answer questions and give boaters tips on how to stay safe on the water.

NEWS BRIEFS

League of Women Voters meeting set for May 12

Voter education will be the focus for the upcoming Thursday, May 12, working committee meeting for League of Women Voters Beaufort Area from 6 to 7:30 p.m., at the Sea Island Presbyterian Church Meeting Room at 81 Lady’s Island Drive. The meeting will be an informal gathering of members, friends, partners, and anyone who would like to be informed about the details of the upcoming Primary Elections on June 14. The objective is to ensure that all members and friends have the information that they need to #GetVoteReady and prepare everyone for sharing the information in their communities. As reported by the LWVB Voter Access Committee, the lowest voter turnout is among 18-24 year olds and 25-44 year olds. Organizers

Hotel

from page A1 be in physical proximity to shopping, markets, entertainment and other necessities,” said Dan Norville, founder and CEO of Vivo Living. “We are reusing buildings versus building ground-up. Adaptive reuse is the most environmentally friendly way of developing. We are basically a building recycling company.” The Ribaut Road property is the first acquired by the developer in Beaufort County, but the third in the state purchased for the purpose of conversion to apartments. The two previously purchased properties are located in North Charleston and Greenville. The company owns 18 such properties nationwide. “We’re excited about the transition,” Town Manager Van Willis said. “I know they’re not large units, but they could be at a price point that’s more palatable for some of our working people. It’s

ask that each participant bring one or more names of organizations or communities that would be candidates to work with and help them #GetVoteReady, especially in the low turnout populations. As a group, we will also develop fresh #GOTV (Get Out The Vote) messaging, as we prepare to provide outreach communications to the community. All are welcome to join and participate at the May 12 meeting. For more information visit lwvbeaufort.org.

County Alcohol and Drug Abuse Department offices to close Thursday

The Beaufort County Alcohol and Drug Abuse Department offices in Bluffton and Beaufort will close at noon Thursday, May 12 for staff training. Both offices will reopen for normal busistill a little early, but it’s exciting for us in a way.” In addition to local demand for workforce housing to support those who work in the service economy, the site’s favorable zoning was a prime factor in Vivo’s selection of the Port Royal hotel for purchase and conversion, said Norville. “In terms of use, it’s an allowed use,” Willis explained, “But what it really comes down to is making sure that it’s building code compliant more than anything. The use itself is permitted in the zoning district they’re currently in.” A listing for the Days Inn that appears on the website loopnet.com states that the 56,875-square foot, two-story building was built in 1986. It featured 140 rooms on a 4.1acre lot. Each of those 140 rooms will be converted into an apartment. “We try to keep the unit count the same so as to provide as many housing units as possible,” Norville explained. “It also helps to keep the rents at a reasonable and attain-

Zonta hosting yard sale

The Zonta Club of Beaufort will be having a giant yard sale from 8 a.m. to noon, Saturday, May 14, at the Robinson Grant, CPA Firm's parking lot located at 806 Boundary Street, near Bellamy Curve leading onto Carteret Street. Proceeds will benefit the club's service projects in the community. Sale items include tools, garden tools, books, puzzles, linens, baskets, stuffed animals, weight scale (up to 300 pounds), jewelry, purses, belts, scarves and wraps, queen size comforter, bed skirt, shams and custom made pillows, household items and many items too numerous to mention.

A public test of the precinct scanners for the June Statewide Primaries will begin on Monday, May 16, at 10:00 a.m. at the Board of Voter Registration and Elections of Beaufort County office, located at 15 John Galt Road, Beaufort, S.C. 29906. For more information, visit https://www.beaufortcountysc.gov/vote or call 843-2556900.

Beaufort TEA Party monthly meeting Monday

The Beaufort TEA Party will hold its monthly meeting from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Monday, May 16, at Fuji's Restaurant, located at 97A Sea Island Parkway, Lady's Island. This month’s guest speak-

SCDNR to hold courtesy boat inspections on Memorial Day

On Memorial Day, Monday, May 30, S.C. Department of Natural Resources

The former Days Inn in Port Royal will be converted to apartments. Bedding and other furniture are being moved out. Photo by Bob Sofaly. able level given the units are primarily studios, which are cheaper to rent than a one- or two-bedroom unit.” In the conversion process, each apartment will receive new flooring, paint and win-

dow treatments. Additionally, new kitchens will be installed with stainless steel appliances. Floor plans for the Port Royal project are not yet available. A similar Vivo Living initiative in New

Braunfels, Texas features 250to 300-square foot efficiencies with a bed, a sitting area, refrigerator, two-burner stove and a small sink in addition to a bathroom with a shower and sink.

Mike McCombs is the editor of The Island News and can be reached at TheIslandNews@gmail.com.

The site will also feature a living-room lobby with free Wi-Fi, lounge areas, a pool, fitness centers and community-oriented programs and events. The hotel will continue to operate while the conversion process is under way, in part, Norville said, to give construction workers involved with the project a place to stay. Vivo Living will serve as the property manager for the location. “We would like to deliver in phases to get some much needed housing supply to the market sooner rather than later,” Norville explained. “If we can deliver the units in phases then we could likely get the first building available for lease in six to eight months.” Tony Kukulich is a recent transplant to the Lowcountry. A native of Wilmington, Del., he comes to The Island News from the San Francisco Bay Area where he spent seven years as a reporter and photographer for several publications. He can be reached at tony.theislandnews@gmail.com. MAY 12–18, 2022

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HEALTH & WELLNESS Options & References for a Healthier Life

Dealing with tendinitis and bursitis Despite names like ‘Tennis Elbow’, ‘Swimmer's Shoulder’ and ‘Jumper's Knee’, bursitis and tendinitis are conditions that strike average Joes as well as serious athletes. According to physical therapists, they're the most common type of repetitive motion injury, caused by an over-and-overagain movement—running, throwing a baseball, swinging a golf club—that puts strain on soft tissues and results in pain and inflammation. Repetitive motion injuries represent more than half of all the athletic-related injuries that send people to the doctor each year. Tendinitis and bursitis are inflammatory conditions (hence the term "itis" in their names). The first affects a tendon, a type of soft tissue that primarily connects muscles to bone, or its covering (called a sheath). The second affects bursae, which are small, fluid-filled sacs that typically protect bony prominences, muscles, and tendons from friction and/or compression. Tendinitis and bursitis are

often caused by biomechanical dysfunction in the body. For example, someone with a scapular (shoulder blade) dysfunction would be vulnerable to tendinitis of the rotator cuff or bursitis in the bursa of the shoulder joint, he explains. Runners with poor biomechanical patterns may be susceptible to tendinitis in the ankle or bursitis in the hip. Some people develop both tendinitis and bursitis at once.

Advice for treatment

The standard advice for treating tendinitis and/or bursitis is rest. You must do two things if you want to get rid of this kind of injury. One, stop performing the motion that's causing the damage to your tissues. And two, give those tissues time to heal. But for many people—pro athletes as well as average Joes (devoted runners or gym junkies)—"rest" can be a four-letter word. Rest isn't an all-or-nothing proposition. Someone with bursitis or tendinitis can exercise if they do so correctly.

Individuals can usually work around an injury to avoid further aggravating it. A credentialed exercise professional or physical therapist can often recommend exercises that can help correct the condition.

Tips for Staying Healthy and Avoiding Further Injury

The best exercises are those that will correct any biomechanical dysfunction without aggravating the condition. Thus, someone with shoulder tendinitis or bursitis should be able to run or bike for a cardiovascular workout but should probably avoid swimming. On the other hand, a runner with Achilles Tendinitis would benefit swimming (or biking). To help correct biomechanical problems in a shoulder, hip or other area, a physical therapist would likely recommend specific exercises to strengthen weak stabilizing muscles in the injured area and to stretch muscle groups that may be tight. Looking ahead, a physical

therapist can offer specific advice regarding getting back to one's regular routine-without repeating the original injury. Until an individual has eliminated his or her pain and corrected any biomechanical faults, it’s typically advised against resuming the activity that contributed to the condition in the first place. This gives the body the opportunity to heal. Additionally, a "maintenance routine" of small, single-joint exercises that target small stabilizing muscles, performed once or twice a week is generally recommended, (to be performed in conjunction with a patient's regular workouts). By targeting these areas, a patient's biomechanics will be improved and ensure that they're moving correctly during other modes of exercise. Source: John Connelly, PT, DPT, CSCS, licensed Physical Therapist. He is board certified as an orthopedic specialist in physical therapy. He is a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (NSCA) and a Level 1 Sports Performance Coach (USA Weightlifting).

Microwaving food in plastic: Dangerous or not?

Chances are good that you’ve at some point received an urgent “PLEASE READ THIS!” email about the dangers of microwaving food in plastic containers or plastic wrap or run across an article about it on a website. The message is that chemicals leaching out of the plastic and into the food will cause cancer, reproductive problems, and other ills. Is there any truth to this, or is it just another Internet-fueled “urban legend”? As is often the case with such warnings, this one contains a small kernel of truth—and a lot of misinformation. Let’s cover the original misinformation first: The earliest missives warned that microwaved plastic releases cancer-causing chemicals called dioxins into food. The problem with that warning is that plastics don’t contain dioxins. They are created when garbage, plastics, metals, wood, and other materials are burned. As long as you don’t burn your food in a microwave, you aren’t exposing yourself to dioxins.

Being a parent can be the hardest job in the world, especially as you are juggling your personal and professional. However, as a new parent being told that your child will be born autistic, your world changes. It estimates that about one in 54 kids are autistic and explains that autism's found in all racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups. The moment you get told that your child is autistic, you become an advocate, educator, cheerleader, therapist, warrior and much more. Most of the time you find that you are battling various roles and you may get frustrated thinking that your child can’t show appreciation or express it. Working with an autistic child in the home setting is challenging but can be done with the proper support system.

Migrating chemicals

There’s no single substance called “plastic.” That term covers many materials made from an array of organic and inorganic compounds. Substances are often added to plastic to help shape or stabilize it. Two of these plasticizers are • bisphenol-A (BPA), added to make clear, hard plastic • phthalates, added to make plastic soft and flexible BPA and phthalates are believed to be “endocrine disrupters.” These are substances that mimic human hormones, and not for the good. When food is wrapped in

plastic or placed in a plastic container and microwaved, BPA and phthalates may leak into the food. Any migration is likely to be greater with fatty foods such as meats and cheeses than with other foods. The FDA long ago recognized the potential for small amounts of plasticizers to migrate into food. So, it closely regulates plastic containers and materials that come into contact with food. The FDA requires manufacturers to test these containers using tests that meet FDA standards and specifications. It then reviews test data before

MAY 12–18, 2022

food contained plastic additives. What about containers without a microwave-safe label? They aren’t necessarily unsafe; the FDA simply hasn’t determined whether it is or not.

It is important for your emotional well-being to take the time to understand your feelings, accept them, and move forward. 1.

2.

Accept your feelings of sadness. It is accepted and expected. When you are told your child is special needs, it is similar to a death as there is such pain. It truly is a life altering event. Many of your plans and dreams for your child may need to be altered. It is important for your emotional well-being to take the time to understand your feelings, accept them, and move forward. Once you accept the situation, it’s very important to have faith

3.

4.

and hope. Medical breakthroughs happen every day. The brain is a wonderful organ with the ability to heal and learn. Educate yourself! You must become an advocate for your child. The internet is a powerful tool. Seek out experts in your area, support groups, etc. There is an informative website www.autismnavigator. com Therapy, therapy, therapy. The earlier it starts the better. Make a list of your child's issues, and

5.

determine the therapies that would be most beneficial. Physical, occupational, speech, visual, auditory processing, are all available. Therapy can be expensive; see what is offered in the public school system. See if a local college has students majoring in the field and see if they have an interest to help. Investigate. Find the closest medical school and see if they have any clinical studies on Autism. Most will. See if your child is a candidate and how to become involved. Stem Cell therapy is becoming more relevant as studies demonstrate a significant benefit. See if this is available as well.

By Christine (Chris) Weiss, a mother, author and educator. She is the author of Educating Marston, a compelling memoir about a mother and son’s journey through autism.

Is Styrofoam microwave safe?

Contrary to popular belief, some Styrofoam and other polystyrene containers can safely be used in the microwave. Just follow the same rule you follow for other plastic containers: Check the label.

The bottom line

Here are some things to keep in mind when using the microwave: If you’re concerned about plastic wraps or containers in the microwave, transfer food to glass or ceramic containers labeled for use in microwave ovens. • Don’t let plastic wrap touch food during microwaving because it may melt. Wax paper, kitchen parchment paper, white

Tips for raising a child with autism

Everywhere That People Care The trusted Care magazine is now back in print as a regular contributor to The Island News, with Karen Mozzo as editor. Together we’ll deliver information, references, and options for a healthier life.

