Martins Headline Piedmont Women`s Center 25th Anniversary
Transcription
Martins Headline Piedmont Women`s Center 25th Anniversary
Change Service Requested PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID GREENVILLE SC PERMIT #269 Will Freedom Survive? ~ See Below ~ 50 cents The Times Examiner, 44 Pine Knoll Drive, Suite E-2, Greenville, South Carolina 29609 VOL. 23, NO. 14 - WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 2016 50th Anniversary of Vietnam War ~ See Page 6 ~ ... can ye not discern the signs of the times? M!""#$% 16:3 Trump Transparent Pricing - Part 2 ~ See Page 8 ~ INDEPENDENT CONSERVATIVE VOICE OF THE PALMETTO STATE Martins Headline Piedmont Women’s Center 25th Anniversary Banquet PHOTO COURTESY OF PWC The Dove Award winning Martins (Judy, Jonathan and Joyce) provided Christian music for the PWC Anniversary Banquet. The Martins were part of Bill Gaither’s Concert Tours and Videos. DAR Commemorated 50th Anniversary of Vietnam War AMERICAN LEGION POST 3 PHOTO BY GILBERT SCALES Nathanael L. Greene Chapter DAR members visited American Legion Post 3 with a proclamation from Easley Mayor Larry Bagwell recognizing Vietnam War Veterans. Piedmont Women’s Center Chief Executive Officer Lenna Fox Smith announced Plans for New Grove Road Medical Facility Vet Center Program for Vietnam Veterans By Bob Dill The 2016 Piedmont Women’s Center Pregnancy Medical Clinic 2016 Banquet For Life featured music by the Dove Award winning Martins. The popular family group has appeared on most of the Bill Gaither videos produced in recent years. The food was exceptionally good for an event requiring food service for more than1,100 people. The guests were treated with ultrasound images of live unborn babies in various stages of development on a giant screen, with narration by the medical staff. An excellent video was shown depicting the 25 year journey of the Piedmont Women’s Center from it’s beginning to the present. The highlight of the banquet was live testimony of two women who had abortions and had life changing experiences through the PWC abortion recovery programs. Lieutenant Governor Henry PHOTO BY GILBERT SCALES Craig Barnett, US Army (Ret.), Vietnam War Veteran was guest speaker at the 50th Anniversary commemorating the Vietnam War (November 1, 1955 to May 15, 1975). Funeral of South Vietnamese 2nd Lt.Yen V Vo See PWC, Page 2 Will Freedom Survive? Have Super-PACs and Dark Money Stolen our Birthright? By Mike Scruggs O n January 21, 2010, the Supreme Court of the United States decided a case, Citizens United versus the Federal Election Commission, which has dramatically changed the relative influence of Ameri- can voters on government policy for the worse. The average voter is scarcely aware or as yet much concerned that his relative influence and voice have been reduced to a whisper beside giant Political Action Commit- tees (super-PACs) that spend unlimited millions on political and media propaganda campaigns. Moreover, legal arrangements can now hide See SCRUGGS, Page 12 PHOTO COURTESY OF RONALD HALL Presenting the Vietnamese Heritage Flag to family of 2nd Lt. Yen V Vo. The Times Examiner 2 PWC future construction of a new free limited OB ultrasounds. ... Continue from Page 1 modern medical facility to re- Their Abortion Recovery As- McMaster presented CEO Lenna Smith with a commendation from the Lieutenant Governor’s Office recognizing the life-saving accomplishments of the PWC during the past twenty-five years. Lenna Smith made what she called an “earth moving” announcement that involved the place the decaying building on sistance program helps women Grove Road. Additional space and men who have experienced in the new facility will permit an abortion find God’s path of the doubling of ultrasound ser- healing and restoration. vices provided at that location. Wednesday, April 6, 2016 During 2015, the Piedmont Piedmont Women’s Center Women’s Center administered serves families by offering con- 1,786 pregnancy tests, provided fidential counseling, free lab- 606 ultrasounds and saved 303 grade pregnancy testing, and babies from abortion. PHOTO COURTESY OF PWC More than 1,100 guests attended the Piedmont Women’s Center 25th Anniversary Banquet. PHOTO COURTESY OF PWC PWC CEO Lenna Fox Smith welcomes guests to the Piedmont Women’s Center 25th Anniversary Banquet. Washington Center’s Annual Spring Plant Sale PHOTO BY BOB DILL SC Lt. Gov. Henry McMaster made presentation to PWC CEO Lenna Fox Smith during 25th Anniversary Banquet. Funeral of South Vietnamese 2nd Lt.Yen V Vo WASHINGTON CENTER PHOTO Students and staff at Washington Center display a sample of ßowers available for purchase during the school’s annual Spring Plant Sale. Washington Center ’s annual Spring Plant Sale begins Wednesday, April 6th and is open to the public. The greenhouse is full of brightly colored flowers such as impatiens, petunias, lantana, geraniums and hanging baskets. Vegetables include tomatoes, bell peppers, cucumbers, squash and zucchini. The students have worked very hard along with their teacher Cathy Bush. Classes have participated in every part of the process. They have filled containers with soil and planted seeds or plugs. Students have also helped to care for plants in the greenhouse as they grow. Monies raised will provide funding to continue the gardening program which is an important part of our curriculum. For more information, call 355-0250 or come visit Washington Center at 2 Betty Spencer Drive. The students and staff say a big Thank You to the community for your continued support. Pat Ramsey and Ron Hall salute SV 2nd Lt. Yen Vo one last time as a traditional goodbye to their brother. PHOTO COURTESY OF RONALD HALL 09-28-16 I am addicted to the The Times Examiner www.timesexaminer.com ANTIQUES - COLLECTIBLES & GARDEN 601 W. Rutherford Street, Landrum, SC 29356 864.457.2314 Open 6 Days 10:30 to 5:30, Closed Wednesdays Look for us on Facebook Free Pickens County Community Meeting A free Pickens County community meeting will be held Tuesday, April 12, 2016 from 7pm till 8pm to provide information for concerned citizens over the recent School Board decision to close two of our rural schools. This meeting will provide updates on the three plans in place to fight back against this decision which was clearly against the WILL OF THE PEOPLE OF PICKENS COUNTY. The three plans are #1 Law Suit #2 Charter School #3 Refusing the Spring high stakes tests. Grassroots activists will be our speakers and hopefully we will try our best to answer your questions about the plans. Donations will be accepted to pay for the retainer fee of the lawyer we have retained. Meeting will take place at the Pickens Senior Center located at 129 Schoolhouse Street, Pickens, SC. Park in the back and enter through back entrance. Turn left down hallway and meeting will be held in multi-purpose room. For more information contact: Johnnelle Raines, cell # 704-860-0648 email: johnnelle@bellsouth.net. The Times Examiner Wednesday, April 6, 2016 3 Helen Kinion Presents “Confederate Bingo,” to Greenville 51 UDC PHOTO COURTESY OF CAROL LEAKE Ladies of Oliver Thompson 1850 UDC, young ladies from Caroline S. Coleman 537 CofC, and some of their friends from the community are pictured at the “Somewhere in Thyme” Tea on March 26, 2016. settings, and hours of their time in preparation and clean-up. Their efforts are greatly appreciated by their CofC chapter! The event was attended by ladies from Greenville 51 UDC, Hunley Chapter 2667 UDC, Oliver Thompson 1850 UDC, Beulah Meredith 2327 UDC, Ann White 123 UDC, Lancaster 462 UDC, Caroline S. Coleman 537, CofC, and other guests from the community. The chapter members were honored to have in attendance the SC Division UDC President, Ann Shugart, SC Division Registrar Judy McCardle (who was also the Division Director for the CofC when she served as SC Division Third Vice President from 2012-2014), Honorary SC Division President Helen Kinion, and President of Lancaster 462 UDC Donna Sowell. Oliver Thompson 1850 Chaplain Ann Vaughan brought a devotional, incorporating a variety of herbs into her message. She provided two lovely baskets and an assortment of books for a si- Oliver Thompson 1850, United Daughters of the Confederacy, held its chapter meeting on Wednesday, March 16, 2016, at the Fountain Inn History Museum. Following the UDC Ritual and business session, the chapter members enjoyed the program of “Confederate Bingo,” presented by Helen Kinion, member of Greenville 51 UDC. Mrs. Kinion is the Honorary President of the SC Division UDC. The game was very educational, teaching some interesting facts about the War Between the States, and testing the knowledge of those in attendance! The chapter was honored to also have Darlene Dowdy, SC Division Treasurer, in attendance at the meeting, and Georgia Grey Chumley (SC Division Recording Secretary of the Children of the Confederacy) and her sister Charlotte Chum- ver Thompson chapter ladies donated items to the benevolent projects of Caroline S. Coleman 537. They also contributed to the SCSCAR President’s Project of Will Flint, who is a member of Caroline S. Coleman 537, CofC. Will’s project is called, “Helping our Heroes,” uniting “Canine Angels” service dogs with Wounded Warriors and First Responders suffering from PTSD. At the end of the meeting, the ladies posed for a picture across from the Caroline S. Coleman exhibit at the Fountain Inn History Museum. The ladies of Oliver Thompson generously supported and contributed to the “Somewhere in Thyme” Fundraiser Tea of Caroline S. Coleman 537, which was held on Saturday, March 26, 2016, at the “Old Manse” of Fairview Presbyterian Church, Fountain Inn, SC. Chapter members provided lent auction which she donated to the chapter fundraiser. The children of Caroline S. Coleman 537, many of whom were attired in their “old-timey” outfits enthusiastically greeted and welcomed all the guests. They helped to set the tables, served the courses of food and cleared plates. The tea was served in three courses. The first course consisted of scones with cream and jam and an assortment of fresh fruit. The second course was an assortment of savories and sandwiches, including chicken salad sandwiches, egg salad sandwiches, cucumber sandwiches, pimento cheese sandwiches, vegetables and dip, veggie pizza squares, cheese biscuits, and mini quiche. The third course showcased a variety of mini desserts, including banana blueberry bread, brownies, thumbprint cookies, peppermint chocolate chip forget-me-nots, chocolate orange truffles, assorted cream puffs ley, both of whom are charter members of Oliver Thompson’s auxiliary CofC Chapter, Caroline S. Coleman 537. The Oli- food, table cloths and napkins, floral arrangements, gift baskets for a silent auction, china and crystal and silverware for table and eclairs, wedding balls, heart-shaped lavender sugar cookies, and cheesecake squares. Pots of tea were served By Carol Leake throughout the entire Tea. To incorporate the theme, herbs were used in some of the recipes for the party food and were tucked into the ribbons surrounding the napkins at each place setting, and pots of herbs were used in the table centerpieces. Each guest received a tea cup shaped magnet with a miniature 2016 calendar attached for their party favor. Chapter members enjoyed a delightful time of fellowship with their friends, and they were grateful for the good support and attendance for this event. For more information about Oliver Thompson 1850 UDC, please contact Chapter President Carol Leake at 864-414-5092. For more information about Caroline S. Coleman 537, CofC, please contact Chapter Director Pam Evans at 832-867-9224. PHOTO COURTESY OF CAROL LEAKE Caroline S. Coleman 537 Chapter members are pictured with Ann Shugart, SC Division UDC President, Judy McCardle, SC Division Registrar UDC and past SC Division Third Vice President UDC (2012-1014), and Carol Leake, President of Oliver Thompson 1850 UDC and past SC Division Third Vice President UDC (2010-2012) on the front porch of the “Old Manse” of the Fairview Presbyterian Church, site of the “Somewhere in Thyme” Fundraiser Tea. “Kids Day at the Agricultural Museum: Earth & Ecology” On Saturday, April 23rd, the Agricultural Museum of South Carolina will host “Kids Day at the Ag Museum: Earth & Ecology.” The event runs from 10 AM – 1 PM, and is designed for children in grades 3-6. Admission is $5.00 and reservations are required since class size is limited. To make reservations, parents should contact Nikki Saylors at nsaylors86@gmail. com or call 864-646-7271. Through games and hands-on activities, attendees will learn about Earth and Ecology by understanding different ecosystems and how we interact and affect them every day. Some of the activities students will participate in are learning about rain barrels and decorating one for the museum, identifying trees by their leaves while learning about the carbon cycle, and making their own thermometer to take home with them. Attendees will also participate in an ecology scavenger hunt. First time attendees will have an opportunity to earn their Farm Hand badge, an educational program offered by the museum. Agricultural Museum of South Carolina backpacks will also be given to students attending their first Kids Day of the 2016 season. The Agricultural Museum of South Carolina is located at 120 History Lane, Pendleton, SC., across Hwy. 76 from Tri-County Technical College’s Pendleton Campus. The museum is open to the public Thursday and Friday from 12 noon until 5 PM, and Saturday, 10 AM – 3 PM. Admission is free, but donations are appreciated. Group tours and school field trips may be scheduled by emailing ellen@ pendletondistrict.org or calling 864-207-0705. Local Residents Inducted into The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi PHOTO COURTESY OF CAROL LEAKE Oliver Thompson 1850 held its chapter meeting on Wednesday, March 16, 2016, at the Fountain Inn History Museum. Pictured L-R: Carol Leake, Jan Kendall, Ann Vaughan, Elinor Mowbray, Loretta Woods, Helen Kinion, Margaret Thomas, Georgia Grey Chumley, Tammy Chumley, Charlotte Chumley, Pam Evans, Darlene Dowdy and Brenda Meyer. BATON ROUGE, LA – The following local residents recently were initiated into The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, the nation’s oldest and most selective collegiate honor society for all academic disciplines. Ashlee Stephens of Greenville (29607) initiated at Clemson University Nicholas Brown of Greenville (29607) initiated at College of Charleston Gabriela Samour of Greenville (29607) initiated at Clemson University Joey Bonitati of Greenville (29601) initiated at Clemson University Joseph Barnett of Greenville (29617) initiated at College of Charleston Lauren Lees of Greenville (29615) initiated at College of Charleston Samuel McCauley of Greenville (29607) initiated at College of Charleston Shanna Scott of Greenville (29617) initiated at Clemson University These residents are among approximately 30,000 students, faculty, professional staff and alumni to be initiated into Phi Kappa Phi each year. Membership is by invitation and requires nomination and approval by a chapter. Only the top 10 percent of seniors and 7.5 percent of juniors, having at least 72 semester hours, are eligible for membership. Graduate students in the top 10 percent of the number of candidates for graduate degrees may also qualify, as do faculty, professional staff, and alumni who have achieved scholarly distinction. Founded in 1897 at the University of Maine and headquartered in Baton Rouge, La., Phi Kappa Phi is the nation’s oldest and most selective all-discipline honor society. The Society has chapters on more than 300 college and university campuses in North America and the Philippines. Its mission is “To recognize and promote academic excellence in all fields of higher education and to engage the community of scholars in service to others.” The Times Examiner 4 Wednesday, April 6, 2016 Mark Clark Appointed to Greenville Airport Commission LEGAL NOTICE IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS THIRTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT CA. N0.: 2015-CP-23-03543 AMENDED SUMMONS STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF GREENVILLE (Jury Trial Demanded) Cheryl Lark and David Lark, Plaintiffs, vs. Blackwell & Company Realty, Inc., Lewis C. Barker, Charles Sims, And Comdaque Painting Services, LLC, Defendants. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is attached hereto and herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to same upon the subscribed at 178 West Main Street, Post OfÞce Box 3547, Spartanburg, South Carolina 29304, within thirty (30) days after the service of same, exclusive of the day of such service. If you fail to answer same within thirty (30) day period, the Plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded therein and judgment will be taken against you be default. -------------------------Pursuant to Rule i5(a), SCRCP, and the Order of the Honorable Judge Robin B. Stilwell dated January 7, 2016, the Plaintiffs above named, complaining of Defendants herein do submit this their Amended Complaint as following: 1. The parties hereto, the subject matter hereof, and all matters and things herein after alleged are within the jurisdiction of this honorable court. 2. Plaintiffs are and were all times herein after mentioned residents of Greenville County, State of South Carolina. 3. Defendant Blackwell & Company Realty, Inc., (Defendant Blackwell) is upon information and belief a corporation existing under the laws of the State of South Caroline and doing business in Greenville County, South Carolina. 4. Defendant Lewis C. Barker, (Defendant Barker) upon information and belief, is a citizen and resident of Greenville County, South Carolina and a co-owner of real property located at 333 Wade Hampton Boulevard in Greenville, South Carolina. 5. Defendant Charles Sims, (Defendant Sims) upon information and belief, is a citizen and resident of Greenville County, South Carolina and a co-owner of real property located at 333 Wade Hampton Boulevard in Greenviile, South Carolina. 6. Defendant Comdaque Painting Services, LLC (“Comdaque”) was, upon information and belief, a limited liability company organized and existing under the laws of the State of South Carolina and doing business in Greenville County, South Carolina. 7. Defendant Comdaque was upon information and belief, hired by one or more of the Defendants named above to perform painting services at the 333 Wade Hampton Boulevard location in Greenville, South Carolina 8. Upon information and belief, at the time of the incident complained herein, Defendant Blackwell was the leasee of the property owned by Defendant Sims and Defendant Barker. 9. Upon information and belief Plaintiff Cheryl Lark was a contract real estate agent for Defendant Blackwell, working primarily from the leased ofÞce located at 333 Wade Hampton Boulevard. 10. Upon information and belief, Defendants Sims and Barker owed to their tenant and those lawfully upon the premises a duty to ensure that the premises were in reasonably safe and proper condition for their business purposes. 11. Upon information and belief; Defendants Sims and Barker had a duty to ensure that any workmen they employed to work on the premises would he qualiÞed and trained to do their work in a reasonably careful and professional manner and to do nothing to create a dangerous condition upon the premises and to supervise any workmen so employed. 12. On or about February 25, 2013, Plaintiff Cheryl Lark, in the course and scope of her professional duties, was walking through the ofÞce of Defendant Blackwell located at 333 Wade Hampton Boulevard. As Plaintiff walked through the said ofÞce, she tripped over a desk mat left lying in a dangerous position on the ßoor. 13. Upon information and belief; Defendant Comdaque, by and through its authorized agent and servant, had recently moved this mat while working on the premises at the direction of Defendants Barker and Sims and had not replaced said mat in a safe and proper manner. 14. Defendant Blackwell failed to discover, warn, or remedy the hazard caused by the mat prior to the Plaintiff’s fall. 15. As a result of the fall, Plaintiffs suffered injuries and damages as set forth hereinbelow. PLAINTIFF’S FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION AS TO ALL DEFENDANTS (NEGLIGENCE) 15. Plaintiff incorporates herein by reference each and every allegation as set forth hereinabove as if repeated verbatim. 16. Defendants, by and through their employees, agents, and servants were negligent, grossly negligent, careless, and reckless in the following particulars, to wit: a) In failing to exercise due care to keep its premises in a reasonably safe condition; b) In failing to remedy the hazard created by the mat on the ßoor; c) In failing to warn Plaintiff of the condition either verbally or by way of signage, cone placement, or other reasonably acceptable manner; d) In failing to act as a reasonable and prudent business of like kind would have acted under the circumstances then and there existing. e) In failing to require inspection of the area when Defendants knew or by the exercise of ordinary care should have known that the area had created an opportunity for someone to fall and be injured. 17. As a direct and proximate result of the aforementioned acts of negligence on behalf of Defendants, Plaintiff suffered injuries to her person that required extensive and expensive medical care and treatment. 18. As a further and direct proximate result of the aforementioned acts of negligence on behalf of Defendants, Plaintiff suffered permanent physical impairment, disability, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of income, and physical pain and suffering. FOR A SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION AS TO DEFENDANT BLACKWELL (BREACH OF CONTRACT) 19. Plaintiff incorporates herein by reference each and every allegation as set forth hereinabove as if repeated verbatim. 20. Upon information and belief, Plaintiff and Defendant Blackwell entered into a Contract on or about January 22, 2013 whereby Defendant Blackwell agreed to maintain an ofÞce, “properly equipped with furnishings and other equipment necessary and incidental to the proper operation of said business, and staffed with employees, suitable to serving the public as a real estate broker. . .” 21. Defendant Blackwell breached its contract with Plaintiff by failing to provide properly equipped and staffed ofÞce space for Plaintiff. 22. As a direct and proximate result of the aforementioned breach of contract on behalf of Defendant Blackwell, Plaintiff suffered injuries to her person that required extensive and expensive medical care and treatment. 23. As a further and direct proximate result of the aforementioned breach of contract on behalf of Defendant Blackwell, Plaintiff suffered permanent physical impairment, disability, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of income, and physical pain and suffering. FOR A SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION AS TO DEFENDANT’S BARKER, SIMS, AND COMDADQUE AND A THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION AS TO DEFENDANT BLACKWELL (LOSS OF CONSORTIUM) 24. The foregoing allegations of the Complaint are incorporated by reference herein as if fully restated verbatim. 25. Plaintiff David Lark is now, and was at all times pertinent herein, a citizen and resident of Greenville County, South Carolina and the loving spouse of Plaintiff Cheryl Lark 26. That as a. result of injuries to Plaintiff Cheryl Lark, Plaintiff David Lark was deprived and continues to be deprived of society, companionship, consortium, and services of his wife, Plaintiff Cheryl Lark. 27. Accordingly, Plaintiff David Lark has been damaged and believes that he is entitled to judgment against the Defendants for compensatory damages in regards to his loss of consortium claim in such amount as determined appropriate by the court at the trial of this case. JURY DEMAND 28. Plaintiffs hereby demand a jury trial on all causes of action herein as a matter of right pursuant to Rule 38, SCRCP. WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs pray for judgment against Defendants for actual damages in an appropriate amount, for the cost of this action, and for such other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper as to the Plaintiff Cheryl Lark, and for actual damages in an appropriate amount, for the costs of this action, and for such other relief as the Court may deem just and proper as to Plaintiff David Lark. Donald C. Coggins, Jr. SC Bar No. 1307 Ryan F. McCarty SC Bar No. 74198 P. O. Box 3547 I78 West Main Street Spartanburg, SC 29304 Telephone: (864) 585-5100 Fax: (864) 542-2993 Attorneys for Plaintiffs January 15, 2016 Spartanburg, South Carolina 04-20-16 Groover to Address BJU’s Pre Law Forum PHOTO COURTESY OF LARA KAUFMANN Mark Clark Mark Clark has been appointed to the Greenville Airport Commission (GAC) by Greenville City Council to serve a three-year term. The GAC is the owner and operator of the Greenville Downtown Airport (GMU). GMU is the busiest general aviation airport in South Carolina and is a self-sufficient entity with financial strength that doesn’t rely on local taxpayers for funding. GMU is home to Greenville Jet Center, the largest Fixed Base Operator (FBO) in S.C., as well as more than 25 other aviation-related businesses creating 453 jobs that annually contribute more than $35.2 million to the Upstate economy. For more information about GMU, please visit http:// www.greenvilledowntownairport.com or contact Joe Frasher at joe@greenvilledowntownairport.com or 864-242-4777. The Radio Pulpit.org PHOTO COURTESY OF RANDY PAGE Chairman of the Greenville County Republican Party Chad Groover. Greenville attorney Chad Groover will address Bob Jones University’s Pre Law Forum Thursday, April 7 at 7 p.m. in Levinson Hall on the BJU campus. Groover will speak about his preparation for law school and his experience in serving as counsel in the U.S. Senate, as a federal prosecutor and a private practice attorney. Groover, a 1994 graduate of BJU, earned his JD in 1998 from the Walter F. George School of Law at Mercer University. He served as counsel to the United States Senate Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Crime where he advised Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA) on constitutional and anti-terror- ism policy. Following his time on the Judiciary Committee, Groover served as a Special Assistant United States Attorney for the Northern District of Iowa, where he prosecuted narcotics and firearms violations. Groover currently serves as managing partner of Upstate Elder Law and Chairman of the Greenville County Republican Party. The forum is free and open to the public. Levinson Hall is located in the University’s Welcome Center, near BJU’s Wade Hampton Boulevard entrance. Parking is available on campus streets and in the parking garage behind Rodeheaver Auditorium. Practical teaching From God’s Word by Pastor Ken Rainey with a message of Hope for the World GTCHS Student Awarded $250 Soil Conservation Grant Greenville County Soil & Water Conservation District awarded a $250 grant to GTCHS student Roann Abdeladl to study biochar in regards to crop yield. Biochar is highly fertile soil discovered in the Amazon Basin. Ms. Abdeladl proposed to create samples of the soil that is composed of charcoal and organic matter and create a test garden in Greenville. Other GTCHS students will assist in planting crops and measuring yield. After data collection and analysis, Ms. Abdeladl will write a formal research paper. Greenville Tech Charter High School is a Public Charter High School located on the Barton Campus of Greenville Technical College. For additional information about GTCHS go to http://www.gtchs. org. The Times Examiner Wednesday, April 6, 2016 5 252 Fallen Law Enforcement OfÞcers Greenville County Sheriff to be Honored During 28th Annual Candidates Appear At County GOP Candlelight Vigil on May 13 Executive Committee Meeting National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund releases list of names of officers being added to the national monument this year Washington, DC—Today the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund released the roll call of names of 252 U.S. law enforcement officers who have died in the line of duty. These names will be engraved next month and formally dedicated at the 28th annual Candlelight Vigil held on the National Mall (between 4th and 7th streets) on Friday, May 13th at 8:00 pm. Included in this list are the names of 123 officers who were killed in the line of duty in 2015 and 129 officers who were killed in prior years but had been forgotten by time until the Memorial Fund’s research staff and a team of dedicated volunteers found record of their law enforcement service. When the addition of these 252 names is completed in late April, the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial will bear the names of 20,789 officers representing all 50 states, the District of Columbia, U.S. territories, federal law enforcement, and military police agencies—all who have made the ultimate sacrifice in our nation’s history. The engraving process begins with a lengthy stencil and proofing procedure conducted before the line of names is cut into the stone on each panel. Next, the first application of Silin stain is applied to the freshly-cut stone to give each letter the necessary color uniformity. Next, the panel is covered and will cure for 24-36 hours, weather dependent. The concluding step includes application of a final coat of Silin stain that is applied to the names. The panel is again covered and cured for 24-36 hours before final inspection by engravers. Once the inspection is finished, the covers are removed, and the panel is completed. Names will be engraved on 48 of the Memorial’s 128 panels encompassing the east and west walls. Each May 13, an estimated 20,000 people assemble for the Study Finds Large Shortage of Primary Care Physicians in SC Report Also Shows that a Prescription Requirement for Certain Cold Medicines Would Further Strain the Primary Care Shortage Creating Over 17,000 New Doctor Visits Per Year in South Carolina South Carolina – March 31, 2016 – Today, Avalere Health released a national study that analyzed a number of states facing a primary care physician shortage as well as the costs that consumers would face if the state enacted a new prescription requirement for existing overthe-counter (OTC) medicines containing pseudoephedrine (PSE). The study found that 57 million Americans live in regions that lack adequate access to primary healthcare due to a shortage of physicians in their communities and that the U.S. health system will have a deficit of 52,000 doctors by 2025, but an increasing population in need of primary care. In South Carolina specifical- ly, the study found that the state has 93 primary care physician shortage areas, with 26 percent of South Carolinians already living in an area without enough doctors. Additionally, the study found that placing a new prescription requirement for current OTC medicines containing PSE would create an additional 17,646 new doctor visits in the state of South Carolina, creating an unnecessary additional workload burden on a physician community that is already facing a shortage, costing $300,000 in new Medicaid spending on unnecessary doctor visits and prescriptions, and resulting in $1,000,000 in lost sales tax revenue for South Carolina in the first year alone. Conservatives of the Upstate Will Have Two Pickens County Candidates as Guests Conservatives of the Upstate will have two guest speakers for its April meeting. Tim Morgan, candidate for Pickens County Sheriff, and Allan Quinn, candidate for the SC Senate District 2 seat, will explain their positions to the group and anyone who cares to attend the meeting. Mr. Morgan served as Assistant Sheriff under former Sheriff David Stone. Mr. Quinn is a local business man in the Easley area. Both men are running for their respective offices in the upcoming Republican primary on June 14, 2016. The public is invited to attend the meeting and encouraged to ask the candidates questions. The meeting will be held on Thursday, April 14, 2016 at 6:30 