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approving a container for microwave use. Some of these tests measure the migration of chemicals at temperatures that the container or wrap is likely to encounter during ordinary use. For microwave approval, the agency estimates the ratio of plastic surface area to food, how long the container is likely to be in the microwave, how often a person is likely to eat from the container, and how hot the food can be expected to get during microwaving. The scientists also measure the chemicals that leach into food and the extent to which they migrate in different kinds of foods. The maximum allowable amount is 100– 1,000 times less per pound of body weight than the amount shown to harm laboratory animals over a lifetime of use. Only containers that pass this test can display a microwave-safe icon, the words “microwave safe,” or words to the effect that they’re approved for use in microwave ovens. When Good Housekeeping microwaved food in 31 plastic containers, lids, and wraps, it found that almost none of the

paper towels, or a domed container that fits over a plate or bowl are better alternatives. Most takeout containers, water bottles, and plastic tubs or jars made to hold margarine, yogurt, whipped topping, and foods such as cream cheese, mayonnaise, and mustard, are NOT microwave-safe. Microwavable takeout dinner trays are formulated for one-time use only and will say so on the package. Old, scratched, or cracked containers, or those that have been microwaved many times, may leach out more plasticizers. Don’t microwave plastic storage bags or plastic bags from the grocery store. Before microwaving food, be sure to vent the container: leave the lid ajar or lift the edge of the cover.

Source: http://www.health.harvard. edu//staying-healthy/microwavingfood-in-plastic-dangerous-or-not? The Family Health Guide


HEALTH & WELLNESS Options & References for a Healthier Life

Helping children manage frustration

By Stacey L. Spencer, Ed.D. Frustration is inevitable for young children. There are shelves that can't be reached, shoes that can't be tied, baseballs that can't be hit and parents and other adults saying "no" to a child's most fervent desires. Frustration isn't necessarily a negative emotion. Dealt with constructively, it can help children learn to overcome obstacles and tolerate disappointment. "The mistake most children make when frustrated is to just try harder, to keep doing the same thing over and over," says clinical neuropsychologist Dr. Stacey Spencer, Ed.D. "Unfortunately, that seldom results in success and the child's emotions can quickly escalate to anger and even despair, which are indeed negative emotions and can be overwhelming for young children. It's up to parents to help the child learn to overcome frustration and find solutions to the obstacles that confront them." Sometimes that is easier said than done. A parent's immediate inclination when a child is frustrated and upset is to step in and do whatever is necessary to make the child happy. "While stepping in is the right thing to do before frustration escalates, remov-

previous challenges that he has overcome and how it seemed he would never succeed—and then did.

Remember that the goal is for the child to learn to recognize his own frustration and be able to deal with it on his own. Every time you help him quiet down and approach a problem calmly, he is learning a valuable lesson in patience and perseverance and is taking a step toward that goal.

Coping with "No"

ing the roadblock right away or giving in to the child's demands may not be the best strategy," says Dr. Spencer. "It's better to turn the problem into an opportunity to help the child learn how to manage frustration." Dr. Spencer offers suggestions to parents for helping children cope with these emotions.

Coping with "I Can't"

• Make your own behavior a model for your child: Let your child see you manage your own frustration by staying positive

and looking for solutions. Avoid vociferous expressions of impatience and anger. • Encourage expression of emotion: Let your child know that it's okay to express her frustration verbally and even to cry but help her learn to calm herself by soothingly asking what the problem is and discussing solutions. A hug or a cuddle with a favorite stuffed animal may help. • Take a break: Sometimes continuing to tackle the

Stay active with a disability:

QUICK TIPS

Do strengthening activities 2 days a week. • These include activities like crunches (situps), push-ups, or lifting weights. • Try working on the muscles that you use less often because of your disability.

Regular physical activity is good for everyone's health, including people with disabilities. Getting active can help you: • Strengthen your heart • Build strong muscles and bones • Improve coordination • Relieve stress, improve your mood, and feel better about yourself

Before you start... • Talk to your doctor about the types and amounts of physical activity that are right for you. If you are taking medicine, be sure to find out how it will affect your physical activity. • It’s also a good idea to talk to a trained exercise professional. Find a fitness center near you that is comfortable and accessible. Ask if they have experience working with people with similar disabilities.

Aim for 2 hours and 30 minutes a week of moderate aerobic activities. • Choose aerobic activities—activities that make your heart beat faster—like walking fast or wheeling yourself in a wheelchair, swimming, or raking leaves. • Start slowly. Be active for at least 10 minutes at a time and gradually build up to doing 30 minutes at a time. • Aim for 30 minutes of aerobic activity on most days of the week.

Find support and stick with it. • Take along a friend, especially if you are trying out a new activity. • If you don’t meet your physical activity goal, don’t give up. Start again tomorrow. • Be active according to your abilities. Remember, some physical activity is better than none! For more information on physical activity and disabilities, visit: National Center on Health, Physical Activity and Disability (NCHPAD), http://www.nchpad.org

problem head-on will just exacerbate the frustration. Suggest stepping back for a little while. Sing a song, get some physical exercise, have a snack. Have him do something he can do successfully to boost confidence. • Break it down: If the original problem presents an insurmountable obstacle, try again with just a single step that can be accomplished successfully and built on. • Remember past successes: Remind your child of

• Stick to your intent: Empathize with the child's desire but stand firm. Giving in once will make the child's frustration worse next time. • Stay positive and calm: Don't let the child's heated emotions affect your own reaction. If you are in control of your emotions, it will be easier for the child to control hers. • Offer an alternative: A cookie after lunch, a favorite game after nap, an extra story at bedtime... something the child will want that you can say "yes" to.

Helping a child deal with the frustration of "no" requires

a strategy virtually opposite that of coping with the inability to accomplish a task. "This is a case in which allowing perseverance to achieve the child's desired result is not the best outcome," says Dr. Spencer. "The child must learn to accept 'no' and let go of the goal. But the lesson learned is similar: to be able to deal with the emotion on his own and understand that he can tolerate not always getting everything he wants." Every time you help your child cope with frustration, she is gaining experience in recognizing and understanding her feelings and learning an important skill. Dr. Spencer concludes: "Children who learn to successfully manage the frustration that is unavoidable in their young lives will develop confidence that they can deal with disappointment and will more easily cope with challenges and difficulties later on." Stacey L. Spencer, Ed.D., is the Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry & Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. She provides psychotherapy with a cognitive behavioral approach and specializes in neuropsychological assessment of children, adolescents and adults following brain injuries and in connection with attention and learning differences.

careTALK© Childhood insomnia

Insomnia, or trouble falling asleep or staying asleep, is largely thought of as an adult problem. But children can suffer from insomnia as well, and that can prove disruptive for the entire family. Children who do not receive an adequate amount of sleep can feel tired and irritable, and may have difficulty concentrating in school. Many factors can contribute to the onset of childhood insomnia. Kids, just like adults, can suffer from stress, which then manifests itself as worry or an overactive mind at night, says the Cleveland Clinic. Depression, anxiety, pain, or other medical problems also may be the catalyst for insomnia. While common insomnia medications used in adults are not approved for children, there are steps parents can

take. A solid bedtime routine, including consistent bedtimes and wake times, can help combat child insomnia. Try to identify stressors and

remedy them as well. In some instances, a pediatrician or therapist may be needed to help a child work through sleep-related issues.

Everywhere That People Care The trusted Care magazine is now back in print as a regular contributor to The Island News, with Karen Mozzo as editor. Together we’ll deliver information, references, and options for a healthier life.

We’ll get through this together. s u n i o J

NEW PATIENT SPECIAL!

BREAST CANCER SUPPORT GROUP

2nd Wednesday each month from 6 - 7 p.m.

CANCER SUPPORT GROUP (all cancers) 4th Wednesday each month from 6 - 7 p.m. Beaufort Medical Plaza

989 Ribaut Road, Beaufort • Classroom 350 (3rd floor)

$109

Includes: Exam, X-Rays & Cleaning Initial Visit Only

General & Cosmetic Dentistry • Dental Implants • Latest Technology for Procedures •

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MAY 12–18, 2022

A9


EDUCATION

BOE schedules public forum for 2022-23 budget From staff reports A public forum is scheduled this week in Northern Beaufort County for community members to learn more about the school district budget being developed by the Beaufort County Board of Education for the 2022-23

school year. The forum will be at Beaufort High School at 6 p.m. Thursday, May 12. Participants will hear a presentation on the budget and have a chance to work in small groups to deeper explore various areas such as

instruction, administration, operations, and salaries. Participants will be able to share their discussions and suggestions with Board members. “One of the Board’s most significant jobs is to approve the school district’s annu-

al budget in a transparent manner,” Board Chair David Striebinger said in a release. “We hope community tax payers, parents, and our educators will attend one of our budget forums so they can learn about next year’s budget and provide feedback to

the Board.” Individuals who are unable to attend can also view the proposed budget and provide feedback through BCSD Connected at https:// co n ne c t b eau fo r t sc ho o ls . org/. The feedback forum will be open through May 15.

The Board hopes to officially certify the district’s 2022-23 budget at its May 17 meeting. Beaufort County Council’s current timeline calls for three readings, with the final reading of the district’s budget taking place on June 27.

Parker’s gives $56k to Beaufort County School District

From staff reports Parker’s, which operates 71 convenience stores in Georgia and South Carolina, has donated $56,000 to the Beaufort County School District. According to a news release, the proceeds came from Parker’s “Fueling the Community” program. The promotion gives one cent of every gallon of gas sold on the first Wednesday of each month to local schools. Superintendent Frank Rodriguez accepted the donation on behalf of the school

district. “This partnership with Parker’s is a wonderful example of a strong community partnership,” Rodriguez said in a release. “The company’s visible annual donation is greatly appreciated by our employees who serve our children in so many aspects of the district.” Part of the Parker’s donation will help support the school district’s annual “Support Person of the Year” recognition program, which honors school nurses, social

workers, bookkeepers, office managers, teacher assistants, school secretaries, bus drivers, and technology and data specialists. Other funds wil go to specific schools designated by Parker’s “Pump Pal Club” customers when they purchase their gasoline on the first Wednesday of each month. "We're incredibly honored to support the hard work of district employees who serve the children of families right here in Beaufort County through our Fueling the

JROTC HONOR

Community program," Parker’s Community Outreach Manager Olivia Parker said in a release. "At Parker's, giving back is part of our DNA. We want to be a force for positive change in the communities where we operate stores and believe education has the power to transform lives." Parker’s launched its charitable initiative in 2011 and has donated money to public and private schools in every community where Parker’s does business.

Beaufort County School District Superintendent Frank Rodriguez, Parker’s Community Outreach Manager Olivia Parker, and Board of Education Vice-Chair Cathy Robine. Submitted photo.

Schools announce teachers and support staff of the year for 2022-23

Beaufort County Board of Education members and Beaufort County School District administrators made surprise visits Friday, May 6, to classrooms and work areas to announce the 2022-23 Teachers of the Year and Support Staff of the Year. “This is an amazing opportunity to celebrate our best and brightest teacher and staff leaders,” Superintendent

Frank Rodriguez said in a release. “They represent all district employees who consistently go above and beyond in supporting our students needs in innovative and creative ways.” Teachers of the Year are selected by their peers according to criteria established by the schools, the South Carolina Department of Education and the district’s Teacher Fo-

rum. Teachers honored will be eligible for District Teacher of the Year honors next fall. Support staff honorees are selected by school staff and can include social workers, school nurses, bookkeepers, office managers, teacher assistants, school secretaries and technology and data specialists. Staff honored will be eligible for District Support Staff Person of the Year.

2022-2023 Beaufort County Teachers of the Year and Support Staff of the Year

Col. Harold Mills, USAF Ret., Chairmen of Military Awards for Beaufort's Gov. Paul Hamilton Chapter, Sons of the American Revolution, honors Cadet Bryan Velasquez with the SAR Bronze JRTOC Medal on Friday, April 29 at Bluffton High School’s annual JROTC Awards and Achievement program in the school auditorium. Cadet Velasquez, a rising senior, was selected by the school's Senior Army Instructor, Col. Thomas F. Foster, U.S. Army, ret., for his "Leadership, Soldierly Bearing and Excellence." The Medal depicts a Minuteman holding a rifle, with plow and the Liberty Bell in the background. Submitted photo.