PM. The location is Blue Ridge Bible Church, 769 Belle Shoals Rd, Pickens, SC 29671. For more information go to http://www.conservativesoftheupstate.com. annual Candlelight Vigil, a signature event of National Police Week when the names of these fallen officers are formally dedicated. Thanks to a partnership with Officer.com, the Vigil is streamed live over the Internet so that people across the country can witness this annual tribute to America’s law enforcement officers. Individuals interested in the free webcast can register online at www.UnitedByLight.org. “The process of meticulously engraving names—252 this year—on the Memorial each spring is big undertaking,” said Craig W. Floyd, CEO of the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. “These officers gave their all protecting our communities and we owe them and their surviving family and friends a huge debt of gratitude.” The names of the 252 officers added to the National Memorial this year can be found at www. LawMemorial.org/2016RollCall. For a complete schedule of National Police Week events in Washington, DC, visit www. LawMemorial.org/policeweek. PHOTO BY GILBERT SCALES PHOTO BY GILBERT SCALES Bruce Cannon PHOTO BY GILBERT SCALES Sam Manley Will Lewis PHOTO BY GILBERT SCALES Hobart Lewis Campaign to REFUSE the HIGH STAKES TESTING Here in Pickens County Pickens, SC - United States Parents Involved in Education (USPIE) along with local chapter South Carolina Parents Involved in Education (SCPIE) is encouraging parents across the state to boycott South Carolina’s Common Core-aligned standardized testing beginning April 19, 2016. In order to gain the attention of the School District of Pickens County Schools Board of Trustees for their decision to close two proven effective schools, and to rein in the negative impact of high stakes testing on children, their families, teachers, and society as a whole, USPIE and SCPIE encourages parents to fill out the TEST REFUSAL form which can be found at scpie.org. All over the country, parents are fed up with being ignored by the government education system and parents are being driven to civil disobedience, or as some claim their civil duty to take a stand for the children and future of the United States. Furthermore, USPIE and SCPIE call upon the School District of Pickens County to accept parental decisions to refuse the standardized tests, and ask the school district to provide educationally appropriate, non-punitive responses, including alternative settings and activities for the child whose parents have refused the test. Just recently SC Representative Rita Allison, Chairlady of the SC House Education and Public Works Committee stated, “Right now, if a parent chooses for their child not to take an assessment there are no ramifications.” The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that parents “possess the fundamental right to direct the upbringing and education of their children, and that the child is not the mere creature of the State; those who nurture him and direct his destiny have the right coupled with the high duty to recognize and prepare him for additional obligations.” PHOTO BY GILBERT SCALES Incumbent Sheriff Steve Loftis PHOTO BY BOB DILL Forum Moderator Steve Mullikin BJU Intercollegiate Athletics Move to NCCAA DII Bob Jones University President Steve Pettit announced Wednesday evening that BJU’s intercollegiate athletic programs will transition to DII of the National Christian College Athletic Association (NCCAA), effective July 1. With the exception of the women’s soccer program which transitioned to DII in 2013, the Bruins have competed at the NCCAA DI level since 2012. The decision was made upon recommendation of the Bruins Athletic department. “As we continue to grow and expand our intercollegiate sports programs, I’m thankful for the leadership of our athletic department and the incredible testimony of our student athletes in and out of competition,” said Steve Pettit. “This move will enhance the overall experience of our student athletes.” In compliance with existing NCCAA regulations in place at the time BJU began intercollegiate athletics in 2012, we competed at the DI level. At this level, student athletes typically are awarded athletic scholarships. The Bruins are one of the only DI programs in the country to not offer athletic scholarships, and a move to DII is in the best interest of our student athletes. In 2015, the NCCAA announced changes in division structure, including the realignment of regions across the country into four regions. This consolidation allowed the existing NCCAA DII south region to expand and presented a good fit for the Bruins. BJU will now compete in the postseason against opponents such as Pensacola Christian College, Toccoa Falls College, Piedmont International University and other non-scholarship DII schools. However, each program remains committed to regular season schedules that include NCAA, NAIA and NCCAA DI and DII opponents. “We have been praying and considering this move for a while,” Bruins athletic director Neal Ring said. “I am pleased to follow the president’s vision in helping our student athletes use their God-given athletic talent as a platform for ministry.” With the addition of women’s volleyball, distance track and shooting sports, BJU will offer 13 varsity sports this fall. All programs will begin competition at the DII level in the fall of 2016. The Times Examiner 6 Wednesday, April 6, 2016 Opinion We want to hear from you! to stimulate the mind by Bob Dill What do you think about current, national or local events? Send us a letter-to-the-editor. Please keep letters to under 500 words. Letters more than 500 words may be rejected. 50th Anniversary of Vietnam War T his year marks the official 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War. Most Americans will never know and others have no factual knowledge of the war that cost thousands of American lives over a period spanning more than a decade. Any truthful historical assessment of the Vietnam War including that of Communist leaders has concluded that the war was won by the United States military with assistance of allies. They also concluded that the victory was forfeited and lost by the United States Congress and the liberal media. Politicians were influenced by the Communist sympathizers operating on college campuses and Communist sympathizers inside the government as well as influential voices in the media. The aging Vietnam Veterans who spent decades trying to forget their unpleasant experiences will never forget their service, the sacrifice of their families, the ultimate sacrifices of their comrades in arms and the ungrateful nation that failed to welcome them home. Most suffered in silence, not acknowledging what is now known as Post-Traumatic Stress symptoms. The wounded were patched up, discharged from active service and sent home to mostly fend for themselves. In those days there was no “Wounded Warriors” organization or urgency to improve the Veterans Administration (VA). Unless there was a strong family bond, the Vietnam Veteran became a lonely individual indeed and many were classified as “homeless.” Returning Vietnam Veterans who sought fellowship with other veterans by joining the American Legion or other similar organizations soon found that the leaders in some of them openly discriminated against Vietnam Veterans and did not consider them to have fought in a “real” war. The Communist sympathizers and terrorists of the 1960s who assaulted soldiers, burned federal buildings, destroyed private property and undermined the war effort went mostly unpunished. They are now members of congress, presidential appointees in top-level positions in the Obama Administration, top executives in media and industry and tenured professors in universities. Bill Ayers and Jane Fonda are two of the more notorious terrorists and Communist sympathizers living among the privileged and continuing to undermine the Constitution of the United States and encourage mischief. After five decades, the fact that a high percentage of the 22 veterans that commit suicide each day are Vietnam veterans goes unnoticed by most of their fellow Americans. On a personal note, my mother who lived to be 93 never understood why I would not discuss my military service after I retired and I never explained why. Only Vietnam Vets would understand. In early 1969 a battalion commander I knew was killed in a helicopter accident. The previous commander of the unit, Lt. Col. Don Wilkerson, an officer I served with in Bremerhaven, Germany and Vietnam was on the same aircraft and witnessed the tragic accident. Don volunteered to escort the body of his friend back to Pennsylvania. When he returned to Vietnam, he emotionally confided in me that, “I will never do that again.” The family and friends of his deceased friend were very opposed to the Vietnam War and were very hostile and unfriendly to Don. He said that except for his duty requirement and loyalty to his friend, he would have walked away as soon as he was met with hostility. His experience was far too typical. Vietnam Veterans in Greenville County are fortunate. There is an active chapter of the Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA) that they may join. In addition, the newly formed American Legion Post 214 named for Major Rudolf Anderson, Jr., hero of the Cuban Missile Crises, welcomes all veterans, including those who served in Vietnam. The VVA is erecting memorials and reminders across the nation of the role of Americans in attempting to preserve the freedom of the Vietnamese people as promised by our government. Timing is of importance, because the vets are aging and when the last one dies, the organization will exist no more. PUBLICATION POLICY News items, advertisements and announcements must be received prior to 5 p.m. on Friday before the date of publication to be considered for the next issue. Letters to the editor are requested by the Wednesday prior to publication. They should include a legible signature, address and phone number. Photographs and other submitted material become property of The Times Examiner unless prior arrangements are agreed to in writing. Articles, columns and letters reflect the views of the writers, and not necessarily those of The Times Examiner. © COPYRIGHT 2016 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED The Times Examiner Published Weekly on Wednesday www.timesexaminer.com Office located at: 44 Pine Knoll Dr. Suite E-2 Greenville, SC 29609 Ph: (864) 268-0576 Fax: (864) 292-1013 Office Hours: 9:30 - 12 and 1-5 Closed Wednesdays Subscription Rates: $20 per year for web subscription $40 per year in South Carolina $45 per year out-of-state Publisher and Editor in Chief Bobby M. Dill Managing Editor James M. Spurck, Jr. Office Manager La Verle G. Dill Copy Editor Joyce Worthington Ad Sales Kenneth MacCallum Printed on Recycled Paper Postage paid at Greenville, South Carolina This publication may not be reproduced in whole or part without written permission. Letters to the Editor ... Poor old Donald Trump Dear Editor, Donald Trump is the only candidate who has spent all of his life in the real nasty world — the rest: honest Hillary, crazy Bernie, humble Kaseck, and Cruz in Starbright Park. Let’s solicit our memories back to America’s worst disgrace — Yafla — orchestrated by Franklin Roosevelt where he charmed Stalin into putting the three Baltic countries, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and the Balk- ins and Hungary behind the Iron Curtain and a living hell (my wife and I visited Eastern Europe during that time). But suppose Trump was doing our negotiating during that time. Stalin would have been lucky to keep Moscow! Can you imagine Hillary playing in the big leagues with China and Putin? Our Hillary, who has been the architect of failure in everything she has touched. Can you imagine Hillary, who is afflicted with an acute case of narcissism, handling a serious war situation? Perhaps she would turn to her draft dodging husband for advice. There appears to be in the “Republican corridors of power” the high button shoes thinking: the Lindsay Graham mentality - to win, we must bend and be like “them.” These midwives of disaster have been weaving a tapestry of defeatism with the likes of Dole, McCain, and Romney. The establishment complicity in defeatism has finally been unmasked by Donald Trump. Thank God we have one candidate who has the guts to call a spade a spade. The only omission on his resume is he has been a neighborhood organizer. Dana Sullivan - Greenville, SC Presidential Elections vs. Popularity Contests Dear Editor, As some of my readers al- day on the hydraulic system. Af- with a pretty girl. She and her me of when the crowd wanted ready know, halfway through ter supper that night Ralph got boyfriend both told him to back Barabbas released and Jesus World War II the Army decid- stinking drunk, and spent about off. He didn’t. He just got bolder crucified. ed they had over-recruited men an hour running around outside and more offensive. Finally the In 1993 I attempted to or- who wanted to be pilots. Instead in two inches of snow, barefoot 16-year-old boyfriend knocked ganize a reunion of our cadet of further pilot training they sent and half naked. The next day Harry’s teeth out. Nineteen- class. Bob was the only one my cadet class to B-17 Tech Ralph flunked his test and was year-old Harry retaliated and who showed up (besides my- School. Unwilling to give up on washed out of tech school. Be- beat the tar out of the kid. Bob self). Bob had spent his life as becoming pilots, my friend Bob fore shipping out he came by laughed, put his hand on Har- a radio announcer. Harold had and I went to the local civilian the barracks to tell us all good- ry’s shoulder and said, “You’re stayed in the Army, became a airport when off duty. Bob did bye. Bob laughed, patted him on okay, Harry. You’re okay.” Har- Squadron Maintenance Officer, some spectacular things in a 75 the back and said, “You’re okay, old took him aside and said, later a Squadron Commander, H.P. Piper J-5, similar to what I Ralph, you’re okay.” Harold “Harry, don’t you think it would and finally a Wing Command- did in a 65 H.P. Piper J-3. Back took him aside and said, “Ralph, have been smarter if you had er in the newly formed US Air at the barracks I was surprised at don’t you think it was pretty sil- backed off when they told you Force. Now I fully understood. how our barracks mates praised ly to get drunk the night before to?” My understanding grew. And it helps me to understand Bob’s flying skills, exaggerated a big test?” I was beginning to his accomplishments, but most- understand. One beautiful summer day why Donald Trump gets more I suggested to Bob that we in- votes than Ted Cruz, and why ly ignored mine. I began paying In his off-duty hours Harry vite Harold to go flying with Trump calls Ted “Lyin Cruz” closer attention. I soon realized liked to go roller skating. One us. Bob quickly nixed that idea, and Marco Rubio “Little Mar- that Bob was the most popular morning we noticed Harry’s and called Harold some rather co” and belittles Dr. Carson, guy in our barracks. By con- hands were skinned and bruised insulting names. It reminded me John McCain, and so many oth- trast, Harold was the least popu- and his two front teeth were of when the Pharisees said Jesus ers. Donald Trump has made lar. I wondered why. missing. Afier much prodding cast out demons by the power this Presidential Election into a One day we were told that we we learned the story. At the of Beelzebub. It also reminded popularity contest. would be given a test the next skating rink Harry had flirted Frank Hall - Greenville, SC The Depression of 2016 Dear Editor, It was said of my Father’s parents that they were so poor, when asked about the Depression they answered, “What Depression?” That pretty well sums up the Depression of 2016. Depressions are something that you go through, you don’t just arrive at. If we look around us, we can observe the following: 1. The average American is living from paycheck to paycheck. 2. The typical American household is carrying a grand total of $203,163.00 of debt. 3. 43% of American households spend more money per month than they bring in. 4. For the past six years more businesses have closed their doors than have opened. 5. 49% of all Americans receive money from the government each month. 6. 47 million Americans are living in poverty right now. 7. 46 million Americans use Food Banks each year. 8. The middle class, for the first time, make up a minority of the population. 9. 62% of all Americans have less than $1,000.00 in savings. 10. Today, one out of every five children receive Food Stamps. All these figures can be verified at: theeconomiccollapseblog.com. Folks, it will continue. May I suggest the following to prepare yourselves: 1. Put your faith in God. 2. Reduce your expenses and get out of debt. 3. Buy a weapon to protect your family and yourself. 4. Learn a trade and learn to barter. 5. Network with friends in your community. 6. Find a purpose for living. 7. Last, abolish the Federal Reserve. It is neither Federal nor Reserve. They are privately owned Banks that create money out of thin air and charge interest on it. It will keep the American people perpetually in debt. Friends, it is later than you think. Glenda Windham - Greenville, SC The Times Examiner Wednesday, April 6, 2016 7 SYNDICATED COLUMNISTS Campus Lunacy Minority Review Walter Williams T he American Council of Trustees and Alumni publishes occasional reports on what college students know. Nearly 10 percent of the college graduates surveyed thought Judith Sheindlin, TV’s “Judge Judy,” is a member of the U.S. Supreme Court. Less than 20 percent of the college graduates knew the effect of the Emancipation Proclamation. More than a quarter of the college graduates did not know Franklin D. Roosevelt was president during World War II; one-third did not know he was the president who spearheaded the New Deal. But it is little mystery why so many college students are illiterate, innumerate and resistant to understanding. Let’s look at it. Student activists at Brown University complained of emotional stress and poor grades after they spent months of protesting for various causes. They blamed the university for insisting that they complete their coursework. One of the objects of their protest was an op-ed in The Brown Daily Herald, the university newspaper, that was deemed racist because it defended the celebration of Columbus Day. Brown University’s faculty recently took care of that and renamed Columbus Day “Indigenous People’s Day.” Professor Salvador Vidal-Ortiz of American University told his students that capitalism dehumanizes brown people and black people. If his students had one iota of brains, they might ask him why it is that brown and black people all over the world are seeking to flee to countries toward the capitalist end of the economic spectrum rather than the communist end. Campus Reform reports that Vidal-Ortiz, during the Q&A of a book talk at the University of Virginia, said he tells his students that though he is light-skinned, he refuses to be called white. “I will not be labeled as something that I know is violent,” he said. College administrators are short on guts and backbone. But there is a glimmer of hope every now and then. Young Americans for Liberty at Rutgers University invited Breitbart News’ technology editor, Milo Yiannopoulos, who is a homosexual, to give a lecture. Yiannopoulos describes his lecture tour as “The Most Dangerous Faggot Tour.” His lecture was titled “How the Progressive Left Is Destroying American Education.” There were about 400 students who attended his lecture, plus there were protesters who smeared themselves with fake blood. Despite student opposition, Rutgers University President Robert Barchi called on his university to stand up for free speech, saying, “That freedom is fundamental to our university, our society, and our nation.” That was also Yiannopoulos’ message, namely: “The purpose of university is to interrogate new ideas, discover ourselves, meet new people and explore the world. What it ought to be is a free space without trigger warnings. In my view, anyone who asks for a trigger warning should be expelled. What they’ve demonstrated is that they are incapable of being exposed to new ideas.” Then there is Dr. Everett Piper, president of Oklahoma Wesleyan University, who bravely told his students, “This is not a day care. It’s a university.” Stanford University’s board of trustees is to be congratulated for not caving in to the diversity crowd in its selection of highly distinguished scientist Marc Tessier-Lavigne as university president. Students furiously denounced the choice because Tessier-Lavigne is a white man. The student-run Stanford Political Journal wrote: “We believe the Search Committee intended to select the best possible candidate, and, of course, white men should not have automatically been precluded from the search. However ... it would have been fitting for Stanford to select a president that deviates from the traditional white, straight, male mode.” The University of Missouri System’s board of curators is also to be congratulated for firing professor Melissa Click, who was videotaped intimidating a student reporter during demonstrations that led to the cowardly resignations of the system’s president, Timothy M. Wolfe, and chancellor, R. Bowen Loftin. Her firing was not a result of administrator and faculty decency. Private donations had plummeted, and Missouri lawmakers were proposing an $8 million cut in the system’s budget. That proves what I have always held: Nothing opens the closed minds of administrators better than the sounds of pocketbooks snapping shut. -------------------------------------Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To Þnd out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS.COM www.timesexaminer.com Dangerous Donald Trump Opinion Column Thomas Sowell D onald Trump’s victories in the Republican primaries may make him seem like a sure winner. But those victories have been achieved by receiving either somewhat less than 40 percent of the votes or somewhat more than 40 percent, but never a majority. The fragmenting of the Republican vote among many candidates in the primaries made this possible. But victory in the general election for President of the United States in November is going to require a lot more than 40 percent of the votes. And polls consistently show Mr. Trump to be the most negatively regarded of any of the candidates in either party. In some Republican winnertake-all states, 40 percent of the votes can be enough to get 100 percent of the delegates. This leverage might enable Trump to gain a majority of the delegates needed to become the party’s nominee. But Trump and his supporters want more. They are now talking as if winning a plurality of the delegates ought to be enough to gain him the nomination, despite his failing to get a majority, as required by long-standing rules. There is a reason why the rules require a candidate for the nomination to receive a majority of the delegates. If you cannot even get a majority of the delegates in your own party, how can you expect to win the November election for President? Delegates get their first opportunity to choose a candidate by voting according to the way their respective primary voters voted. But, if that process fails to produce a winner, then dele- Nuclear Jihad: The Threats Are Inside Our Tent Opinion Column Michelle Malkin I t’s not over. It’s never over. After last week’s deadly airport and subway bombings in Brussels, the Belgian government remains on high alert for jihad attacks and espionage at its nuclear facilities. One Belgian nuke plant security guard was murdered recently and his ID is missing. Two of the Brussels bombers reportedly spied on the home of a top senior scientist in the country’s nuclear program. ISIS has been implicated in an alleged insider plot to obtain radioisotopes from one of Belgium’s nuclear plants for a dirty bomb. Two former Belgian nuke plant workers left their jobs to fight for ISIS in Syria. This is all according to plan. The al-Qaida house organ, Inspire magazine, has urged its followers to conduct attacks using “specialized expertise and those who work in sensitive locations that would offer them unique opportunities” to wreak havoc. Could Islamic terrorists and other criminal menaces now exploit homeland security vulnerabilities at our own nuclear power plants and other utilities here in the U.S.? Answer: They already have. In 2011, a little-remembered Department of Homeland Security intelligence report warned of the ongoing enterprise of jihadi infiltration at nuclear, utility and other infrastructure facilities. The memo, titled “Insider Threat to Utilities,” warned that “violent extremists have, in fact, obtained insider positions.” Moreover, “outsiders have attempted to solicit utility-sector employees” for damaging physical and cyber attacks. “Based on the reliable reporting of previous incidents, we have high confidence in our judgment that insiders and their actions pose a significant threat to the infrastructure and information systems of U.S. facilities,” the bulletin detailed. “[I]nsider information on sites, infrastructure, networks, and personnel is valuable to our adversaries and may increase the impact of any attack on the utilities infrastructure.” No kidding, Captain Obvious and First Lieutenant Duh! Since the 9/11 attacks, the U.S. nuclear industry has spent more than $2 billion upgrading security -- including more than doubling the number of armed guards at entrances and checkpoints surrounding the plants. But when the threats are coming from (SET ITAL) inside (END ITAL) the tent, all those armed forces outside the perimeters are for show. South Jersey jihadist and al-Qaida-linked radical Sharif Mobley held positions at several nuclear power plants in Salem County, New Jersey, beSee MALKIN, Page 12 gates can vote again, this time on the basis of their own best judgments, for as many rounds of voting as it may take before someone gets a majority. None of this is new. Yet some Trump supporters are talking as if a failure to change the rules for the benefit of “the Donald” -by letting a plurality, rather than a majority, choose the winner -- would mean that Trump had been cheated out of the nomination. But what of the voters who voted AGAINST Trump during the primaries? Despite the fog of political rhetoric, we should not lose sight of the fact that those who voted against Trump in the primaries were far more numerous than those who voted for him. This might all be just an internal problem of the Republican Party, and of no concern for those of us who are not Republicans, except for one thing. This country is at a dangerous crossroads. We got here by electing a president on the basis of glib words and boastful promises. We cannot afford to repeat that mistake. In addition to internal polarizations, we are threatened by countries that openly declare their hatred of America, and are developing intercontinental missiles that can carry nuclear bombs. In addition, there are international terrorist organizations killing people in Europe and in the United States. In order to deal with these threats, and especially secretive international terrorist organizations, we are going to need the cooperation of many other nations around the world. These nations, knowing that cooperating with the United States will make them targets for terrorists, must first have confidence in the words and deeds of whoever is President of the United States. They cannot have that confidence in someone who is con- stantly spouting off with irresponsible rhetoric -- some of which has to be walked back by his apologists -- or someone whose snap judgments about complex and weighty issues betray a superficial knowledge, if not sheer ignorance. If ever there was a time when we needed a serious, mature President of the United States, with a depth of knowledge and a foundation of personal character -- a grownup in the White House -- this is that time. But seldom a week goes by without Donald Trump demonstrating, yet again, that he is painfully lacking in all these prerequisites. Instead of offering coherent plans for dealing with the nation’s problems, Trump skips that and boasts of the great things he will achieve. Those who dare to question are answered with cheap putdowns, often at a gutter level. A man in his 60s, who is still acting like a spoiled adolescent, is not going to grow up in the next four years. And, as President, he would have the lives of us all, and our loved ones, in his hands, as well as the fate of this great nation at a fateful time. There are signs that some people are belatedly waking up to the dangers that Donald Trump represents. We can only hope that the voters in Wisconsin are among them -- and that voters in New York, California and elsewhere wake up before it is too late. -------------------------------------Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www. tsowell.com. To Þnd out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS.COM Lock Out the Establishment in Cleveland! Opinion Column Pat Buchanan T he Wisconsin primary could be an axle-breaking speed bump on Donald Trump’s road to the nomination. Ted Cruz, now the last hope to derail Trump of a desperate Beltway elite that lately loathed him, has taken the lead in the Badger State. Millions in attack ads are being dumped on the Donald’s head by super PACs of GOP candidates, past and present. Gov. Scott Walker has endorsed Cruz. Conservative talk radio is piling on Trump. And the Donald just had the worst two weeks of his campaign. There was that unseemly exchange with Cruz about their wives. Then came the pulling of the woman reporter’s arm by campaign chief Corey Lewandowski, an atrocity being liken by the media to the burning of Joan of Arc. Then there was Trump’s suggestion, instantly withdrawn, that if abortion is outlawed, then women who undergo abortions may face some punishment. This gaffe told us nothing we did not know. New to elective politics, Trump is less familiar with the ideological and issues terrain than those who live there. But the outrage of the elites is all fakery. Democrats do not care a hoot about the right to life of unborn babies, even unto the ninth month of pregnancy. And the Republican establishment is grabbing any stick to beat Trump, not because he threatens the rights of women, but because he threatens them. The establishment’s problem is that Trump refuses to take the saddle. Again and again, he has defied the dictates of political correctness that they designed to stifle debate and demonize dissent. Trump has gotten away with his insubordination and shown, with his crowds, votes, and victories, that millions of alienated Americans detest the Washington establishment and relish his defiance. Trump has denounced the trade treaties, from NAFTA to GATT to the WTO and MFN for China, that have de-industrialized America, imperil our sovereignty and independence, and cost millions of good jobs. And who is responsible for the trade deals that sold out Middle America? “Free-trade” Republicans who signed on to “fasttrack,” surrendered Congress’ rights to amend trade treaties, and buckle to every demand of the Business Roundtable. The unstated premise of the See BUCHANAN, Page 12 The Times Examiner 8 Wednesday, April 6, 2016 SYNDICATED COLUMNISTS Brussels and the Border Schlaßy Report Phyllis Schlaßy T he bombs that killed 35 and injured 300 in Brussels, Belgium, shutting down the capital city of the European Union, followed a familiar pattern. Young Muslim men born to immigrant parents were inspired by radicals overseas to wage holy war against Western civilization. President Obama, attending a baseball game in Cuba when the bombs went off, did not change his plans to go on to Argentina where he performed a tango with a professional dancer. In a previously recorded interview published in the latest issue of The Atlantic magazine, Obama said Americans have an inordinate fear of terrorism because we’re more likely to die from falling in the bathtub. Ohio Governor John Kasich said on Fox News, “We cannot afford to alienate all the Muslims in the world who, by the way, are condemning