BOOKMARK WINNERS

The winners of the Beaufort County Library’s 2022 Bookmark Contest have been announced. The four winning entries came from Sonora Henry, 8, of Coosa Elementary; Nevaeh J. Cleveland, 12, of Lowcountry Virtual/ Beaufort Middle School; Kailey Hall, 17, of SC Whitmore; and Veronica McLeod (18+ age group). The four winning designs were chosen from 950 entries will be available at library locations during the Summer Reading Program. Submitted photos.

School

Teacher of the Year

Support Staff of the Year

Battery Creek High

Justine Hardy

Quintin Moultrie

Beaufort Elementary

Paige Grennan

Shannon Switzer

Beaufort High

Dawn Peebles

Christina Allen

Beaufort Middle

Jordan Pender

John Uhlman

Beaufort-Jasper ACE

Edwin Tucker

Steve Bove

Bluffton Elementary, ECC

Laura Bradley

Sharonne Allen

Bluffton High

Jeron Martinez

Kathy Olson

Bluffton Middle

Kinsey Butler

Debbie Cepollina

Broad River Elementary

Tracy Maxwell

Alicia Shaw

Coosa Elementary

Jennifer Lyles

Kimberly Fickes

H. E. McCracken Middle

Kelly McMahan

Lisa Parquin-Groth

Hilton Head ECC

Teresa Nelson

Chris Ponsini

Hilton Head Elementary (IB)

Helen Ashton

Gayle Oslund

Hilton Head Island Creative Arts, Daufuskie Island

Emily Jeffords

Judith Clouse

Hilton Head Island High

Garret Talarczyk

DaisyDianne Morgan

Hilton Head Island Middle

Dr. Laverne Stewart

Stephanie Vanderpool

Joseph Shanklin Elementary

Cathy Cobbs

Luann Jayne

Lady’s Island Elementary

Angela Tidwell

Julie Riddle

Lady’s Island Middle

Marta Smith

Tammy Smith

May River High School

Karri Kearns

Melissa Halsey

M. C. Riley Elementary/ECC

Victoria Cockrell

Kevin Fulton

Mossy Oaks Elementary

Becky Schlack-Babb

Jodi Knorr

Okatie Elementary

Diane Woods

Kate Leighton

Port Royal Elementary

Kimberly Islas

Holly Mehrer

Pritchardville Elementary

Rosemary Birchall

Julie Houchin

Red Cedar Elementary

Aneta Garbutt Cummings

Melody Wright

River Ridge Academy

Lauren Borasky

Lindsay Catanzaro

Robert Smalls Intl. Academy

Amber Reeves

Rauel HernandezCardenas

St. Helena Elementary, ELC

Cheilon Preston

Rebekkah Mickel

Whale Branch E.C. High

Robert "Jack" Bryant

Sharika Green

Whale Branch El., Davis ECC

Cindy Crosby

Shonda Royals

Whale Branch Middle

Blakely Fowler

Angela White

Adult Education

Peggie Darien

Nykerria Aiken

Transportation

Kimiko Miller

District Office

Melissa Hibbs

Office of Early Childhood Education

Mayra Toro

Right Choices

Onika Jaquese

Mass Schedule Weekends

SAINT

PETER’S CATHOLIC CHURCH

70 Lady’s Island Drive Beaufort, SC 29907 www.stpetersbeaufort.org

843-522-9555

A10

MAY 12–18, 2022

SATURDAY 5:00 pm 7:00 pm (Spanish)

SUNDAY 9:00 am 11:00 am 4:00 pm -

Daily Masses Main Church 8:30 am

Mon Tues Thurs Fri

Sunday Worship Pre-Recorded — YouTube Indoor — Sanctuary 8:30 and 10:30 am Holy Cross Mission

Historic Church 12:00 pm - Wed 9:00 am - 1st Sat of Month

81 Lady’s Island Drive 843.525.0696 www.seaislandpresbyterian.org

Jesus Christ is Lord! Steve Keeler, Senior Pastor Richard Norris, Lay Pastor

A Congregation of the Presbyterian Church (USA)


EDUCATION

Graduating Class of 2022 • May 13, 2022 Certificate Graduates

Diploma Graduates

Jaeon David Allen

Kelcie Shari Anderson

Jared Moshe Amaral Seda

Cassandra Banks

Nyla Zerine Arn

Jasmine Marie Callender

Marlena Yneathe Benson

Sydney Luree Cantwell

Zahory Bernabe-Villegas

MaCayla Janae Frazier

Wayne Bidelman

Allison Goen

Briana Chante Binyard

Josefa Alicia Heidacher

Faith Victoria Blatter

Connor Ansley Faulkner

Joanna Carolina Olivares

Rose Marie Faust

Narelle Milena Andrade de Oliveira

Rachael Michele Fennell

Amber Nicole Oordt

Quintilian Salamian Fields, Jr.

Michael Jason Osborne

ZaQoya D. Fields-Baldwin

Rebekah Anne Ossenfort

Tania Figueroa

Elizabeth Pacheco

Sofia Nahir Figueroa Hobler

Shelby Elizabeth Padgett

Tiffany Fortier

Sarah Danielle Parmelee

Ashley Marie Fosnight

Savannah Paige Parmelee

Emma Zoe Hess

Timothy Blake Freeman

Blake Tyler Parsons

Jason Isiaha Bradshaw

Martika Dion Kelevh Jackson

Alexis Sabrina Gadsden

Vanessa Marie Paulchel

Shante Brooks

Cynthia Macedo

Tyasia Gadson

Rosalyn Marie Antonia Paulino

Christine Cannon

Caroline Maichel

Madison Nichole Gallion

Gloria P. Perez Castillo

Ileana Cordero

Madison Leann Monroe

Alicia Garcia

John Isham Pierce

Miguel Angel Costilla

Samantha Marie Monroe

Julio Anibal Giraldo

Alison Renee Pittinger

Jaylean A. Morales

Jaimee Renee Gleisner

Stephanie Polanco

Emelda Alejandra Polanco

Madeline Gonzalez-Nava

Robert Powell

Paige Nichole Sauls

Kennadi Chanez Gordon

Glaychia Elaine Reber

Sarah Jo Sepulveda

Nathan Jesse Gore

Renee Elizabeth Riel

Petrie Tiller, Jr.

Morgan Briana Gracen Sapp

Ty'leasha Robinson

Nadesha Kay Louise Green

Wesley Jacob Rogers

Imani A. Cummings Narayana Nylaisia Deloach Farrah Zianna Doe Joseph Cameron Ellison Mikayla Chanel Ferguson Fallon Rose Fischer Khayyam M. Forbes

Associate Degree Graduates

Tiphanie Reneé Griffin

Sarah Hill Rose

Cheyanne Summer Gannon

Danielle Renee Hamner

Lana Pearl Rowe

Joshua Ryan Albridge

Joshua Tyler Gobel

Tytianna Santana Hannah

Elizabeth Ann Sadoski

Morgan Alexis Alexander

Brandi Nicole Heath

Laura Jean Salazar

Jonathan Gonzalez

Kathleen Kim Almeida

Jacqueline Arely Henderson

Jessica Sanborn

Stephen Lee Gray

Emiah M. Anderson

Lucia Samantha Henriquez

Katy Sandoval

Leila Nichole Green

Jordan Arie Anderson

Britney-Bell Pricilla Henry

Samantha Rose Schuetrum

Paris Imani Heyward

Taylor Lauren Arnemann

Sheldon Hunter Hiers

Lisa Marie Servin

Daniel Jamaal Holmes

Stacy Elisa Bajorek

Veronica Yvonne Hodges

Tamieka Latoya Shuler

Mattice L. James

Marcella Baker

Abigail Cherie Holmes

Rachel Elizabeth Shumaker

Chantel Iesha Banks

Daniel Hooper

Brittany Ann Shuman

Paul Christopher Batt, II

Kylie Michelle Hubbard

Sara Simone Sievright

Isabelle Baily Bennett

Brianna Christine Ireland

Kayla Lee Sikes

Nancy Penelopy Bentley

Cymone A. Jenkins

Alexis Simmons

Mark Edward Bernhard, Jr.

Sharonda Denise Jenkins

Anna Patricia Simmons

Leanora Vonne Bishop

Rashida Veronica Johnson

Shandela Lamaice Simmons

Myles Warren Bramlette

Cylar Jade Jones

Taylore Lorraine Simmons

Bransen Tucker Brickweg

Kerri Rene Jones

Christopher John Smith

Kierra Iquan Brown

Agnes Jurksa

Jermey Franklin Smith

Jada NiKerra Jenkins Maria Jose Kandyce Marie Karney Lindsay Leora King Pamela Nicole Kitts Stephanie R. Kornell Cassandra Lee LaFontaine Jennifer Lau RaSheika Myleka Lee

Shayla Lamaria Brown

Angela Farthing Lloyd

Jennifer Michelle Kane

Buffy Deann Snider

Ana Gabriela Cano Jaldin

Faith Lynn Marie Macherione

Kaitlyn Barbara Kintz

Megan D. Sordi

Jane Marie Carbonaro

Alysha Kromm

Alexandria Nakota Stanley

Valeria Chantal Marin

Tayler Carley

Rylee Madison Lavigne

Jared Louis Starks

Add'Drina Dawsha' Morrison-Ford

Megan Elizabeth Carson

Jordan DeCarlo Lawyer

Alexander Stewart

Joshua Pacheco

Gabrielle Carter

Lavonna L. Levine

Stanisha Rebekah Stroman

Alex Ponce

Staci Nicole Chant

Alyssa Nicole Lindesmith

Anna Maren Tetrault

Jane K. Rivers

Crystal Zihita Chin

Madison Long

Sara Nevaeh Thomas

Sabber Jabbar Robinson

Shoranda Clark

Raven Love

Kyleigh Anastasia Tokar

Gisela Rodriguez

Darwin Ernest Cleveland

Kimberly May Lunceford

Madison Tomkins

Iris Roman

Sabrina Ann Cooler

Michael Robert Lupi

Shirley Carla Torres

Margaret M. Copeland

Tatum Allee MacBride-Deaver

Makeda Khalilah Toure-Lonnon

Sarah Lyndsay Craven

Gian Manuel Malquist

Emily Caitlin Trepashko

Brian Nathanael Crosby

Chelsea Grassi Maner

Sydney Morgan Tuten

David Wallace Cunningham, Jr.

Andres Martinez

Theresa Darlene Tuten

Brooke Mayfield Cushman

Agustin Martinez, Jr.

Shelby Ann Vest

Katelynn Marie Cutie

Shalayae Keandra McKelvey

Tamika Danyell Walton

Autumn Kelly Dark

Elisabeth Amara McMillan

Brandasia Monay Washington

Brittany Elizabeth Davidson

Diane Chaplin Milton

William Gerald Watson, III

Jaclyne Brihannon Davis-Harley

Jalen Cherod Minters

Sydney Brooke Weiland

Kristina Marie Russo Lisette Sanchez Byren M. Scholten Aaliyah Elicia Simmons Devon Smith Lee Maximus Torres Kayla Patricia Rose Townsend Lataye Alysha Walker Anthony O'Neil White

Krystal Maria Deitsch

Raven N. White

Ann Monroe

Kayleigh Weston

Aleksandr Dekhtyar

Lisa Lorraine Monroe

Tavarise Alfredo Wiley

Caleb Gabriel Willis

Tonya Rachelle Dill

Mary Elizabeth Montana

Taylor Marie Wilkerson

Ny'Asia Bethea Witter

Kaitlyn Nicole Dovich

Tayina Morris

Nicholas Tyler Williamsen

Morgan Breanne Yoder

Natascia Natalia Drummond

Stephanie Marie Muri

Talia Chantane Wilson

Vanessa Drummond Hudson

Nicole Teresa Myers

Kaylea Winebrenner

Shermica Robyn Dunbar

Brandon Najera

Abigail Lynn Wollwerth

Scarlet Duran

Brittany Alice Nease

Christina Nichole Woods

Jessica Anne-Marie Edwards

Elizabeth McKeithan Nettles

Victoria Jeanette Woods

Derik Paul Bradley Engblom

Grace Barry Newman

David Thomas Wright

Grace Lynn Erdel

Austin Jacob Nicholson

Nikole Kennedy Wright

Kelly Erdel

Laurann Elaine Nix

Max Yale

Isabella Michelle Fallon

Alexis Jane Noll

Leah Hyun Joo Zulkosky

Names of candidates for graduation were furnished to The Island News prior to commencement. It is possible that some persons listed may not have completed award requirements or may have been added after publication. Printing of a candidate’s name in this publication constitutes neither graduation nor the granting of an award.