this act of murder in overwhelming numbers.” Kasich seemed to be saying that when Muslims engage in jihad, it’s our fault for doing something to “alienate” them. That’s such a perfect example of political correctness, it’s no wonder Kasich has lost 30 out of 31 Republican primaries and caucuses to Donald Trump. And, by the way, there’s no evidence to support Kasich’s claim that Muslims around the world are condemning terrorism in overwhelming numbers. Even the New York Times, in its news report from Belgium, attributed terrorism to “poorly integrated Muslim immigrants.” We, too, have millions of “poorly integrated” immigrants, mostly from Mexico and Central America. Consider these crimes by immigrants in recent weeks. In Kansas City, Kansas, Pablo Antonio Serrano-Vitorino is accused of shooting four men inside a house there. He then crossed the state line to New Florence, Missouri, where he killed a fifth man in front of the man’s wife. After he was apprehended, we learned that Pablo was an illegal alien from Mexico who had been stopped last September for a traffic violation in Overland Park, Kansas. Despite records showing that he had been previously deported in 2004, ICE sent the detainer to the wrong county, and he was released. In Framingham, Massachusetts, brothers Elmer, Ariel, and Adan Diaz and their friend Marlon Josue Jarquin-Felipe are accused of seizing a young woman off the street, gang-raping her, and beating her boyfriend who tried to rescue her. All four thugs were illegal aliens from Guatemala, Central America; two had previously been deported after convictions for drunk driving. In South Omaha, Nebraska, Eswin Mejia is accused of street racing while drunk, causing a crash that killed a 21-yearold Iowa woman, Sarah Root. Despite being an illegal alien from Honduras, Central America, Mejia was released on bond with no ICE detainer because the Obama administration has “de-prioritized” the deportation of illegal aliens with no previous felony convictions. Murder, rape, and mayhem by motor vehicle are not the only consequences of immigration from south of the border. We’re also fighting diseases brought in by immigrants, including the frightening new Zika virus as well as old diseases such as tuberculosis which we thought we had eradicated. The Centers for Disease Control just reported that the number of TB cases rose last year for the first time in 23 years. Contrary to liberals who say the disease doesn’t discriminate, most TB cases occur in immigrants from Mexico, China, India, Vietnam and the Philippines and their U.S.-born children. When Hillary Clinton was campaigning in Arizona on the eve of that state’s Democratic primary, she bragged that “I voted to secure the border when I was in the Senate” and “I think we’ve done a really good job securing the border.” Like so many of Hillary’s statements, nothing could be further from the truth. Within a week of Hillary’s statement, authorities discovered a Mexican-built drug-smuggling tunnel the length of four football fields running from a restaurant in Mexicali, Mexico to a house in Calexico, California. At the other end of the border in Hidalgo, Texas, frightened residents invited the local TV news to film dozens of men crossing through their back yards every night from Mexico. The president of the National Border Patrol Council told a House subcommittee that the number of people arrested at the border from Afghanistan, PakiSee SCHLAFLY, Page 12 Why Trump Loves Lewandowski Opinion Column Mona Charen I n a year of floors falling away under one’s feet (such as the assumption that nearly all Americans demand a minimal level of civility in public life), the Corey Lewandowski story represents one more gob smack. That Donald Trump stands by the belligerent Lewandowski tells us more of what we already knew about Trump, and also hints at the coward beneath the blowhard. First, the battery. The campaign manager -- not a volunteer, not even a hired security guard, but the honest-to-goodness campaign manager -- nearly shoved reporter Michelle Fields to the ground and inflicted bruises on her arm. When she protested, there was no apology. Instead, the campaign at first suggested that there was a mistake: Lewandowski mistook Fields (who worked at the time for the pro-Trump Breitbart. com) for a member of the mainstream media. Oh, so that makes shoving OK? But the campaign quickly reverted to outright lies. Hope Hicks, a Trump campaign spokesman, said that Fields’ account was “entirely false . ... I did not witness any encounter ... not a single camera or reporter of more than 100 in attendance captured the alleged incident.” Trump himself offered that “maybe she made it up.” Except there was an eyewitness, Ben Terris, of The Washington Post, who confirmed Fields’ account that very day. And the following day there was an audio recording of the Terris/Field conversation immediately after the incident, which further confirmed her account. And then there were videos, one of which was enough to con- vince the police to bring battery charges. Never mind. In the morality-free Trump zone, facts are optional. “You are totally delusional,” Lewandowski said of Fields. “I never touched you. As a matter of fact, I have never even met you.” Trumpkins disdain eyewitnesses, audio recordings and videotape. You have your truth, as our friends on the left would say, and I have mine. Not even Bill Clinton was so brazen. So the battery is an established fact shamelessly denied. And then there is the character assassination. Trump has suggested that Fields was an attention seeker, and sneered that she’s “not a baby, OK?” This is classic Trump -- attacking those he has already wronged. Asked in an early debate about the people left holding the bag after his four bankruptcies, he dismissed See CHAREN, Page 13 USC Warehoused Bottled Water it Bought for Flooding Guest Column by Ron Aiken, The Nerve O ne of the University of South Carolina’s biggest embarrassments of recent years is currently hiding another. On the empty concrete floor inside the former USC biomass plant – a $19.6 million, “green-energy” flop that vendor Johnson Controls never could make work without setting off periodical “potentially lethal explosions” – sits pallet after pallet filled with cases of bottled water the school bought at a discount during the floods of October 2015 but never opened, never distributed, and only acknowledged after a media request by The Nerve. The vacant biomass building at the corner of Whaley and Sumter streets, which closed in March 2011, sits locked, with a big red sign taped to the door reading “BUILDING CLOSED No Admittance.” It is maintained by the school’s facilities department and has no other discernible purpose now besides the storage of row after row of unopened pallets from the 300,000 bottles worth $41,000 that the school bought for $31,000 thanks to a $10,000 discount from Grainger due to the emergency nature of the purchase. USC spokesman Wes Hickman said since the city of Columbia returned potable water service within days of the flooding, the university’s needs were not what they could have been. He said while some of the water has been used, with plans “to distribute it at events in the coming months.” With many events having already happened at the school and city over the past six months, why so much water hasn’t been used or wasn’t donated to a community in crisis remains a question. “Numerous options were considered,” Hickman said. “Including distribution to our own off-campus students, faculty and staff for home use.” Giving the water away to the community was not a consideration, Hickman said. “[S]ince the water was purchased with state funds, we are limited in its use and distribution. “Therefore, it was determined the best method of distribution would be at on-campus events, like commencement and others with large numbers of attendees.” South Carolina Treasurer Curtis Loftis said he was not aware of any such specific prohibition on donating items, especially items that were purchased for the purpose of donation. “I’m not aware of that (prohibition),” Loftis said. “That was the point, to give it away to people in need. That’s what they bought it and got a discount. I would say that they give it away if they wanted to. “Even if they didn’t want to donate it, I’m sure the students could use it.” On the school’s official website a page remains dedicated to instructing students and faculty on what they can do to help flood victims since “our campus is safe and dry.” “Donate Needed Items: Concerned members of the Carolina family – both within and outside the local community – may choose to donate much needed items to families who have experienced devastating losses. Items can range from bottled water, gloves and masks to personal items such as toiletries, diapers and clothing.” -------------------------------------Reach Aiken at (803) 254-4411. Email him at ron@thenerve. org. Follow him on Twitter @ RonAiken and @TheNerveSC. Trump Transparent Pricing - Part 2 Guest Column Gerard Gianoli I n a previous editorial (http:// w w w. d e t ro i t n e w s . c o m / story/opinion/2016/03/23/ trumps-healthcare-fixnorm/82194350/), I commended candidate Trump’s proposal of price transparency for hospitals and doctors. It is astounding that this has not been an element of the GOP formula for healthcare reform until now and that an outsider had to bring it up. It is so obviously part of a free market that only in an overly regulated healthcare market could it be overlooked. However, there is another element of price transparency that the Trump campaign (along with the rest of the GOP hopefuls) missed. What about insurance industry price transparency? a cardiologist $500 to do an Insurance premiums and de- $5,000 for the same procedure. ductibles are advertised by the Which insurance company do insurance industry, but patients you think most cardiologists do not know what they are re- will want to sign with? Most ally getting for their money. Pa- would obviously not want to tients have no idea how much accept the Cheapo Insurance the insurance company will pay because they might actually the hospital or the doctor for lose money every time they any of the services rendered. did an angioplasty. Yes, doctors And most doctors and hospitals can lose money when they are don’t know how much they will paid too little. If the doctor’s be paid by the insurance compa- overhead is $600 per hour and nies either. it takes him an hour to do the angioplasty and the Luxor Insurance Co. pays a cardiologist Some may think this is unim- angioplasty, he just lost $100 portant. But these same people on the patient with Cheapo In- may also wonder why their in- surance. Many doctors, who are surance is not accepted by most focused on doing a good job, are of the doctors or hospitals in not even aware of this until it’s their town. too late. For example, imagine that the Cheapo Insurance Co. pays See GIANOLI, Page 11 The Times Examiner Wednesday, April 6, 2016 9 LOCAL COLUMNISTS As We View Things Summit View Don Lowry T he apostle John sounded the warning: “Do not love the world or the things in the world” (1John 2:15 NKJV). Among John’s reasons for such an admonishment was “the world is passing away, and the lust of it; but he who does the will of God abides forever” (1 John 2:17 NKJV). John further warned, “Little children, keep yourselves from idols” (1 John 5:21 NKJV). John further revealed in his Revelation that idolatry was a societal menace and religious perversion that would be easily eradicated. Even after the visiting of six angels, which brought plagues of judgment upon the whole world, John wrote, “But the rest of mankind, who were not killed by these plagues, did not repent of the works of their hands, that they should not worship demons, and idols of gold, silver, brass, stone, and wood, which can neither see nor hear nor walk. And they did not repent of their murders or their sorceries (the word here can be translated “drugs”) or their sexual immorality or their thefts” (Rev. 9:20-21 NKJV). Witchcraft is represented not just by some ancient tribes dancing incantations to spirits around a fire or some distant natives of the jungles of South America or Africa bowing to some image of stone. Recently, I came across some writing of A. W. Tozer, which provided understanding of three erroneous entities involved in witchcraft. All of them certainly have manifestations in our world today. The first error is the belief that natural substances possess moral and spiritual qualities. How often has the environmental movement gone way beyond simple stewardship of the created planet to espouse spiritual qualities in the environment? The second error is that witchcraft presents the nature of God as capricious (changeable) so that His laws are whimsical and easily circumvented. We won’t have to go too deep in our thinking processes to discover that the doctrines of the gay-rights movement and the pro-choice movement represent not “rights” or “choice” but are represented by whimsical and circumvented change to the divinely inspired Law of God and the moral foundations of civilized societies. The third error is the one often associated in our minds with witchcraft but unfortunately often not in modern context. It express as fact that there are invisible beings that can be summoned and persuaded to aid men or injure them through incantations using secret words, numbers, or by objects worn, or charms placed in places where life is conducted. Witness of this means of witchcraft can be recognized in the popularity of the New Age Movement, the popularity of the meditative exercises of eastern religions, and the mystical practices applied to facets of worship even in some professed evangelical churches. “Little children, keep yourselves from idols” (1 John 5:21 NKJV). That’s the way we view things. -------------------------------------Summit View Baptist Church is located at 31 N. Highway 25 Bypass, just south of Furman University’s golf course. WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU Write us a letter-to-the-editor and tell us and our readers what you think. See page 6 for details. Public Education: A Pagan System? Homeschool Heather Sheen I was talking with friends recently and made reference to our nation’s “pagan indoctrination system,” meaning the public schools. Several friends immediately got indignant, wanting to know why I was calling public school teachers “pagan.” After all, many of those teachers are hard-working, child-loving people who sacrifice tremendously for the kids in their classes. I quickly clarified that “pagan system” does not mean “pagan teachers.” But I didn’t back down on my original claim – our public schools are a pagan system. Christian teachers are fighting an uphill battle to provide good education in a godless system that fights back against them. Here’s why I say this. G!"’