CONGRATULATIONS! MAY 12–18, 2022

A11


SPORTS

Angus captures high school state singles crown … in 8th grade

By Justin Jarrett LowcoSports.com When Graeme Angus established himself not only as the top player on a state runner-up Beaufort High tennis team as a seventh-grader last spring, but also as one of the area’s best overall players, it seemed apparent that Angus would one day capture a state singles title. It didn’t take long. Only an eighth-grader at Beaufort Middle School, Angus has claimed a state title for Beaufort High School before he has even enrolled, winning five consecutive matches in straight sets to win the SCHSL Class 5A/4A state singles championship. Angus earned All-State honors as a seventh-grader when he won three straight matches in the back draw following a tough three-set loss to Myrtle Beach’s Rivers Cahill in the opening round, eventually falling to Greenwood’s Graeme Simpson in the consolation semifinals. Both of those past nemeses were in the draw this year, too, but they didn’t stand in Angus’ way. In fact, they

Beaufort High’s Graeme Angus defeated Dreher High Shool’s Achilles Hahab in straights set of 6-1, 6-1, to win the S.C. 4A/5A State Championship Singles Tennis tournament in Florence, S.C. Photo by Bob Sofaly. squared off in the semifinals with Simpson winning an epic three-setter (7-5, 6-7, 1513), while Angus dispatched Spartanburg’s Jerome Falcon 7-5, 6-2 to set up a rematch of the bout that ended his season a year ago. This round went a little differently, as Angus was able to grind out a 7-5 win in the first

set and pounce on a weary Simpson for a 6-1 win to close it out and cap off a sensational second season playing high school tennis for the Beaufort star. Angus finished 23-1 this season and earned Region 7-4A and Class 4A Player of the Year honors. And he still has four years left.

Eagles bow out of tennis, softball playoffs

LowcoSports.com The season came to an end for Beaufort High’s tennis and softball teams this week, capping off exceptional campaigns for both programs. Veteran coach Dave Riedmayer’s tennis team reached the Class 4A Lower State fi-

nals for the second straight year but were denied backto-back trips to the championship match with a 6-0 loss at Myrtle Beach. Coach Scott Rast’s softball squad finished up with an 11-8-1 record after running into a buzzsaw in the district

tournament and losing twice to Midland Valley, but the Eagles eked out a tough 4-3 road win at Bluffton in the postseason and return a solid core including star Kylie Rast, who enjoyed a breakout season at the plate and in the circle.

Beaufort boys golf punches ticket to state meet

LowcoSports.com Beaufort High’s golf team earned another shot at claiming a state title after a third-place finish a year ago when the Eagles placed second at the Class 4A Lower State qualifier on Monday at the Country Club of South Carolina in Florence. Led by a 73 from Jack

Lubkin and a 75 from Jerry Bruns, the Eagles carded a team score of 302, finishing just behind champion North Augusta (291). Hilton Head High (316) and May River (321) finished fourth and fifth to earn their spots in the state meet, and Bluffton’s Jones Saylor carded a 73 to qualify as an individual.

Lubkin’s 73 was good enough to tie for fourth overall while Bruns tied for 10th, and Simon McAlister and Jack Sumner each shot 77 to round out a solid team showing for Beaufort. The state meet will be played Monday and Tuesday at Forest Lake Country Club in Columbia.

Beaufort’s Stanley 14th at Junior Worlds

From staff reports Beaufort weightlifter Dade Stanley, a 20-year-old rising junior at Clemson University, competed Saturday at the 2022 IWF Junior World Championships in Heraklion, Greece on the island of Crete. Competing in the 89-kilo-

gram weight class, Stanley, a 2019 Youth Worlds silver medalist, was 14th in the Snatch (135kg), 17th in the Clean & Jerk (159kg) and 14th in total (294kg). Last summer, Stanley, then 19, swept the Snatch (138kg) and Clean & Jerk (168kg)

and set a personal record with an Overall total of 306 kilograms to win gold in the 89kg weight class by 10 kg at the USA Weightlifting Junior National Championships in Detroit. This was Stanley’s final competition as a junior.

SOCCER ROUNDUP

JPII teams, HT boys advance in SCISA soccer playoffs

The SCISA soccer playoffs got under way for the girls on Monday and the boys on Tuesday, and a trio of Beaufort-area squads are still in the mix for state titles. John Paul II and Holy Trinity rolled to easy victories in the boys first round, and the Golden Warriors rallied for a thrilling golden-goal win in the SCISA 2A girls bracket. Here’s a look at the first-round action. GIRLS

John Paul II 2, Spartanburg Day 1

After falling behind early, the Golden Warriors rallied to win on the road in the first round and earn another road trip to face Christian Academy of Myrtle Beach on Wednesday.

A12

MAY 12–18, 2022

Beaufort High tennis coach, David Reidmayer, with Graeme Angus at the S.C. 4A/5A State Championship Singles Tennis tournament in Florence, S.C. Photo courtesy of Beaufort High School Athletics.

New-look Eagles keep rolling into Lower State bracket

By Justin Jarrett LowcoSports.com A little over a month ago, first-year Beaufort High baseball coach Zach Jacobs saw his team at a crossroads. The Eagles had dropped three straight heading into a challenging spring break tournament, but the back half of the Region 7-4A schedule was favorable. Some young talent was beginning to emerge, but the chemistry was missing something. Jacobs did something few first-time head coaches would have dared and dismissed a couple of veteran players from the team and replaced them on the roster with young players who had bought into the new coaching staff’s team-first philosophy. The Eagles went 1-2 in that tournament with both losses coming in hardfought games against quality opponents, and they’ve been on a tear ever since, winning five of their last six regular-season games before ripping through the Class 4A District 6 tourna-

ment with three straight wins to punch their ticket to the Lower State bracket for a second straight year. Beaufort travels to Hartsville to open the double-elimination tournament on Thursday. “There’s a new feeling with this group that they feel like they belong and can compete with anybody,” Jacobs said. “They play together and have each other’s back. It’s become one big family.” The Eagle family endured some ups and downs this year, but they’ve been flying high lately and claimed the district crown with a 4-1 win over visiting Aiken on Monday after advancing to the championship round with a pair of extra-inning victories. Beaufort ace PJ Daley was dealing in the district finale, striking out five and allowing just four hits and one walk over six innings while allowing one unearned run, and Zack Talbert struck out two in a perfect seventh to earn the save and scored twice out of the leadoff spot,

setting the table for Jacobs’ “get him on, get him over, get him in” brand of baseball. Talbert led off the bottom of the first with a single, swiped second and moved to third on a passed ball, and scored on the first of Mason Connelly’s two hits. After the Hornets tied it in the fourth, the Eagles turned the momentum back in their favor with some serious small ball in the fifth. Malcom Webb bunted his way on and took second on a sacrifice bunt, then scored when Talbert reached on an error. The Eagles’ leadoff man then stole second and came around to score on an error for a 3-1 lead. Beaufort tacked on an insurance run in the sixth when Logan Brutcher and Carter Bowersox came up with back-to-back singles to start the inning and Brutcher came home on Webb’s sacrifice fly. Win or lose at Hartsville on Thursday, the Eagles will be back in action Saturday, facing either James Island or Airport.

LowcoSports.com

Emma Sauls found the equalizer late in the first half, and after a scoreless second half and overtime, Paige Weniger scored the golden goal off an assist from Trinity Grace Maxwell to give JPII a hard-fought victory.

Charleston Collegiate 3, Holy Trinity 1

After winning back-to-back SCISA 1A titles, the Mighty Lions struggled through a tough 2022 campaign that ended with a firstround playoff defeat to the Sundevils. BOYS

John Paul II 8, Greenwood Christian 0

It was smooth sailing in the first round for the Golden Warriors, who haven’t lost to a SCISA opponent this season — their only

losses have come against Class 4A foes Beaufort High and Bluffton. Eight different players scored a goal each for JPII: Nic Richardson, Colin Anfinson, Brennan McDermott, Mark Knight, Jackson Ogden, Anthony Hill, Jackson Sanders, and Finn Mahoney. Anfinson, Hill, and Knight also contributed assists, as did Larry Racey-Rubacaldo, William Rooney, and Chris Orta. The JPII defense stifled the Hawks’ attack all night, and Evan Slusne made seven saves in his seventh consecutive shutout. JPII (14-2) will face Spartanburg Day at home on Thursday.

playoffs, as a strong Northwood squad went on the road to oust BA, whose inexperience in the postseason showed up Tuesday afternoon. BA had a tough time getting in a rhythm on offense and had numerous miscommunications on defense leading to an early 2-0 deficit before Evan Rankin pulled one back before halftime. BA finished 11-4-1 under firstyear head coach Ian Leslie and returns numerous starters, including all-region selections Rankin and Zeke Gonzalez.

Northwood Academy 3, Beaufort Academy 1

The Mighty Lions rolled to a big win at home as Holy Trinity kicked off its SCISA 1A title defense. Holy Trinity travels to Christian Academy of Myrtle Beach for a semifinal matchup on Thursday.

The Eagles’ remarkable turnaround season ran out of steam in the first round of the

Holy Trinity 4, The King’s Academy 1


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Need Healing? All of us

can use healing: healing of a heart that cannot forgive, emotional wounds from the past, or physical illness or sufferings.

Reverend Greg Bramlage, a nationally known preacher, will come to Beaufort and offer three evenings of prayer and healing. He will share how Jesus Christ continues to show his love and mercy in our own day, including many miracles of healing! You are invited to join us for “God’s Healing Love,” a parish mission held on the evenings of May 23, 24, and 25, starting at 6:30. Though the presentations build upon one another, if you cannot attend all three nights, come to the ones you can. All are welcome: adults and children, believers and non-believers, and those of all faith backgrounds. There is no cost. Come with an open heart, ready to be awed by the extravagant love of God!

God’s Healing Love Three Nights of Prayer & Healing

“Blessed Are The Merciful” Monday, May 23 • 6:30pm

“Be Filled With The Holy Spirit” Tuesday, May 24 • 6:30pm

“Pray That You May Be Healed” Wednesday, May 25 • 6:30pm

Testimonies from Past Participants “I could not walk due to rheumatoid arthritis and now I can walk!” - Philomena Vitale, Howell, MI

“I had macular degeneration in my left eye. I can now see colors and there is no difference between my left eye and my healthy right eye.” - Iris Alvarez, Arvada, CO

Held at Saint Peter’s Catholic Church 70 Lady’s Island Drive, Beaufort, SC 29907 (Across from Publix)

MAY 12–18, 2022

A13


ARTS AT THE OPERA

Gaetano Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor

By Becky Sprecher

“I see poor crazed Lucia’s eyes’ unnatural gleam, Her hair down her back falls loose and dishevel’d.” – Walt Whitman, “Proud Music of the Storm” The first thing an opera lover will tell you when they hear you are going to see Gaetano Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor is, “You gotta have a good Lucia.” Come find out why when the Metropolitan Opera broadcasts this opera live in Hi-Def at USCB’s Center for the Arts on Carteret Street, on Saturday, May 21. Curtain is at 1 p.m. The opera is based on Sir Walter Scott’s 1819 novel The Bride of Lammermoor, which tells the story of a young woman caught in the maelstrom of two rival families in financial decline. The solution to the Ashton family’s problems, according to Lucia’s scheming brother Enrico, is to marry her off to the newly wealthy Arturo Bucklaw, thereby securing the family’s future. But Lucia is having none of it because she has fallen in desperately love with Edgardo, the leader of the Ashton family’s enemy. Being forced to marry Arturo is the last straw for her; she descends into madness that initiates the opera’s tragic ending. Scott’s story was so compelling that many novelists drew inspiration from it. As H. Owen Lee writes in his book, A Season of Opera, it was “at a performance of Lucia in Rouen that Madame Bovary regretted ever marrying her

husband, and it was almost certainly at a Moscow performance of Lucia in Petersburg that Anna Karenina was moved to flee guiltily from her lover.” The character of Lucia is so central to the opera that casting a virtuoso singer for the part is essential. We will have that virtuoso in Ft. Lauderdale-born Nadine Sierra, a recent Richard Tucker and Beverly Sills Award winner and rising star at the Met. Lucia is a star turn for a soprano who specializes in what is known as the bel canto repertory. Popular in the 18th and early 19th centuries, bell canto means “beautiful singing.” While a good bel canto singer must possess beauty of sound, he or she must also have a mastery of breath control, agility in florid passages, and an ability to hit the high notes. Such vocal pyrotechnics are really exciting for the audience and can move the listener in deeply personal ways. They certainly proved life-changing for the poet Walt Whitman. Said the New York Times, “Italian bel canto opera was so important to Whitman that he claimed it was essential to conceiving and writing his magnum opus, the poetry collection ‘Leaves of Grass,’ which contains hundreds of musical terms, as well as the names of composers and performers. The word ‘song’ appears more than 150 times.” This type of singing dovetailed perfectly with the talents of Italy’s Gaetano Donizetti, who composed almost 70 operas, churning them out like

Nadine Sierra as Lucia like you’ve never seen before. Submitted photo. Erle Stanley Gardner did with his Perry Mason courtroom dramas. Donizetti also suffered from mental illness, and characters in bel canto operas often go mad. “The singing lends itself to this particular struggle,” writes H. Own Lee. “The music seems to express the sadness of all human suffering, our helplessness in the face of adversity.” Although much has been learned about mental illness since the mid-1800s, it still plagues a great many people in spite of recent advances. This opera takes us closer to how those afflicted with these diseases actually feel. How does it sound musically when one has a psychotic episode? Lucia tells us in her Mad Scene aria that careens wildly from tenderness and joy to terror, singing to the sounds of a flute that no one else can hear. We are going to see Lucia like we’ve never seen her before. Director Simon Stone has designed a new production that takes us from the hills of

USCB center For The Arts hosting Annie, Jr.

Production will run for just one weekend

From staff reports Annie, Jr. is playing for one weekend only at USCB Center for the Arts, running Friday, May 20 to Sunday, May 22. The production is based on the comic strip adapted from the Tony-Award-winning musical by Thomas Meehan, Charles Strouse, and Martin Charnin. “We have a talented and dedicated cast of young actors who love the stage and shine in their roles,” Assistant Director Naomi Forrestall said. “Our team has had a wonderful time working together and with these kids. We are excited for the community to enjoy the show in a few weeks.” Annie, Jr. tells of a spunky Depression-era orphan determined to find her parents who abandoned her on a New York City orphanage doorstep run by the cruel Miss Hannigan. In adventure after adventure, Annie foils Miss Hannigan’s evil ways,

The cast of Annie Jr., from left, Annie Grace Wells as Lily, Cole Mueller as Rooster, Emmett O’Brien as Daddy Warbucks, Maren Tillapaugh as Annie, Brea Parker as Grace, and Peyton Brock as Ms. Hannigan. Submitted photo. befriends President Franklin Roosevelt, and finds a new family in billionaire Oliver Warbucks, his personal secretary Grace Farrell, and a lovable mutt named Sandy. Showtimes are 7 p.m., Friday, May 20 and Saturday, May 21 and 3 p.m., Sunday, May 22. Tickets are $22 for adults, $18 for seniors, and $14 for students. Go to USCBCenterForTheArts.com for tickets, or go the box office by calling 843-521-4145. Tickets will also be available

WANT TO GO? What: Beaufort Children’s Theatre production of Disney’s Annie, Jr. Where: USCB Center for the Arts, 801 Carteret Street, Beaufort When: 7 p.m., Friday, May 20 and Saturday, May 21; 3 p.m., Sunday, May 22 Tickets: $22 for adults, $18 for seniors, and $14 for students. Visit USCBCenterForTheArts.com.

at the door one hour prior to showtime.

Clover Choraliers performing in Beaufort

From staff reports The Clover Choraliers will perform a concert in the sanctuary of First Presbyterian Church of Beaufort at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, May 17. Under the direction of Jay Forrest, Alex Bromell, and Meredith Cornwell, the Choraliers are a 96-member auditioned championship SATB choir hailing from Clover High School in the upstate of South Carolina. Vic Varner, retired high

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school choir director and Music Director at First Presbyterian, said of the Clover Choraliers, “I’ve worked with high school choirs for 40 years, I’ve traveled far and wide to hear high school choirs, and I’ve never heard anything like this choir. It’s almost 100 voices, and all of them study voice privately. It is something that will completely mesmerize you.” The Choraliers will be passing through Beaufort on their way home from Florida,

as part of their spring tour. Their repertoire is broad, creative, and guaranteed to please a wide range of tastes. If you love choral music – or any music – this special concert is not to be missed. First Presbyterian Church is located at the corner of Church and North Streets in downtown Beaufort. Admission is free and the public is welcome. For more information, visit www.cloverchoraliers.com.

southeast Scotland in the early 1700s to the American Rust Belt of the present day. As one who is attracted to traumatic stories, Stone was fascinated with the repressive patriarchal society and persistent violence against women in the story of Lucia di Lammermoor. A traumatic story set in the days of yore can sometimes seem so far removed that we run the risk of taking it less seriously. Presenting it in today’s time frame, however, can heighten the impact because the audience can more easily identify with it. In an interview with the Met, Nadine Sierra sees Lucia’s reinterpretation as a good way to reach contemporary audiences. “It shows the struggles that certain young women have in their lives now and brings them to the stage in a realistic sense … so the audience can walk away thinking a lot about it.” In Stone’s concept, the characters are under enormous pressure from the realization

that the American Dream has failed them. His Lucia is all tricked out in torn jeans and a little pink puffer jacket, standing anxiously in front of a pawn shop. Grieving the loss of her mother and feeling powerless because of her manipulative brother, we learn that she is also suffering from opioid addiction. Sometimes touches like this latter can seem a little gimmicky, but here it could actually serve the drama well. We realize early on how unstable Lucia is, how utterly hopeless and trapped she feels. When she falls in love with someone, we want her to have happiness. We can also better understand why being forced to marry someone other than the person she loves sends her into psychosis. As always, the challenge in such a production is that a director must remain faithful to Donizetti’s glorious music, and it appears that Stone understands that. “I am choreographed by the music,” he told Opera News. “I have to find my individuality in that choreography.” It will be interesting to see if he succeeds. For more about Nadine Sierra, search YouTube for “Nadine Sierra in Rehearsal for Lucia di Lammermoor” and watch her interview at the Met. She has a new album out called “There’s a Place For Us,” which is a mix of music from North and South America. And using the social media savvy of her generation, Sierra also advocates for opera on her Instagram page, where you can see things like a video

WANT TO GO? What: Gaetano Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor, performed by the Metropolitan Opera and broadcast in HiDefinition When: 1 p.m. Saturday, May 21 Where: USCB Center For The Arts, 801 Carteret Street, Beaufort Tickets: $22, $20 for OLLI members. Visit uscbcenterforthearts.com, click Met, Movies and More. Also available at the door. Of note: Sung in Italian with Met Titles in English. Run length is about 3½ hours, although add an extra half hour for interviews and curtain calls. Intermissions are between Act I and II, and Act II and III. For a full synopsis and production details, visit metopera.org, click Menu/ Season/In Cinemas.

clip of her doing an amazing vocal warm-up in the Munich airport prior to a flight. A hip lady with gobs of talent, Nadine Sierra’s going to be a great Lucia! About the opera Sung in Italian with Met Titles in English. Run length is about three and a half hours, although add an extra half hour for interviews and curtain calls. Intermissions are between Act I and II, and Act II and III. For a full synopsis and production details, visit metopera.org, click Menu/ Season/In Cinemas. To book a seat in advance, visit uscbcenterforthearts.com, click Met, Movies and More. Tickets will also be on sale at the door. Price: $22, and $20 for OLLI members.

BSO’s “Romantic Blockbusters” concert to feature violinist Tsai

From staff reports At the age of 10, violinist Francis Tsai won First Prize at the 2017 Samuel Fordis Young Artist Concerto Competition and appeared as soloist with the Georgia Philharmonic Orchestra. But by then he already had a lot of practice under his belt – he had begun playing when he was five. That same year he was awarded First Place at the 2017 Louis Pickard Scholarship Competition, and at age 13, he was the First Prize recipient at the 2019 Hilton Head Symphony Youth Concerto Competition. Along with these awards, he has won several prizes from a variety of other nationally recognized youth competitions. Tsai attended the Bowdoin International Music Festival in 2019, under the tutelage of Sergiu Schwartz and Roland and Almita Vamos, and will be attending the Morningside Music Bridge International Music Festival in Boston this summer. Currently, he studies remotely with Jennifer Liu, violin faculty member at the Julliard School in New York City. On Sunday, May 15, Tsai will perform at 4 p.m., with the Beaufort Symphony Orchestra at their Romantic Blockbusters concert at Sea Island Presbyterian Church. Tickets are $40 for adults and $15 for students. Visit www.beaufortorchestra.org or call 800-5954TIX (4849). Tsai credits his parents and siblings for their ongoing encouragement and support. “I started playing because my two older brothers both played the violin, and I asked my father if I could play too,” he said in a news release. But he also wanted to play

another instrument – the drums. “I always wanted to play the drums but I Francis started learnTsai ing only a few years ago. I like being able to release all my energy into something that, in return, energizes me even more,” he said. In addition to practice the violin and sharing his music, Francis also enjoys other interests, including videography, photography and creative writing. “I think I will always love to play the violin, whether I major in music at college or not,” he said. Tsai said that his family has always supported his many passions, “... but that, most importantly, they encourage me to seek out what really matters in my life – to love God and to show genuine kindness to everyone I meet.” This philosophy has had a tremendous impact on how he approaches his musical studies, performances and goals. “It frees me to make music without worrying about whether I'll be successful or famous,” he said. This attitude expresses itself in the sharing of the brothers' musical talents by their frequent performances at retirement homes. Beaufort Symphony Director Frederick Devyatkin first heard Francis play at the Hilton Head Competition where he performed the first movement of Tchaikovsky Concerto. “I was very impressed with his playing,” Devyatkin said.,

WANT TO GO? What: Beaufort Symphony Orchestra's “Romantic Blockbusters” concert featuring violinist Francis Tsai When: 4 p.m., Sunday, May 15 Where: Sea Island Presbyterian Church, 81 Sea Island Drive Tickets: $40 for adults and $15 for students. Visit www. beaufortorchestra.org or call 800-595-4TIX (4849).

“and invited him to perform with our orchestra.” But in 2020, COVID hit, and all concerts through the 2020-2100 season were canceled. During this time Maestro Devyatkin and Tsai worked out a schedule and considered several options in his repertoire. “We decided on Violin Concerto No.1 in G Minor, Op. 26, by composer Max Bruch as a work that both our audience would be excited to hear and Francis would be eager to play,” Devyatkinsaid. Tsai was initially excited about Bruch's Violin Concerto because it had been one of his dreams to play this piece with an orchestra. Over the months as he explored the depths of the composition the piece began to take on a new and more profound meaning for him. “The first movement with its dark and turbulent waters, the second with a striking calm and somewhat misty touch, and the last movement portraying a joyful and victorious ending relate to various stories and emotions in one's life,” he said, adding that he hopes that his performance will bring “comfort, hope, inspiration and blessing” to everyone attending.


WHAT’S HAPPENING St. Helena Library Activities

4:30 to 5:30 p.m., Mondays, Lego Club, all ages welcome; 2 to 4 p.m., Thursdays, S.C. Works Job Coaching, free help with job searches, interviews; 1 to 2 p.m., Saturdays, Chess Club, ages 5 and older. 6355 Jonathan Francis Senior Road, St. Helena Island, 843-2556540.

Beaufort County Library Ongoing Programs

These are the ongoing programs available at the Beaufort Branch Library Downtown: 2:30 p.m., 1st Tuesday each month, Knitting/ Crochet Class; all day during business hours, 1st Thursday each month, Chess Club; 2:30 p.m., last Tuesday each month, Book to Movie Club; daily during library hours, Escape Quest Games.

THIS WEEK’S MOVIES AT HWY 21 DRIVE-IN The movies scheduled for this week (Thursday, May 12 through Sunday, May 15) at the Highway 21 Drive-In are Dr. Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (PG-13, 8:30 p.m.) and Sonic The Hedgehog 2 (PG, 10:40 p.m.) on Screen 1 and Firestarter (R, 8:30 p.m.) and Ambulance (R, 10:05 p.m.) on Screen 2. Online ticketing is available at hwy21drivein.com on the Now Playing page. Patrons are asked to arrive early on Friday and Saturday nights. Gates open at 6:30 p.m. “Our family at the Hwy. 21 drive in feel a responsibility to our community,” a statement from Highway 21 Drive-In management reads. “We are concerned about many things in these trying times and in making the right decisions. We are concerned with our employees, our patrons, our business, our community’s businesses, and the health and well-being of all.” A reminder: no outside food or beverages can be brought into the drive-in. Upcoming movies include Top Gun (Memorial Day Weekend) and The Bob’s Burgers Movie (May) – Staff reports

Bluffton Night Bazaar — a Lowcountry Made Market

5 to 8 p.m., first Thursday of each month, Burnt Church Distillery, 120 Bluffton Road. A highly curated selection of accessories, clothing, home goods, custom gifts and more by local artists and makers.

Rooted Beaufort Yoga classes

5:30 to 6:45 p.m., Thursdays, Cypress Wetlands, Port Royal; 9 to 10:15 a.m., Whitehall Park or Pigeon Point Park. Rooted Beaufort is a collective of local Yoga teachers who host outdoor yoga classes and donation-based events with proceeds being donated locally on a rotating basis.