$ S%$&'( When God created the universe, He put certain laws into place. The law of gravity is a good example. You can disagree with it, you can defy it, you can try to work around it, but it’s still there and it still governs the outcome of all our physical actions. Another law God put in place concerning human behav- ior is that a person who is unfriendly usually winds up with few friends. This God-ordained law is so self-evident that even non-Christians agree it exists. But there are many other laws of human nature that people try to ignore. Just as there would be chaos and pain from everyone ignoring the law of gravity, we see the chaos and pain in our society from ignoring those God-given laws. One of them concerns raising children. This law of human nature is that God created the perfect education system in the beginning: Families. When society as a whole operates as a support to parents training their children, that society tends to flourish. When society ignores and usurps the role of parents in their children’s education, that society will likewise see chaos and pain in the outcome. Nowhere in the Bible do we see God giving authority for children’s education to the government, the community, or the church. But He gives it repeatedly and clearly to parents. This doesn’t mean that parents don’t need help, encouragement and training in this task. But that’s the key – help parents do the job. Don’t take their job away. Parents naturally have the most vested interest in loving and helping their children to succeed. Parents know their children better than anyone else on earth, including “child education experts.” Parents have the ability to spend one-on-one tutorship time with their children. Parents are uniquely positioned by God to be a child’s best educators. Unless, of course, you mess up God’s system. T)' P*+*, S%$&'( Home education, properly supported and encouraged by the state and the civil community, is the best, least expensive, and most efficient way for children to be educated and integrated into the adult world. So there is only one reason why the state would want to interfere and get involved: Power. He who controls the education process controls the eventual makeup of society. People who want to control society, therefore, have a vested interest in first controlling the education system. It’s interesting to note that every totalitarian dictator in modern history has quickly moved to take over his nation’s school system. It’s easy to see the outcome of 100+ years of enforced government schooling in our country. We now have a nation that ranks below many other nations in basic academic skills. We have a society that, by and The Art of the Deal onald Trump is a bull in the political china shop. That characteristic is his greatest strength and the reason he has attracted a solid core of fanatical supporters. Many people believe the establishment has failed us badly, and the politicians in both parties have lied to us repeatedly and so the thirst for a new regime is palpable. Trump is seen as the antidote to the beltway fever that infects the nation’s capital…turn the bull loose in the DC china shop. Donald Trump wrote a book called, The Art of the Deal, which is still selling briskly long after its 1987 publication. And Trump has suggested that we should vote for him as the next POTUS because he will make great deals on behalf of America, “believe me.” It is easy to convince people that he would never have made the Iran deal, for example, because most people know that Obama’s deal with Iran was a disaster that will haunt the world forever. But even if we accept the assertion that Trump would be adept at making deals, is that what needs to be done in DC? Americans may not yet understand how corrupt DC has become, the nation’s capital is completely under the influence of money and making deals is not the remedy for what ails government. The solution to the corruption in government is term limits. Remove the possibility of reelection and the power of the lobbyists and their money is neutered. Making deals plays right into the hands of the lob- byists, it would make a bad situation worst. Ted Cruz has demonstrated his ability to resist playing the game, the go along to get along game. Ted Cruz had the nerve to call Mitch McConnell, the Majority Leader, a “liar” on the floor of the Senate. That act was the antithesis of making a deal that served notice that his principals are more important than making a deal. Frankly, the last thing Washington needs is a POTUS who thinks the art of making a deal is a skill set we need more of in DC. Trump is what DC calls a “chickenhawk,” a guy who avoided military service and who pretends he is a tough guy. Barack Obama imperils this nation because he clearly has no idea how to use our military strength as a bargaining tool with enemies. Donald Trump would jeopardize America because he would use the military recklessly in a hopeless effort to prove his toughness. Trump recently said that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was outdated and we should not continue to finance it at current levels. NATO was formed in 1949 at the advent of the Cold War. Its purpose was to form an alliance to curtail Russia’s adventures in the Balkan states. One of the articles in the NATO charter is #5 which says an attack against one member would be considered an attack against all. Think of Crimea and Ukraine. It is true that NATO members are not fulfilling membership commitments to fund it with a percentage of their GDP. But Trump is trying to be a tough guy with our allies…hmm, if that reminds you of Barack Obama you would not be mistaken. Does Trump aspire to replicate Obama’s dismal record as Commander-in-Chief? A good bit of Trump’s support comes from folks who agree with his position on a pause with immigration, on Muslim people. His promise to build a wall and finally close our southern border also generates a good bit of enthusiasm. But again, these positions don’t make him a tough guy who will “make America great again.” Trump being taken seriously as a candidate for POTUS would not have been possible had not the GOP so badly disappointed its supporters. People were sufficiently outraged by Obama’s feckless leadership and his overt campaign to diminish America that in two election cycle’s both the House and the Senate majority were given to the GOP. But even in the majority the GOP continued to give Obama everything he wanted, a clear failure to fulfill campaign promises. And into this quagmire jumped Donald Trump, painting himself as the ultimate outsider who only has the best interests of America at heart. So here we are faced with the possibility that Donald Trump will be the Republican candidate for POTUS. The question is: can he close the deal? Polls say that Trump will lose big to Hillary Clinton in a general election…and that is not the deal we have in mind. large, believes “diversity” is more important than excellence, so people are hired by race and gender quotas instead of skill level. Our nation is becoming a place where sexual deviancy is not only allowed by law, but encouraged and promoted in every level of society. Our culture believes that parents are outdated and authority is something to be flaunted. And of course, it goes without saying that the Bible is unwelcomed and even banished wherever possible. Further, we now have a society that has no problem with murdering millions of unborn children. We have a culture that regularly produces teenagers and young adults who go on shooting rampages and commit suicide. We have a country that is narcissistic and materialistic, empty and shallow. Children grow up into adults who have no idea what functioning marriages and families even look like. Family units are disintegrating all around us. This is the fruit of leaving our education system to be designed by government. This design is not God’s way – it’s the pagan way. And we’re getting pagan results: pain and chaos. Opinion Column David Thompson D -------------------------------------David W. Thompson worked in government, education and the non-proÞt sector for more than forty years. A graduate of Westminster College and Harvard University, he resides in Easley, SC. You can follow him on his blog, Smokealarms2015. com. R'&-., &! G!"’$ S%$&'( When communities and nations practice education using God’s system, blessings follow. It’s simply a law of nature that God put into place when he created the universe. See SHEEN, Page 13 The Times Examiner 10 Wednesday, April 6, 2016 GUEST COLUMNISTS She Was Only A Dog – Our Dog Guest Column W. H. Lamb T hose of you who have read this very special weekly newspaper for any length of time probably remember that up until about a year ago we ran an occasional column titled, “Boomer’s Tale,” which was written (actually narrated in “dog” and “translated” and written down by me) by my great friend and four-legged companion, Boomer Lamb. You’ll recall, perhaps, that he was quite “opinionated” (he despised cats, liberal politicians, big birds, most other dogs, airplanes, motorcycles, etc.) and didn’t mind writing about it in “his” columns over the past few years. Sadly, Boo passed away from cancer about a year ago, but he was l2 years old, loved, and had lived what I hope was a pretty good life until just near his end. I assure you that he was almost pain free until just two or three days before he “crossed over” his “Rainbow Bridge.” People who have lost beloved pets (especially dogs, which are so much like US), know how traumatic it is when we must say goodbye to them. They live such abysmally short lives compared to ours, that every minute, every day, every week, every month, and every year that we spend together is time that is treasured forever. At least it is if we have established a truly loving relationship with that unique four-legged creature. But we knew several days before Boo said goodbye to us that he would soon be gone, and we were able to prepare ourselves for the inevitable, as hard as that was. After a couple of dogless weeks, it became apparent to my daughter that her parents needed another four-legged “grand child” in their lives; and at the Greenville Humane Society, to which I was reluctantly “dragged” by my daughter, we met a little almost “mirror image” of Boomer. In a cage with her sister was a little creature whose name was SELENA, and as I put my hand into the cage to pet her, she licked me and claimed me as her human. In- deed, I was, for the next day we adopted her (or more accurately she adopted us). We brought her home, a little black Labrador retriever/Pit Bull mix (just like Boomer) with a big tongue and a long tail and a wondrous “look at me—I’m special” personality—a 3 1/2 month old puppy who would both challenge and delight us for what we knew would be a long time. Would that it had been so. Two days after we brought her home, she came down with severe kennel cough. I spent one entire sleepless night sitting in my recliner, comforting her over my shoulder as she coughed, patting her back to loosen the phlegm, and telling her that her grampa was going to make her all better. At the vet the next day she was given antibiotic pills, and in a few days she was all better. But the next week she came down with a bad rash under her front legs. Back at the vet she was diagnosed as having a bad case of Staph infection, and she was on an antibiotic for almost two months before it cleared up. But it did, and for the next 11 months we watched in delight as she learned what pleased her, what she could and could not do without upsetting her grampa and gramma, and developed a wonderful personality. She became a “mini” Boomer, smaller and sleeker, but every bit as much of a “character” as her “Uncle Boo” had been, but just not as “opinionated.” Selena soon leamed how to “control” her humans, and settled into a semi-routine “routine” at our house. Whenever her Aunt Cindy and Uncle Jack would come visiting, she would greet them at the door with paroxysms of joy, as though she hadn’t seen them for years. But Selena’s world changed in early February of this year, when I had to have lumbar fusion surgery and neither my wife nor I would be able to care for her for a time. She was “re-homed” to my daughter’s house a day before I went for the surgery, and she spent the next l.5 months chasing my daughter’s four cats and wrapping her and her husband around her paws. She was in doggy heaven, or so it seemed. On Sunday, March 6, Selena stopped eating. She began to Selena drink lots of water, and have “accidents” around my daughter’s house. The following Wednesday we took her to our vet hospital; they suspected that she had swallowed something that was causing an intestinal blockage, and they arranged to do x-rays and blood tests, which they did that afternoon. Before they took her away from us, there in the hospital where she was to stay ovemight for observation, she tried twice to climb onto my lap, but settled for a big “grampa” hug from me, and a face lick from her, each time. Then we said “goodbye~we’ll see you tomorrow.” Perhaps Selena “sensed,” then, that she’d never see us again. I don’t know, because she didn’t ever see us again. Our vet told us that our beloved little Selena awoke from the sedative that they gave her before the x-rays, and was sitting in her cage, seemingly ok. But sometime overnight she succumbed to kidney failure at age 14 months. Our vet believed it was caused by her ingesting some kind of poison, like antifreeze, which shut down her kidneys slowly. There was no antifreeze or any other open containers of poisonous substances at my daughter’s home. Each time they walked her they were careful to not let her lick or eat anything on the street. Our vet said that it was a possibility that Selena had a congenital kidney weakness that finally manifested itself on March 10, when she crossed over her “Rainbow Bridge.” We’ll probably never know for certain. My wife and I promised Selena a “forever” home, and I hope we delivered on our promise. We never realized that her “forever” would be only 14 months, but it was. She was a wonderful and loving young dog who loved life, and us. She loved sleeping in bed with us and with her Aunt & Uncle at their house. She delighted in “intimidating” her Aunt Cindy’s cats; she loved to ride in our car with her head out the window, the wind flapping her ears as she barked at other dogs. She loved to listen to classical music with me and take naps with me. She loved short walks with me, and long walks with her other family members. We LOVED spoiling her rotten, and I hope we did so. PHOTO COURTESY OF W. H. LAMB Full Scale Replica of Jerusalem Being Built in Colorado PHOTO COURTESY OF HTTPS://WWW.FUNDABLE.COM/HERODS-TEMPLE A proposed drawing of a model of Jerusalem. COLORADO SPRINGS – Christian Newswire – Plans to buy 700 acres and build the first ever full size replica of the ancient city of Jerusalem are underway by a man in Colorado. He believes that the United States deserves a holy site for people to visit, and what better than to replicate the holiest site ever built. The project would like to break ground over the summer and have the first structure ready to tour by the following spring. Most people travel to Colorado to look at mountains and ski. This project will bring people to Colorado for an entirely different reason. The project is expecting the total cost to exceed $100 million once complete and is looking for companies, organizations, and wealthy individuals to help. They must raise the capital for this project privately because no banks will loan on it and the State of Colorado won’t invest in their own future. This project is going to end up being one of the largest construction projects to ever be completed in Colorado. It will raise millions of dollars in tax revenue. Located on the site will also be a shelter able to house and feed up to 2,400 poor and homeless citizens. The site chosen for the replica is on a small hill 45 miles east of the Rocky Mountains, but views of Pikes Peak and the front range are visible from the site. The plan is to build Herod’s Temple, Antonia’s Fortress, Herod’s Palace, City of David, Jesus’ crucifixion site, the High Priests Palace and all the small shacks and buildings that were scattered across the old city. This isn’t being built for profit. This isn’t being built for anything other than the developer wants to build something for the people of America and the people of the world that is built so well that it will require little maintenance and still stand 2,000 years from now. As terrorists in Europe and the Middle East try and get rid of the Jewish and Christian people across the planet, we must all stand strong and proclaim that we aren’t going to take it. This project will tell Extreme Islamic Terrorists across the globe that America stands tall with our religious beliefs and we stand strong with our friends in Israel. Questions or Concerns: www.herodstemple.org Fundraiser: www.fundable.com/ herods-temple Email: info@herodstemple.org I’d like to believe that Selena loved us as much as we surely loved her. We’ll all miss her terribly, as I do right now, with tears in my eyes. Sad stories sometimes have happy endings, or happy “beginnings” as the case may be. A few days after Selena’s passing, we went to the Greenville Animal Care Shelter and adopted a new, 8 month old puppy named HAYLEY. She’s a black lab/pit bull mix and is virtually a TWIN of Selena. Very interestingly, on the EXACT day that Selena died, a kind citizen found Hayley wondering the streets of a Greenville suburb, and took her to that shelter, where we found her on their web site the next day. My wife and I adopted her that day. Her photo, with me, is below. Does God move in mys- terious ways, His wonders to perform? What do you think? PHOTO COURTESY OF W. H. LAMB Hayley, with her Grampa The Times Examiner Wednesday, April 6, 2016 11 Next Week on Nite Line Dove Broadcasting NITE LINE broadcasts live Monday through Friday on WGGS TV16 from 8:00 pm until 9:30/10:00 pm. The program features local and/or nationally known guests who share their testimonies and talent. Our goal is to be an inspiration to our viewers as well as inform them of Christian and community events in the Upstate. The programs are designed to inform and encourage viewers. Prayer Partners are available to pray with any caller who has a need. For information on becoming a volunteer prayer partner or a monthly partner, call 864-244-1616 or 1-800-849-3683. Audience seating is FREE, but limited. Please arrive no later than 7:30 p.m. The studio is located at 3409 Rutherford Road, Ext., Taylors, SC 29687. GIANOLI deal. uents do. In a free market, hon- The companies est prices are essential—not just you don’t want price transparency for what doctors and hospitals wouldn’t care so much what the since this would result in reduc- charge, but for what insurance exact fees your insurance com- ing their competitive edge and companies pay. pany is paying your doctor or hurt their bottom line. Doctors, -------------------------------------- hospital. However, you would hospitals, and patients all suf- Gerard Gianoli, M.D., F.A.C.S. want to know how much they’re fer. So why isn’t the Republican specializes in Neurotology and paying the doctor or hospital Party pushing for price transpar- Skull Base Surgery. He is in relative to how much your treat- ency for insurance companies? private practice at The Ear and ment costs. If you learn that Why hasn’t the Democrat Party Balance Institute located in almost all of the cardiologists mentioned it either? It seems Covington, and also a Clinical accept Luxor Insurance, but al- apparent that lobbyists for the Associate Professor in the De- most none accept Cheapo Insur- insurance industry have more partments of Otolaryngology ance, and that the reason is that influence with both politicians and Pediatrics at Tulane Uni- the Cheapo payment doesn’t of both parties than their constit- versity School of Medicine. ... Continue from Page 8 Now, as a patient, insurance cover most doctors’ costs, you might have some concerns about going to the cardiologist that accepts Cheapo Insurance. He might be desperate, or foolish, or both. Unfortunately, the situation is not quite so simple. In the real world, the fees an insurance company pays doctors or hospitals will usually not be the HERITAGE CHAPEL BAPTIST CHURCH monopoly in the community, it can negotiate much higher fees from an insurance company. The insurance company has no option but to make a deal with YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND OUR SERVICES EACH WEEK SUNDAY SCHOOL – 9:45 a.m. WORSHIP SERVICE – 10:30 a.m. CHURCH LOCATED JUST OFF BRUSHY CREEK ROAD ON ALEXANDER ROAD. COMING FROM GREER TAKE THE FIRST LEFT AFTER PASSING THE SUBER ROAD INTERSECTION. CHURCH ¼ MILE ON THE LEFT. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT PASTOR KEITH CROWE AT 864-979-9626 the market in that town. HowevMost of the leverage is on the side of the insurance company. A large private company like Blue Cross of Louisiana insures close to half of the privately insured patients in the entire state. So, if Blue Cross doesn’t make Hope Presbyterian Church (unaffiliated) 20 Sharon Drive, Greenville, SC 29607 (864) 232-1486 Sunday School ............................................9:45 a.m. a deal with a particular hospital, Worship Service .......................................11:00 a.m. it could ruin the hospital finan- Larger Catechism Class ............................6:00 p.m. cially by sending half of the Evening Worship .......................................7:00 p.m. privately insured patients to the Wednesday Prayer Service .......................7:30 p.m. hospital’s competitors. In the eyes of the insurance compa- Mark W. Evans, Pastor nies, all doctors are all equivalent. For doctors, the insurance Thursday, April 7, 2016 - Greta Campbell is joined by Rev. Terry and Beth Bailey of South Greenwood Pentecostal Holiness Church as they share about their ministry. This program also features the music of Counterßo, a trio from Belton, South Carolina. Friday, April 8, 2016 - Gwen and Wade Hall welcome Randy Shepherd from Crossfire Ministries in Asheville, North Carolina. Meghan Woods of Fletcher, North Carolina sings tonight. * Guest appearances are subject to change without notice. ST 11-04-09 that hospital if it wants to be in er, that is an unusual situation. Wednesday, April 6, 2016 - Nathan Bland learns how one man has overcome the obstacles in his life as Jeff Grillo of Hickory, North Carolina returns to Nite Line. Tonight Jeff shares his miracles of healing from cancer and reveals how the Lord led him to write the self-help book, The Excuse Assassin. Jim Sheldon, “The Positive Cowboy,” sings on tonight’s program. 218 ALEXANDER ROAD • GREER, SC 29651 same for all. If a hospital has a large patient population or has a NITE LINE Preaching the Doctrines of Sovereign Grace contract is a take-it-or-leave-it www.timesexaminer.com If you have any questions please feel free to contact us at Dove Broadcasting, a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization operating from WGGS TV-16’s studios. Mailing address: P.O. Box 1616, Geenville, SC 29602, ATTN: NITE LINE. Phone: 800-849-3683/ 864-244-1616, or FAX: 864292-8481. We are now STREAMING LIVE 24/7 on www.wggs16.com. Please tell your friends and family that are out of our viewing area, to watch. FAMOUS QUOTES ... “Terrorist attacks can shake the foundations of our biggest buildings, but they cannot touch the foundation of America. These acts shatter steel, but they cannot dent the steel of American resolve.” ~ George W. Bush The Times Examiner 12 MALKIN ... Continue from Page 7 fore moving to Yemen. He had passed several federal background checks as recently as 2008. In December, Mobley was sentenced to 10 years in prison after shooting a guard during an attempted escape from detention on terrorism charges. How many radicalized Muslims -- homegrown converts, foreign business visa holders and foreign students -- are working inside America’s sensitive infrastructure? Thanks to our suicidal refusal to profile international visitors and workers from jihadist breeding grounds, nobody knows! Politically correct politicians and terror-coddling grievance groups condemn monitoring and tracking of Muslim refugees and Muslims enclaves (such as those in Minneapolis and Maine where tens of thousands of Somalis have resettled). They cried “Islamophobia” when homeland security officials wanted to interview Muslim visa holders from terror-sponsoring nations after the 9/11 attacks. And consider this: There are now more than 100,000 Muslim students accepted into U.S. college and universities every year from the Middle East and North Africa. Nuclear engineering is one of the fields of study for which F-1 foreign student visa holders can obtain work and extended residency through the Optional Training Program. None are screened for jihadist loyalties and sympathies. How many legal visa holders (let alone illegal visa overstayers) who entered through these pipelines have gained access to sensitive facilities? Nobody knows! Earlier this year, DHS admitted it doesn’t investigate 99 percent of illegal visa overstayers who entered here on business or tourism -- 500,000-plus in 2015 alone, including thousands from Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Libya, Pakistan, Syria and Yemen. The feds still haven’t compiled up- to-date visa overstay data for those who came in as foreign students and guest workers (including high-tech foreigners working in science, technology, engineering and mathematics). Then there are the security breaches involving who knows how many illegal border-crossers, fake document users and deportation violators. Dozens of illegal immigrants using fake Social Security numbers were swept up in immediate post9/11 raids at nuclear sub bases, power plants and Navy aircraft carriers. But it didn’t take long for the feds to hit the snooze button. In 2011, Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio arrested Cruz Loya Alvares, who was working at the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station despite being a Mexican illegal immigrant who had been deported in 2000. He paid human smugglers to bring him back, secured work in construction, and somehow escaped re-deportation despite being cited by Mesa County Police for driving with a suspended license. In 2012, another Mexican illegal immigrant, Nestor Martinez-Ochoa, who worked in construction, was arrested after trying to enter the same Palo Verde nuclear power plant with a fake ID -- not by federal authorities, but again by Arpaio’s office. These arrests are exceptions, not the rule. Worksite enforcement under President Obama is a joke. The specter of nuclear jihad is terrifying, but the chilling fact is that homeland security has already been in meltdown for years. We’re doing ourselves in. SCHLAFLY ... Continue from Page 8 stan and China is up dramatically from last year. Brandon Judd also testified that official statistics are low-balling the number of “got-aways,” defined as people seen crossing the border without being detained by U.S. officials. Back home from his tango in Argentina, Obama said on his weekly radio address that the massacres would not change “our openness to refugees” (he still plans to import another 100,000 Muslim refugees) and he vowed to “reject any attempt to stigmatize Muslim-Americans, and their enormous contributions to our way of life” because we are “a nation built around the idea of religious freedom.” Earlier that same week, -------------------------------------Michelle Malkin is author of the new book Who Built That: Awe-Inspiring Stories of American Tinkerpreneurs. Her email address is malkinblog@ gmail.com. COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS. COM Wednesday, April 6, 2016 Obama’s lawyer asked the Supreme Court to punish the Little Sisters of the Poor for exercising its religious freedom not to cover abortion and contraception in its employee health plan. Obama is eager to accommodate the religious freedom of Muslims who want to move to our country from the Middle East, so why won’t he recognize the “enormous contribution to our way of life” by Catholic nuns who operate thousands of America’s schools, hospitals and homes for the aged? -------------------------------------Phyllis Schlaßy has been a national leader of the conservative movement since the publication of her best-selling, 1964 book, A Choice Not An Echo. She has been a leader of the pro-family movement since 1972 and has authored numerous books. 05-14-16 www.timesexaminer.com SCRUGGS ... Continue from Page 1 the identity of donors in what are called “dark money” PACs. This has probably already resulted in laundering foreign or criminal money and influence into U.S. election campaigns. How much Muslim Brotherhood money from Saudi Arabia and Qatar enters our political arena or directly influences our political leaders? How much Sharia Finance influence buys or defeats bills before the North Carolina and South Carolina legislatures? Furthermore, there seems to be little accountability for truth in the PAC advertising I have seen in 2016 Presidential Primaries. Campaign finance money has always been important to winning political campaigns. Communication is all-important to the persuasion of voters, and unless candidates have a genius for generating free, favorable media exposure, the costs of buying competitive media exposure in print, mail, telephone, television, radio, and internet are tremendous, especially for federal or state executive and legislative offices. Door to door campaigning is quite effective but time and energy generally limit it to a small fraction of voters. Campaign financing is crucial to both major parties and even more to third parties and third party candidates that do not have high name recognition and issue identity. It is much more important to Republicans, because most of the communication and education media favor liberal and therefore Democratic Party agendas. In addition, the Democrats usually have considerable automatic income and manpower advantages because of their close identity with labor unions. Furthermore, due to a historical consensus that huge donors should not dominate fiscal support for candidates and thereby dominate elections, campaign donations by individuals and organizations have traditionally been limited by ceilings of several thousand dollars. This, however, had the effect of making it even harder for Republicans to compete against liberal media dominance and labor union dues and manpower. This also tended to suppress free speech for those who had the money to influence elections and public opinion, often defensively, but were severely limited by the Federal Election Commission in doing so. The Citizens United decision by the Supreme Court was at first celebrated as a victory for conservatives, but its supposedly unforeseen consequences now threaten to place overwhelming political power in the hands of giant international corporations, business associations, compliant banks and unaccountable government. Super-PACs had an enormous impact on the 2014 Congressional elections, and that is why The Republican victories were predominantly Republican establishment victories rather than conservative victories. Whether the public noticed it or not, in 2014, the Republican establishment was campaigning hard and deceptively for more foreign cheap labor, the exact opposite of what their grassroots conservative constituents wanted. A PAC headed by establishment GOP RINO, Senator John McCain, even spent $1,000,000 trying to defeat NC Third District Conservative Republican Congressman Walter Jones. The liberal pro amnesty GOP establishment is lining up again to try to defeat Jones in 2016. May God forbid! According to the Institute of Southern Studies in Durham, independent PACs not associated directly with a candidate, but supporting that candidate and attacking their opponents, have spent $270 million so far in the Presidential primaries. More than $87 million spent supporting Bush and $60 million supporting Rubio were spectacular failures. As with the Congressional primaries in 2014, the lion’s share of independent PAC spending has gone to candidates supporting amnesty and increased legal cheap foreign labor. But in North Carolina state legislative primaries, the $1.4 million independent PAC spending reported to date helped elect 77 percent of their candidates. More than $350,000 was spent by the North Carolina Chamber of Commerce. The NC Chamber spends most heavily on candidates that support amnesty and increased cheap foreign labor. Thus they often oppose conservative candidates. In the 48th NC Senate District Chuck Edwards received outside PAC support of $47,800: tenth highest in the state. Lisa Baldwin received none. Only $13,000 of this PAC support shows up on his Disclosure Report to the NC Board of Elections (NCBE) as of his March 7 filing. $3,500 of it comes from five typically pro amnesty, pro BUCHANAN ... Continue from Page 7 Trump campaign is that some among the Fortune 500 companies are engaged in economic treason against America. No wonder they hate him. As for Trump’s call for an “America First” foreign policy, it threatens the rice bowls of those for whom imperial interventions are the reason for their existence. If the primary goals of U.S. foreign policy become the avoidance of confrontations with great nuclear powers and staying out of unnecessary wars, who needs neocons? Should Trump lose Wisconsin, he can recoup in New York on April 19, and