The Historic Port Royal Museum

10 a.m. to 3 p.m. or upon request, Thursdays through Sundays, The Historic Port Royal Museum, 1634 Paris Ave. The museum features the turn-of-the-century businesses and industries of Port Royal: Shrimping, crabbing, oystering, the railroad, the school and the mercantile. Great gifts featuring local artists are available. For more information. visit www.portroyalhistory.org, email historicportroyalfoundation@gmail.com or call 843-524-4333.

Tour Historic Fort Fremont

10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Friday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday, Fort Fremont History Center, Fort Fremont Preserve, 1124 Land’s End Road, St. Helena Island. Docent-led tours are at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. every Saturday. Travel back in time to the 1800s and the Spanish American War. Visitors to Fort Fremont can learn about the fort’s history by reading interpretive panels, taking a self-guided tour with a smart phone, visiting the history center exhibit hall, or attending a docent-led tour of the property. The Preserve is open to the public Monday through Sunday from dawn to dusk. For more information, visit www.fortfremont.org or contact Passive Parks manager Stephanie Nagid at snagid@bcgov.net.

Port Royal Farmers Market

9 a.m. to noon, Saturdays, year round, Naval Heritage Park, 1615 Ribaut Road, Port Royal. Rain or shine. You will find fresh, local, seasonal produce, shrimp, oysters, poultry, beef, pork, eggs, bread and cheese, as well as plants, ferns, camellias, azaleas, citrus trees and beautiful, fresh cut flower bouquets. There are prepared food vendors serving barbecue, dumplings, she crab soup, crab cakes, paella, coffee, baked goods, bagels and breakfast sandwiches. No pets allowed. For more information, visit http:// www.portroyalfarmersmarket.com/, visit @ portroyalfarmersmarket on Facebook or call 843-295-0058.

A War on Two Fronts: African Americans Fight for Victory at Home and Abroad

Through Saturday, Aug. 13, Morris Center for Lowcountry Heritage, 10782 S. Jacob Smart Blvd., Ridgeland. A traveling exhibit adapted from an original exhibition and book developed by the Athenaeum Press at the Horry County Museum. The exhibition and book explore how African Americans in the 92nd and 93rd Army infantry divisions fought for racial equality during wartime, and then went on to be active participants in the Civil Rights Movement. It traces the little-known stories of soldiers on the front lines, and how segregation affected their training, service and recognition. The exhibition draws from the work of Maggi Morehouse, Burroughs Distinguished Professor of Southern History and Culture at Coastal Carolina University and a daughter of a commanding officer in the 92nd infantry division. To learn more about “A War on Two Fronts” and other Athenaeum Press projects, visit www.ccu.press or www. warontwofronts.com. Morris Center is open to the public from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. For more information, visit www.morrisheritagecenter.org or call 843-284-9227.

Lowcountry Made Markets

9 a.m. to 1 p.m., first and third Saturday of each month through December, Buckwalter Place Park, next to Kroger off Buckwalter Place Blvd., Bluffton. Each market includes local

vendors, live music, food and drink. The events are free. Participating vendors include: Gullah Express LLC (food truck), Declan’s Delights, Pick N Paint Pottery, Preservation Tree Art, 7th & Palm, Kara Artman Art, Southern Botanica, Hedone (bath & body), Blue Door Boutique, The Herb Room Organic Apothecary, Juke Joint Sweets, BPC Custom Furniture, Back to Eden Self Care Products, LLC, Shutterbug Custom Designs LLC, Pet Wants Hilton Head, Grind Coffee Roasters, LLC, Fabula Collective, The Artsy Girl, KODA Glass Designs, Lowcountry Livin’, Legacy Art Gallery, Cottonwood Soap Company, Marsh View Candles and Crafted With A Purpose.

Lowcountry Made Markets in Port Royal

9 a.m. to 1 p.m., fourth Saturday of the month through May; second and fourth Saturday through November, Live Oaks Park, 904 14th Street, Port Royal. These markets showcase only local artists, artisans and small businesses. The open-air markets are held “farmer’s market” style with new vendors each month. Each market will also include live music, food and drink, and is free to attend. Vendors include Amidst the Alders, Preservation Tree Art, True South, Pet Wants, Meg’s Sweet Treats, Sativa Health Products, Back to Eden Self Care (Tea), Graceful Stitches, Cottonwood Soap Company (Bath & Body), Sweet Carolina’s Clothing Boutique, B&E Rustic Designs, Blue Door Boutique, Clayed by Reena LLC, Kara Artman Art, The Herb Room Organic Apothecary, Bliss Bites Cookies, Kilted Bee Mead (Soap), HandMade Beaufort, Lovin' My Skin, LLC, Purely, Inc. and KODA Glass, Lovely Olive Designs, Gone Gullah, Tout Sweet Macarons, Moonlight Crow Creations, Fabula Collective, Finch Sign & Design Metalworks LLC and Honey Bunny Boutique.

“Pull Yourself Up” Group Exercise Class for women

9:30 a.m., select Saturdays, Wardle Family YMCA, 1801 Richmond Ave., Port Royal. This multi-generational women’s group training is a 5-week program taught by Kelly Blackston. It is designed for females who wish to be stronger especially using back muscle shoulders and arms plus build camaraderie and make new friends. Free for ages 13-19; $10 per class for YMCA members; $20 per class for adult non-member. Questions should be directed to Denice Davis, YMCA Healthy Living Program Director at 843-521-1904 or beaufortjasperymca.org.

Beaufort Sportfishing and Diving Club’s May meeting

7 p.m., Thursday, May 12, Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club, Lady’s Island, Meridian Road. Social begins at 6:30 p.m. Tallboy Fishing Charters Captain Richard Pollitzer’s presentation will be on Cobia. Captain Pollitzer recently relocated his 31-foot Contender Center Console from the Northend Fleet (Hilton Head) to Port Royal Landing Marina – Safe Harbor. He will discuss inshore and artificial reef fishing for Cobia. This will include baits of choice, setups, rods and reel, and the importance of the correct use of netting Cobia before gaffing. Beaufort Boat & Dock Supply, Butler Marine, and Adams Marine Seminars again are our drawing sponsors. Remember to weigh in your favorite catch at the Port Royal Landing Marina – Safe Harbor – during regular hours. Winners must be present at the next month’s meeting to receive the cash award. Guests are welcome. Reservations are not needed. For additional information, please contact Captain Frank Gibson at 843-522-2122 or fgibson@islc.net.

Basic Skills Computer Class

11 a.m., Thursday, May 12 or 11 a.m., Tuesday, May 24, Lobeco Library, 1862 Trask Parkway. Presented by the S.C. Department of Employment and Workforce. Call 843-2556479 or stop by to register.

Full 30-hour lifeguard training

May 13-16 & 22, location TBD. Cost is $170. Schedule: Thursday 4 p.m. – swim test; Friday 4-9 p.m.; Saturday 8-5 p.m.; Sunday 1-5 p.m. Those interested need to register at the Y as

space is limited and filled on a first come, first serve basis. Questions? Contact Contact Frank Hamilton at 843-525-0233 or ghh60fwh@ comcast.net. To register visit the Y front desk or online at beaufort-jasperymca.org and click ‘Register for a Program’ at the top of the page. See Frank Hamilton for lifeguard recertification dates and times.

Friends of Port Royal Cypress Wetlands guided tours

Sunset walk at 6 p.m., Saturday, May 14; 9 a.m., Friday, May 27. The Friends of Port Royal Cypress Wetlands (501c3) offers free tours with Master Naturalist Jill Moore, from Moore2Life, as guide. Learn about the different types of wildlife, birds, and plants that inhabit this special place. Tours are approximately 90 minutes and limited to 12 participants. To sign up for a tour please email Kat Bray at info@ foprcw.org. For more information, visit www. foprcw.org.

City of Beaufort Public Safety Job Fairs

10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday, May 14, City Hall. Police officers and firefighters from the Beaufort Police Department and Fire Department will be available to discuss career opportunities and what new recruits can expect. The Police Department is offering a $5,000 bonus for an officer who is already certified by South Carolina, and up to $2,500 in relocation assistance for candidates from out-of-state. Starting salary ranges from $42,484 to $50,000. The Fire Department, which serves both the City of Beaufort and Town of Port Royal, offers a starting salary of $40,144 to $50,180 depending on overtime. Firefighters work 48 hours on/96 hours off. The Fire Department is also hiring part-time firefighters.

Listen on the Lawn Concert Series: Gwen Yvette

6 p.m., Sunday, May 15, USC Beaufort’s Center For The Arts Lawn. Bring a chair or blanket, a picnic or snacks and beverages. The CFA Lawn will open at 5:30 p.m. Tickets are $10 a person – children younger than 12 are free. Tickets may be purchased in advance at www.uscbcenterforthearts.com or by calling 843-521-4145. In case of inclement weather, the performance will be moved into the CFA theatre.

Late Season Gardening Class

4:30 p.m., Tuesday, May 17, Lobeco Library, 1862 Trask Parkway. Class presented by Horticulture Agent and Master Gardener Laura Lee Rose of the Beaufort County Clemson Extension. Call 843-255-6479 or stop by to register.

Christian Women’s Connection luncheon and fashion show

11:30 a.m., Wednesday, May 18, Hampton Hall Clubhouse. The Christian Women’s Connection will host a fashion show and luncheon. Maggie and Me Boutique of Bluffton will show the latest trends – perfect for Lowcountry Spring and Summer. Anne Hart, former teacher, model and recording artist, will share “Finding the Missing Piece to the Puzzle.” Prepaid reservations are $28, payable to "CWC Bluffton" care of Carol Mock, 607 Argent Way, Bluffton SC 29909. For more details, contact Julie at 602-7505465 or Julie.ott.az@gmail.com.

Beaufort Christian Women’s Connection May luncheon

11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Thursday, May 19, Baptist Church of Beaufort. Cost of $18 includes meal and speakers. We will be collecting unwrapped baby supplies for the Radiance Pregnancy Center. Reservations can be made with Marti Myers at 843-321-0962 or puddlesportia@gmail.com.

Sea Island Quilt Guild

6:30 p.m., Thursday, March 19, Carteret Street United Methodist Church, 408 Carteret Street, Beaufort. Sea Island Quilt Guild will be meeting “in person” and by Zoom. May is our Birthday Month so we will be having light refreshments and celebrating. We look forward to seeing you there. All are welcome.

Adaptive Golf Experience Clinic

9 to 11 a.m., Saturday, May 21, The Legends at Parris Island. Register at https:// adaptivegolfexperience.org/monthly-clinic/ by May 8 to get on base. Free and open to civilians, veterans and active military. Led by golf professionals and physical therapists. Clinics target veterans and civilians with physical disabilities or challenges. As a participant, you’ll receive complimentary instruction on both the full golf swing and putting, taught by experienced professional golf instructors, fellow adaptive athletes who are already golfers and volunteers. No prior experience with golf is necessary – just a desire to learn or to help others. Our goal is to help those with disabilities learn new abilities through adaptive golf.

Original Gullah Festival

May 27-29, Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park, Beaufort. For more information, visit https://www.originalgullahfestival.org/.

Maye River Quilters

10 a.m., Saturday, June 4, Church of the Palms, 1419 Okatie Highway. The wearing of masks is encouraged. For more meeting dates and times, and for membership forms to join the group, call 843-530-1244. To attend the meeting as a guest, send an RSVP email to mayeriverquilters@gmail.com.

Aviation Careers Expo

11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday, June 4, Beaufort Executive Airport. Sponsored by the Beaufort Aviation Association. Learn about the many great careers available in aviation – maintenance and repair; design and engineering; management; avionics design; installation and repair; piloting; airline inflight cabin service; space exploration; air traffic control; flight instruction; university and college opportunities; airline ticketing; cargo and ground servicing; and military aviation. Participants include American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, the Beaufort County Airports Department, the Beaufort County School District, the Civil Air Patrol, Embry Riddle Aeronautical University, the Society of Women Engineers, Technical College of the Lowcountry, and Women in Aviation International. For more information, text 843-812-9909.

Listen on the Lawn Concert Series: The Cluster Shucks

6 p.m., Sunday, June 5, USC Beaufort’s Center For The Arts Lawn. Bring a chair or blanket, a picnic or snacks and beverages. The CFA Lawn will open at 5:30 p.m. Tickets are $10 a person – children younger than 12 are free. Tickets may be purchased in advance at www.uscbcenterforthearts.com or by calling 843-521-4145. In case of inclement weather, the performance will be moved into the CFA theatre.

Beaufort County Library Special Programs

These are the special programs available at the Beaufort Branch Library Downtown: 2:30 p.m., June 14, Hurricane Preparedness; 2:30 p.m., July 12, Comic Con; 2:30 p.m., Aug. 16, Local Art Display; 2:30 p.m., Sept. 13, Civic Awareness; 2:30 p.m., Oct. 20, Friends of the Library Celebration; 2:30 p.m., Nov. 15, Beekeeping; 2:30 p.m., Dec. 13, Gingerbread House Contest.

Broadway Bound Summer Camp

9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, June 20 through July 1, USC Beaufort Center For The Arts. Campers will engage in all aspects of musical theatre, while gaining self-confidence and the ability to express themselves as they learn basic acting skills, vocal instruction and choreography. The highlight of the camp will be the children’s creation of their own show. Tuition is $275. Register and pay at https://www. uscbcenterforthearts.com/summer-camp.

Indoor Gardening: Fruits and Veggies Class

4:30 p.m., Tuesday, June 21, Lobeco Library, 1862 Trask Parkway. Class presented by Horticulture Agent and Master Gardener Laura Lee Rose of the Beaufort County Clemson Extension. Call 843-255-6479 or stop by to register.

Firecracker 5K

8 a.m., Monday July 4, downtown Beaufort. Hosted by HELP of Beaufort and Lowcountry Habitat For Humanity, the race starts at Freedom Mall, crosses the Woods Memorial Bridge and runs to Meridian Road before turning back. Pre-Raceday registration, $35. Virtual 5K registration, $25. Raceday registration, $45. For more information or to register, go to http://runsignup.com/race/SC/ Beaufort.

Junior Building Detectives – Solving the Mysteries of Built Histories

9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., July 10 through July 15, historic John Mark Verdier House. Hosted by the Historic Beaufort Foundation, this summer children’s camp for kids, ages 8 to 12, will enable participants to “solve the mysteries of built history” by learning about local architecture. The camp will teach the basics of historic architecture and preservation. Campers will learn how buildings change over time, the meaning of architectural features, and the relevance of historic buildings to our community through hands-on activities, walks, arts and crafts, experiments and more. Campers will create a building and present the design to the class and parents/guardians. Cost is $100 for HBF members and $125 for non members. Register by calling 843-3793331 or visiting http://historicbeaufort.org. Registration paperwork must be submitted at least two weeks before the start of the program to ensure a child’s spot. MAY 12–18, 2022

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LOCAL MILITARY

HANGING IT UP

U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Daniel Youmans, aviation maintenance officer, Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 31, Marine Aircraft Group 31, receives the American Flag during ‘Old Glory’ at his retirement ceremony May 6 at Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort. Youmans served 27 years in the Marine Corps. Photo by Sgt. Cheyeanne Campbell, USMC.

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How to get VA Housing Assistance, some things you need to know

re you an eligible veteran, military member, or surviving spouse and thinking about applying for VA home loan benefits or applying for a housing assistance grant? If your answer is yes, you need to: • Plan ahead to buy a home to ensure the spouse and family agree with the decision to buy and want to live where you are buying. • As a general rule, veterans (and others) should spend no more than 30 percent of their monthly gross income on housing. If you’re a homeowner, that 30 percent includes other home-ownership costs like mortgage interest, property taxes, and maintenance. • Ensure you have enough money saved for costs associated with buying a home and emergency reserves in case of a loss of employment or illness that interrupts your income. Six months and preferably more of savings that cover the mortgage payment costs and other living costs (utilities, insurance, regime fees, etc.). • Ensure your income is stable and reliable. It is much harder to get a loan if you have not had a job for more than one year, change jobs frequently, or have long breaks in between jobs. • Check and improve your credit score (called a FICO score). Check your score at one of the three Credit Bureaus, which are TransUnion, Equifax, and Experian. Improve your score to get the lowest cost financing by paying off credit card balances, making sure you make payments on time, and not taking out loans or opening multiple credit cards will help you build a higher score or maintain a strong one. • Read about getting home

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MAY 12–18, 2022

EDITOR’S NOTE Part 1 of a series of three articles on this subject.

LARRY DANDRIDGE

loan benefits and getting veterans’ housing assistance online at https:// www.va.gov/housing-assistance/. Listen to the VA podcast at https://www. youtube.com/user/DeptVetAffairs or #thesitrep. Ask a knowledgeable Veterans Service Officer (VSO) for advice. There is a county VSO in every S.C. county. Go to the SC Department of Veterans’ Affairs website at https://bit.ly/3HNQLwt to find the contact information for each S.C. County Veterans Service Office. Research and find a real estate agent who is experienced in working with military members and veterans and VA home loans. Ask veteran friends for a referral of someone they have used to help them buy a home with a VA loan. Find a mortgage lender who is reputable, knowledgeable, and experienced with financing VA home loans. Talk to other veterans and fellow military members who have had a good experience with VA guaranteed loans. The best referral is a personal reference. Ask the mortgage representative, “How many VA Home Loans have you done in the past year?” You can research which companies are rated highest at places like Forbes ADVISER at https://bit.ly/39cqQ5u and other such mortgage company rating sites, but personal referrals are still the best. Go ahead and request,

either online thru eBenefits or by U.S. Mail, from the VA a Certificate of Eligibility (COE). Read the eligibility requirements and how to apply for COE information at https://bit.ly/3N28jXV. Getting your COE before meeting with a lender is a good idea. Veterans are advised to not shop for a home without a COE in hand. Unfortunately, only about 14 percent of veterans nationally use VA home loans, and many veterans and their surviving spouses do not realize that VA Housing Assistance is one of the best VA benefits available to veterans. Many veterans do not know a VA home loan can allow the veteran to obtain 100 percent financing and require no down payment. Many veterans do not know the VA guarantees the lender (mortgage company/ underwriter) 25 percent of the loan amount, which takes much of the risk out of lender loans to veterans. Many veterans do know that they can get the best mortgage rates (equals lower payments) by using their VA housing assistance benefits. They also do not know that veterans get the most favorable credit guidelines (credit score requirements, debt to income ratios, and down payment) and are not required to buy Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI). The Department of Veteran Affairs Housing Assistance The Department of Veteran Affairs Housing Assistance site at https://www. va.gov/housing-assistance/ will explain to a veteran that VA housing assistance can help veterans, service members, and their surviving spouses to buy a home or refinance a loan. The site also explains that

the VA offers benefits and services to help veterans build, improve, or keep their current home.

Housing Assistance Site information Find out how to apply for and manage the Veterans’ housing assistance benefits you've earned. The VA Housing Assistance site at https://www.va.gov/housing-assistance/ will explain to the veteran: • The VA home loan types, eligibility requirements, how to request (online or by mail) your Certificate of Eligibility (COE), VA home programs for surviving spouses, and how to track the status of an open home loan COE appeal. • How to request a decision review or manage a legacy appeal (you disagree with a VA home loan decision), get help to avoid foreclosure because you are struggling to make payments, and how to recognize signs of misleading offers to refinance your VAbacked home loan. • What the home buying process is for veterans, whether or not you will have to pay a VA funding fee, how to find and contact a VA regional loan center, how to buy a home the VA has acquired because its VA direct or VA-backed home loan was terminated, and how veterans get help if they have a VA direct or VA-backed home loan or Specially Adapted Housing grant and your home was damaged by a natural disaster. Ask the VA questions Military members, veterans, and surviving spouses can ask the VA questions about VA Housing Assistance by calling the VA Benefits hotline at 800-827-1000 or MyVA411 main information line at 800-698-2411. You can also use ASK VA (AVA) by going to https://

ask.va.gov to message the VA with questions you may have.

Disability housing grants for veterans The VA offers housing grants for Veterans and service members with certain service-connected disabilities so they can buy or change their homes (permanent or temporary residence) to meet their needs and live more independently. Read online about disability housing grants and how to apply for a grant at https://bit.ly/3vWLGP6. Specially adapted housing grants Find out how to apply, check appeal status, and request a decision review for a Specially Adapted Housing Grant by reading the information at https:// bit.ly/3L0SHT2. If you are a veteran, military member, or surviving spouse and thinking about applying for VA home loan benefits or applying for a housing assistance grant you should also watch and listen to the following VA Home Loan-related YouTube videos found on the U.S. Dept. of Veterans Affairs You Tube Channel, https://www.youtube.com/ user/DeptVetAffairs or #thesitrep, which are produced by the New England Healthcare System: • VA Home Loans Applying, Refinancing, Credit Scores, Cash Out, and More THE SITREP dated July 9, 2021. • How to Cash Out Refinancing Works with a VA Home Loan SITREP dated Nov. 18, 2021. • Options for Refinancing with a VA Home Loan SITREP dated Nov. 11, 2021. • Home Renovations with VA Home Loan Refinancing SITREP. • Save Money with a Cash-Out Refinancing VA Loan SITREP dated December 2021.

This article reminded veterans, military members, and their surviving spouses to take advantage of the excellent VA loan and grant benefits they earned with selfless sweat, tears, blood, and sacrifice. It also explained where to go to find detailed information on the ins and outs of the VA Housing Assistance programs. Next week’s article, the May 19, 2022 edition, will continue explaining the VA Housing Assistance Programs’ wonderful benefits. Next week’s column will cover: • Veterans do need some money to buy a home. How to Apply for a VA home loan? What will the veteran have to give to the lender (underwriter) during the application process? • Eligibility requirements for a VA home loan. How long does it take to close on VA home loan approval? Fixer-uppers. Credit Scores. Types of properties veterans can buy with a VA loan. And Condominiums. The final article in this series on VA Housing Assistance will be in the May 26, 2022 edition of The Island News. That article will cover how many VA loans a veteran can have, investor property restrictions, owner-occupation, no homes in foreign countries, refinancing, service-connected disability benefits, active-duty quirks, bankruptcy, foreclosure, and things veterans should do when wanting to use their VA Home loan benefits. Larry Dandridge is a Vietnam War wounded warrior, disabled veteran, ex-Enlisted Infantryman, ex-Warrant Officer Pilot, and retired Lt. Colonel. He is a past Veterans Service Officer, a Patient Adviser at the RHJ VA Hospital, the Fisher House Charleston Good Will Ambassador, and the VP for Veteran Affairs for the local Army Association Chapter. Larry is the author of the award-winning book Blades of Thunder and a contributing free-lance writer with the Island News. Contact him at LDandridge@earthlink. net or 843-276-7164.


VOICES & FAITH Editor’s Note: The opinions of our columnists in the Voices section are not necessarily the opinions of The Island News.

Should we do more? Are we doing too much?

I

t is Saturday and I’m in Port Royal. This morning I’m looking out at a yard completely carpeted with magnolia leaves. They began falling last month and will continue to fall until midJune. These leaves once signaled the advent of Spring; and for years they created a Saturday-morning obligation — an obligation happily and determinedly attacked by Joe Morrall. Last month Joe Morrall died, and his death has left me and my wife, Susan, bereft and saddened at the sight of these magnolia leaves — ungathered and unmulched — a mute testament to Joe’s passing. This morning I’m also aware that the Ukrainian soldiers in Mariupol are, apparently, fighting to the last man (and woman) in a surrounded, blasted-out steel mill. Their last stand also saddens me and reminds me of a similar

I

t’s been coming for a long time. There have been attempts from time to time, but mostly the country has been able to right itself and move on. It has taken us 73 years to finally reach 1984, but I am very much afraid that 2022 will be the official date that the United States of American began 1984. This month the Biden Administration boldly announced that a new “Disinformation Governance” Board” under the Department of the Department of Homeland Security. I don’t think that George Orwell himself could have come up with a better name for the new “Board.” At this point most of us are not sure what this new board will be doing, including Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, but it’s something

SCOTT GRABER

siege that happened 68 years ago in a place called Dien Bien Phu. In 1946 Viet Minh insurgents led by General Nguyen Giap began fighting the French in a distant, far-away place called “Viet Nam.” The French — reeling from an uneven, unhappy record in World War II were determined to hang onto their colony in Southeast Asia. In November of 1953 about 10,000 French paratroopers — some being part of their famed Foreign Legion — jumped into a valley called Dien Bien Phu. Their plan was to interrupt the transport of weapons and ammuni-

tion that were then flowing South into Laos where there was unrest, insurrection and revolution brewing in the lotus-scented Laotian air. The United States had their own problems in Korea; and the American public was not eager to get into yet another shooting war in Asia. But France was an ally and, well, these Viet Minh folks were undoubtedly Communist. So we covertly covered 80 percent of the French tab in Vietnam. General Giap had roughly 50,000 men who quickly surrounded the French Legionnaires — his troops occupying the triple-canopied hills that surrounded the garrison and its airstrip. Giap also had artillery — 105 mm howitzers — that he disassembled and somehow, someway transported to the top of the hills surrounding Dien Bien Phu. And on March 13, 1954, Giap’s 105s began dropping rounds on the

French positions down in the valley. In the United States Senate there was consternation and serious talk about intervention. It is said that John Foster Dulles, then Eisenhower’s Secretary of State, argued that we should give the French a couple of our atomic bombs in addition to the C-119 “flying boxcars” that were dropping ammunition and other supplies on the base. President Eisenhower and Dulles also pressed Winston Churchill about committing Britain (and his weary, worn-out troops) into combat against the Viet Minh who were now digging trenches within a hundred yards of the French bunkers. But the United States Senate had no stomach for another conflict where American boys would be engaged in actual combat against the Russian-and-Chinese supplied Vietnamese. On April 22, 1954, Giap’s

forces captured the airstrip. Then on May 7, 1954 his forces overran the remaining French bunkers, and the French troopers surrendered, suffering 2,200 killed and 5,000 wounded. It is estimated that only 3,300 of the captured Legionnaires made it back to France. And for many years after Dien Bien Phu, there was the feeling that we should have done more. This is the feeling that has been resurrected by the surrounded Ukrainians in the City of Mariupol. There are many who think the United States should be doing more in the way of weaponry — perhaps supplying aircraft like the A-10 “warthog,” with its Avenger rotary cannon carrying 1174 rounds of tank-penetrating ordinance. Or giving them our Abrams Main Battle Tank instead of the inferior Soviet-era T-72s they are now getting from Poland. Or perhaps sending over a squadron of

1984 has been a long time coming JIM DICKSON

like it’s going to “tackle falsehoods that threaten the national security of the United States.” How is that for a black pit to fall into? The new “Board” will lead by Nina Jandowiez, who it seems is very well versed on falsehoods and disinformation, so it seems a good choice. For those of you who are reading this and asking what has all this to do with 1984, maybe a little explanation is in order. The novel

“1984” written by Eric Blair under the pen-name George Orwell published in 1949, was a story of how Orwell imagined it would be to live in a totalitarian state in the year 1984. At one time the book was on the reading list of most high schools and colleges across the country. I haven’t bothered to look, but my guess is that it’s not anymore; therefore it’s probably not as well read as it once was, even though it should be. If you have not read the book, please do so as there are many lessons to be learned from it. A fictional country, Oceania is ruled by an omnipresent leader known as “Big Brother,” who is watching over every citizen at home, at work or anywhere by means of a Telescreen that

is installed in every home, work and public place. The party controls everything, even history and language which is being replaced with a new language called “Newspeak” which removes all “harmful” words from the language. History is being re-written daily according to what is considered “correct” by the government at the time. Even thought is controlled by the Thought Police who see that no “Thought Crimes” are committed. Does any of this sound a little familiar? The theme of the government is “War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery,” and “Ignorance is Strength.” All this is over seen by The Ministry of Peace, whose job it is to fight wars. The Ministry of Plenty,

whose job is to limit food and other necessities to keep the people poor and hungry while, telling them that they are prospering. Poor hungry people are easier to control. Then there’s The Ministry of Love, who does a great job of spreading hate and suspicion, and last but not least, The Ministry of Truth, whose job it is to be sure that no one ever knows what the real truth is. Also to convince the people that only “Big Brother” loves them and knows what is best for them, and only he can be the answer to all their problems. When Stalin created a similar ministry in Russia he named it “The Truth Department.” It must have worked pretty well for him; it kept him in power until he died a natural death. Rare in that job, so it’s probably in the

F-35s, the most sophisticated gun-and-bomb platform ever devised. But its my bet that there is a memo on Joe Biden’s desk from Vladimir Putin saying that if you deploy any American-built aircraft you will be threatening Mother Russia herself. I believe Putin knows that his massed artillery, his thinly armored T-72s and his medieval siege tactics will not survive the introduction of these airplanes and their smart bombs. After weeks of saying Biden is not doing enough, today’s Wall Street Journal says, “While nobody wants to go on the record, senior Europeans are already whispering to sympathetic journalists that the Biden Administration is escalating too far and too fast.” Scott Graber is a lawyer, novelist, veteran columnist and longtime resident of Port Royal. He can be reached at cscottgraber@gmail.com.

Putin playbook as well. I am happy to say that we are not that far down the road yet, but unless this new “Board” dies the death that it should, this beginning may well be the end, and 1984 may have arrived this year. Let’s hope that there is such non-partisan opposition, this terrible idea will be swept into the dust pan of stupid ideas where it so richly belongs. Born, raised and educated in the Southwest, Jim Dickson served in the U.S. Navy Reserve in Vietnam before a 35-year business career. Retired to St. Helena Island, Dickson and his wife are fiscally conservative, socially moderate and active in Republican politics, though they may not always agree with Republicans. Having lived around the country and traveled around the world, Dickson believes that the United States truly is the land of opportunity.

LIVING ON PURPOSE

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ne of the popular topics that readers contact me about are concerns associated with food shortages and higher costs. I realize that no one has a crystal ball to see into the future, but we have plenty of websites that are encouraging everyone to stockpile food and water. The prepping movement has been warning the public for years to prepare for such a crisis and of course, many have created profitable businesses by selling everything a person would need if something like this were to happen. I’m sure many of you are like us that have friends and family members who have food and water reserves, and my wife and I believe it’s wise to have some extra provisions in case of an emergency. The prices of food and fuel are rising, and many families

Man shall not live by bread alone BILLY HOLLAND

are feeling even more financial stress. I’m involved with a weekly food distribution ministry in my hometown where we receive food from area grocery stores and a local co-op three times a week, then we give it out to homeless shelters, the elderly, and those in need. Our team has a burden to make sure that everyone in our community can at least have something good to eat. It’s one thing to tell someone to be blessed and something else to activate our faith and make sure they have the pro-

visions they need. Jesus said in Matthew 25 that when you give to the needy, you have given to Him. We know that political wars and sanctions can disrupt food chains, as weather, plant diseases, fuel and fertilizer costs, and pestilences can also contribute to shortages. By the way, I’ve often wondered why governments pay farmers not to grow their crops. We read in Matthew 24:6 about the scarcity of food, “For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom, and there will be famines and earthquakes in various places.” And Revelation Chapter 6 talks about a quart of wheat costing a day's wage and implies there will be a time when war and famine will give way to inflation due to supply and demand. For those who love God, we know we can trust Him in

the difficult times and that He hears our prayers and will provide for our needs. Paul related in Philippians Chapter 4 about maintaining contentment and being at peace with God in times of need or prosperity. There is an amazing story found in I Kings Chapter 17 where God intervened for the prophet Elijah and miraculously provided food and water. The Lord commanded ravens to bring him meat and bread twice each day and also supplied him with fresh water from a brook called Cherith. When fear surrounds us and life feels uncertain, it’s easy to doubt that our Creator is really with us, but the same God who is with us during good times is the same God who is with us during times of uncertainty. This example should encourage us to know that He

is always watching over us and desires to take care of us like we take care of our own children. In closing, may we remember that famines and food shortages are not only about empty shelves at our local market, but there is also a spiritual famine happening today with God’s word and it will only become worse. Most people are not really interested in having their conscience being convicted of sin, but believe there is no such thing as a universal standard of divine truth. Even many religious individuals would rather listen to inspirational messages that compromise and justify living however they want. Things that are socially accepted today would have been an outrage in the Christian world just 50 years ago. Instead of God’s followers

taking a stand and defending His foundational realities, the majority now makes excuses and negotiates to make everyone happy. II Timothy Chapter 4 warned us this would happen, and it has. John 6:33-35 Jesus says, “For the bread of God is he which comes down from heaven, and gives life unto the world. Then said they unto him, Lord, evermore give us this bread. And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that comes to me shall never hunger; and he that believes on me shall never thirst.” And in Matthew 4:4, “But he answered, it is written, man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.” Read more about the Christian life at billyhollandministries.com.

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THEME: GRADUATION ACROSS 1. Like a bug on windshield noise 6. G-man 9. Type of race 13. Late actor Ledger 14. Waikiki necklace 15. Group of lions 16. Knight's shiny garb 17. Ensign, for short 18. One to beat 19. *Graduation proof 21. *"School's Out" singer 23. An indigenous person in Laos 24. 6-shooter 25. Founder of People's Republic of China 28. Porous rock 30. *MFA or BA 35. Comrade in arms 37. Be inclined 39. Had in mind 40. Was a passenger 41. Ventricular beater 43. Same as ayah 44. ____ Trick, rock band 46. Nicholas II, e.g. 47. Initiation ceremony, e.g. 48. "Pollock" actor Ed 50. Foolish one 52. Ever, to a poet

53. "House of Gucci" star 55. Masters Tournament peg 57. *Mortarboard attachment 60. *"No more ____, no more books" 64. Fancy boat 65. Mozart's "L'____ del Cairo" 67. Arm bones 68. Orderly arrangement 69. Granola grain 70. Gustatory sensation 71. Lord Byron's composition 72. Dashboard unit 73. Weasel's aquatic cousin DOWN 1. Herring's cousin 2. "Frasier" actress Gilpin 3. Bulb holder 4. Coral reef island 5. Neck cavity 6. Pestilence pest 7. Even, to a poet 8. "Saturday Night Fever" music genre 9. Type of coffee maker 10. Gauche or Droite in Paris 11. Month of Purim 12. Styling product 15. For the time being, Latin (2 words) 20. Cave opening

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22. Like Hemingway's certain man on sea 24. Type of rummy 25. *One in "Pomp and Circumstance" series 26. Hello to Israel Kamakawiwo'ole 27. Ahead in years 29. *"You have brains in your head, you have ____ in your shoes" 31. Cleats to soccer player 32. China grass 33. Related on mother's side 34. Olden days anesthetic 36. *School ____, which is about 180 days 38. No-win situation 42. Old-hat 45. Wilbur's home 49. *Famous frat house 51. Adjective in sheet music 54. Low light 56. Enthusiastic approval 57. Tropical edible root 58. Land measure 59. A fake 60. Beaten by walkers 61. Research facil. 62. It's better than never? 63. Tiresias in "Oedipus Rex" 64. Small dog's bark 66. *Gown's companion

LAST WEEK'S CROSSWORD & SUDOKU SOLUTIONS

MAY 12–18, 2022

A19


820 Bay Street

Beaufort, SC 29902

843.521.4200

$645,000

$845,000

$950,000

COTTAGE FARM | MLS 175808 FRIPP ISLAND | MLS 173423 PIGEON POINT | MLS 175387 4BDRM | 4B | 2522sqft Sara Miller 1.540.209.5434

.46acre Homesite | Oceanfront Trudy Arthur 843.812.0967 Nancy Butler 843.384.5445

3BDRM | 3B | Water View | OLREA Edward Dukes 843.812.5000

$219,000

LOST ISLAND | MLS 174952 .32acre Homesite | Tidal Creek Lloyd Williams 1.843.754.4735

www.LowcountryRealEstate.com Want financial guidance with a Satisfaction Guarantee?

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136 Sea Island Parkway

Talk to our team at the Bluffton Branch. Belfair Towne Village 67 Towne Drive, Bluffton, SC 29910 843-473-3620 schwab.com/bluffton

Open Monday – Friday 9am-6pm Saturday 10am-5pm & Sunday 11am-3pm

843-379-3303 • contact@beaufortkitchen.com

At your request, Schwab will refund eligible fees within specified timeframes. Go to schwab.com/satisfaction to learn what’s included and how it works. © 2022 Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. (“Schwab”) Member SIPC. All rights reserved. (1120-0JP6) SCH5204-5 (3/22)

Beaufort Aviation Association presents the

AVIATION CAREERS EXPO

at the BEAUFORT EXECUTIVE AIRPORT | Saturday, June 4 ~ From 11-2pm

LEARN ABOUT THE MANY GREAT CAREERS AVAILABLE IN AVIATION • Maintenance and Repair • Design and Engineering • Management • Avionics Design • Installation and Repair • Piloting • Airline In-Flight Cabin Service • Space Exploration • Air Traffic Control • Flight Instruction • University and College Opportunities • Airline Ticketing, Cargo, and Ground Servicing • Military Aviation GRAND SPONSOR

GOLD SPONSOR

25

SILVER SPONSORS 07

BRONZE SPONSORS

Live Oak Builders • Low Country Flight Doc • Swamp Fox Avionics PARTICIPANTS

American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics • Beaufort County Airports Department • Beaufort County School District • Civil Air Patrol Embry Riddle Aeronautical University • Society of Women Engineers • Technical College of the Lowcountry • Women In Aviation International

For Info Text 843.812.9909


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