the following week in Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Delaware and Maryland. Yet, a loss in Wisconsin would make Trump’s climb to a first-ballot nomination steeper. Still, if Trump goes to Cleveland, having won the most votes, the most states and the most delegates, stealing the nomination from him would split the party worse than in 1964. The GOP could be looking at a 1912, when ex-President Theodore Roosevelt, who won the most contested primaries, was rejected in favor of President Taft. Teddy walked out, ran on the “Bull Moose” ticket, beat Taft in the popular vote, and Woodrow Wilson was elected. Cruz says the nomination of Trump would mean an “absolute trainwreck” in November. But, Cruz, 45, with a future in the party, would be foolish to walk out as a sore loser, as Nelson Rockefeller and George Romney did in 1964. A Cruz rejection of a nominee Trump would mean the end of Cruz. The elites would hypocritically applaud Ted’s heroism, publicly bewail his passing, then happily bury and be rid of him. Cruz, no fool, has to know cheap foreign labor PACs. This includes the four PACs generally associated with the heaviest amnesty and cheap labor support—The North Carolina Chamber of Commerce, the NC Farm Bureau, The Home Builders, and the Restaurant and Lodging PAC. But the $1,000 from the Restaurant and Lodging PAC was not surprising or significant, since Edwards is a McDonald’s owner and would probably receive their support whatever his position on immigration issues. These four organizations actually wrote key parts of NCHB 786 in 2013, which called for driver permits to be given to illegal immigrant workers and for weakening North Carolina’s E-Verify system to prevent hiring of illegal immigrant workers. The driver license provision, however, was struck from the 2013 bill because of public protest. In 2015, they also presumably wrote a substantial part of NCHB 328, which had the same provision giving driver permits to illegal immigrants. This would have passed the General Assembly, but it was not given a final vote because of growing public outrage on illegal immigration. According to the NCBE, Edwards’ campaign received this. If the nomination is taken from Trump, who will be 70 in June, he has nothing to lose. And as “Julius Caesar” reminds us, “such men are dangerous.” Trump and Cruz, though bitter enemies, are both despised by the establishment. Yet both have a mutual interest: insuring that one of them, and only one of them, wins the nomination. No one else. And if they set aside grievances, and act together, they can block any establishment favorite from being imposed on the party, as was one-worlder Wendell Willkie, “the barefoot boy of Wall Street,” in 1940. All Trump and Cruz need do is instruct their delegates to vote to retain Rule 40 from the 2012 convention. Rule 40 declares that no candidate can be placed in nomination who has failed to win a majority of the delegates in eight states. Trump has already hit that mark. Cruz almost surely will. But no establishment favorite has a chance of reaching it. With Cruz and Trump delegates voting to retain Rule 40, they can guarantee no Beltway favorite walks out of Cleveland as the nominee -- and that Ted Cruz or Donald Trump does. No matter who wins in Cleveland, the establishment must lose. -------------------------------------Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of the new book The Greatest Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose From Defeat to Create the New Majority. To Þnd out more about Patrick Buchanan and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS.COM The Times Examiner timesexaminer.com just over $26,900 from individuals. He also financed campaign expenditures with money borrowed from himself, a very common practice. As of March 7, his campaign had spent just over $92,000. As yet unreported are the four high quality mail brochures printed and mailed by the NC Chamber, costing perhaps tens of thousands more. Note that $34,800 in PAC support had not yet been reported as of March 7. Edwards won his campaign handily with 56 percent of the vote against 34 percent for Lisa Baldwin and 10 percent for Dennis Justice. As of March 7, Edwards’ NCBE Report showed spending of over $5.52 per vote, not counting the expensive looking mail brochures printed and mailed by the NC Chamber. Lisa Baldwin spent $4,500 on her total campaign or slightly over $0.45 per vote. Although Edwards was elected as a special interest candidate probably willing to support liberal positions on immigration, he now has the opportunity to prove he will serve the people rather than cheap labor interests. What needs to happen is for the voters to take a keen interest See SCRUGGS, Page 13 The Times Examiner Wednesday, April 6, 2016 SHEEN ... Continue from Page 9 One of the most bright and shining times in our nation’s history occurred when home education was widely practiced. The Declaration of Independence (the first document of its kind ever produced in history) and the Constitution (which has become a model for nations around the world ever since) were produced by a society that was largely home educated. Missionaries who brought the gospel for the first time to dark places around the world had their start in our home-educated society. The financial foundation of the United States, which has become the wealthiest nation on earth, was formed on principles laid down by largely home educated Americans. Some of the brightest minds, the freest society, and the greatest rags-to-riches stories came from the first 100 years of America’s history – when society was largely home educated. Using God’s system appears to have worked pretty well in America’s history! If families were supported in their role of educating their own children, so much of what people complain about today would go away. 1. The quality of education would be far higher - after all, parents have a much higher vested interest in their children’s education, plus they have ability to work one-on-one with each child at the child’s own pace. Studies have shown that even poorly educated parents who do very little “educating” still wind up with their kids outperforming institutionalized kids. 2. Diversity and cultural heritage would be preserved. All those cultural traditions that should be passed down through generations will have a much better chance of surviving intact - from religious beliefs to family stories to language to respect for elders. 3. Social responsibility would be much higher. You value what you pay for. When education is “free” you don’t value it nearly as much as when you have to put something into it. 4. Herd mentality or peer pressure or following the crowd - whatever you want to call it - is cut way back when a child is raised among loving family members rather than bullying, critical, immature peers. This has also been demonstrated by studies. 5. Many of today’s health problems would be significantly lessened by children being raised in a calm, loving, sup-portive home. The fast food diets of many American children stem from constantly being on the run with the schools’ schedules. Parents who prepare all three meals for their children are far likelier to create a healthy menu than school cafeterias. Stress from long schedules, school bullies, and peer pressure would cease to push young people into behavioral problems like ADD and depression. These are just some of the benefits our nation would gain from going back to God’s model for education. You can have good people in a bad system. There are many American teachers who genuinely love children and want to give them a good education. But good people in a bad system doesn’t make the system good. The system intrinsically works against families and against God’s design for education. The government, the community and the church were designated by God to provide supporting roles for parents to do their job. They were not given a mandate by God to usurp the parents’ job altogether. Our nation is going to continue experiencing chaos and pain until parents take charge of their own children’s education instead of letting the state control it. Home educating parents can tell you already of the blessings on a small scale that God has given their families when they followed God’s design. We need to pray for those blessings on a large scale for our nation, and work to support and encourage parents to take back their role in their children’s education. -------------------------------------Heather Sheen is a homeschool graduate who has never had a TV or video games and would love to have more free time. She currently teaches harp lessons and operates Creative Cockades, a historical research and reproduction company. If you’d like to read more articles by the Sheen family, check out www. HomeschoolFamilyForum.com. 05-11-16 www.timesexaminer.com 13 CHAREN ... Continue from Page 8 them, saying they were “big boys and girls.” Actually, many were electricians, carpenters and other working people who couldn’t afford his fancy lawyers. Any number of Trump-enabling commentators have advised Michelle Fields to get over it, put on her “big-boy pants,” and otherwise to suck it up. Really? What about the big boy who’s running for president? Why is he so scared? Per- 06-10-16 SCRUGGS ... Continue from Page 12 in how immigration issues impact their community, state, and country. That will take some independent study on their part. They should keep in mind that illegal immigrant households receive over $14,000 per year more in benefits and services than they pay in all kinds of taxes. According to the Federation of Americans for Immigration Reform, this costs North Carolina taxpayers $2.0 billion per year, at least $1.75 billion net after tax collections. Who benefits and who loses from this? Another thing to consider is that excess labor supply, whether legal or illegal, costs American haps Trump’s fondness for Lewandowski is not in spite of his henchman’s willingness to get physical but because of it. Trump seems more than usually frightened of protesters. To be sure, every candidate gets serious threats, and doubtless Trump has received some. But his threshold for feeling vulnerable seems unusually low. Before a rally in Iowa, he was told that some protesters might throw tomatoes at him. He was sufficiently alarmed to tell the crowd: “If you see somebody getting ready to throw a tomato, knock the crap out of them.” For tomatoes. Nor has he been shy about calling down violence even on those who merely attempted to disrupt his speeches --which, I hasten to add, they have no right to do -- which in no way justifies mob violence. On another occasion, Lewandowski waded into the crowd and grabbed a protester by the collar. Trump approved of this maneuver, too, explaining (if that’s the right word) to CNN’s Anderson Cooper that the man’s sign contained very workers nearly $2,800 per year per worker in depressed wages. There are other costs to public safety, educational quality, and national security that are unpopular to mention but are very real and a very legitimate concern for all North Carolina voters. Yet we are allowing political correctness and massive outside super-PAC spending to dominate our elections and prevent the tough common sense decisions necessary for the survival of freedom. -------------------------------------Leonard M. (Mike) Scruggs is the author of The Un-Civil War: Shattering the Historical Myths, UniversalMedia, Asheville, 2011. bad words. Non sequitur. The Trump campaign has changed its story several times about Michelle Fields. The latest, on CNN Tuesday night, featured Trump justifying Lewandowki’s manhandling of Fields because she approached the TV star armed with a pen “which is very dangerous.” Tomatoes, Bics, is there no end to the threats against Trump? Donald Trump avoided the draft by claiming bone spurs in his heels -- which somehow didn’t keep him off the ski slopes. Yet he had the gall to disparage the heroism of John McCain. His only real exposure to danger, his “personal Vietnam” he says, was sleeping around and risking STDs in the 1970s. Trump is a physically large man with the courage of a mouse. Like many cowards, he loves tough talk, but he prefers to issue threats from the comfort of his private jet and to let bullyboys like Lewandowski actually get their hands dirty. Purely as a matter of national hygiene, Lewandowski should be fired. But more importantly, so should his boss. -------------------------------------Mona Charen is a Senior Fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS.COM The Times Examiner 14 Wednesday, April 6, 2016 Carol Leake, Representative (864) 414-5092 carol.leake@yahoo.com CLASSIFIED ADS HELP WANTED! MODULAR HOME CEMETERY LOT Full-Time Position Available Experienced Web Developer. Back End Code required. Telecommuting is Þne. Send Resume to goodjobsyes@gmail.com RENTAL 2 Bedroom, Small Study or Computer Room. 2 Large Baths, Large Living Room, Large Den, Kitchen EfÞcient with Like New Appliances. New Heating System Located on Large Private Lot with Water and Lawn Maintenance furnished. Nice Porch, Private with Nice View of Woods. Need Senior Couple without pets and nonsmokers. Rent per month is $800 and deposit of same. Home is like new condition. Located at 55 Smith Tractor Rd., Travelers Rest, SC Inquiries call: 864-834-4349. Cemetery lot, one lot with 4 burial spaces, $3,200 for lot. Call 268-2750, leave a message YARD MAN! Willing to work hard and will train. Own transportation preferred. Non-Smoker • Flexible Hours. CALL 864-284-9440 AFTER 6 P.M. OPPORTUNITY Double - Triple - Even 6x your business CALL for FREE Consultation 864-361-8701 WANTED Fireplace Service Technician Call 864-895-4204 to apply GREEN CAREER Green Technology Manufacturer seeks reps. FULL TIME • PART TIME Will Train. Excellent compensation. Lee Hackney Call: 800-383-9622 FOR RENT Double Wide between Marietta and Dacusville for rent. 3 bedrooms and 1.5 baths for $350 a month Call 864-434-0673 RENT Near downtown. 1.5 mi. from BJU. Nearly New 2 BR, 1.5 BA., 2 story. New carpet. Dishwasher. $775/mth. plus utilities. Parking. Yard. No pets. Call: 901-6584 Office For Rent Gallery Centre $600.00 per Month 292-1298 FOR RENT OfÞce space for rent Wade Hampton/Rutherford Rd in Taylors Area. Reasonable Rent. 292-8580 FOR SALE LOT - Sherwood Forest, Sub Division near Greenville Tech. Call: 419-2797 PIANO AND VIOLIN LESSONS GRACELAND WEST 2 LOTS GRACELAND WEST Headstone already there - $2000. Call: 834-3064 ONE CEMETERY LOT Graceland West Side with headstone. $995 • Call: 864-862-6809 GRACELAND EAST Graceland East Chapel Mausoleum: 2 spaces inside, section 16, 4th level. $8,400 OBO. (864) 850-0761 GREENVILLE MEMORIAL Two Adjoining Niches inside Mausoleum at Greenville Memorial Gardens - Below Market price Call 864-235-2397 WOODLAWN WOODLAWN 2 Pre-Paid Veteran Grave Plots Paid - $14,000 Asking - $8,000 Call 202-3681 One Cemetery Lot Woodlawn Memorial Park Lot located near front, at Wade Hampton Blvd. Asking $3,000.00 Call 864-268-8874 (leave message) FREE CAT ST-04-06-16 Focuses on Christian, classical and traditional music. Emphasizes chord theory, ear training, and improvisation. Relaxed Christian environment. Affordable rates. Taylors area. Ages 9 and up welcome. Visit www.upstatemusiclessons.com or contact Raquelle Sheen at musicinformation@earthlink.net. COMPUTER REPAIR At home computer repair services. Greater Greenville area. 864-361-8701 Free Piano Lesson! Free Piano Lesson! All ages welcome. Studios located in Taylors and Campobello. Call Stephanie Magnuson today at 864-770-3912 to schedule your free Þrst piano lesson. CEMETERY LOT One lot in highly desirable section “G” Near Mausoleum - $2,795.00 Call: 864-848-0368 GRANDVIEW Grandview Memorial Gardens Praying Hands Section 2 lots with Vaults valued at $5,580 Will sell for $4,380 - Call 895-6116 HILLCREST CEMETERY LOT, HILLCREST MEMORIAL GARDENS, GREER, S.C., 2 MAUSOLEUM CRYPTS IN UPPER MAUSOLEUM, $7,000 for the pair. Call 268-2750, leave a message CANNON MEMORIAL FOR SALE Cemetery Lots - Cannon Memorial Fountain Inn, SC. 2 lots, side by side with vaults $1500.00 EACH Call: 864-246-9034 DOUBLE STACK LOT 4 plots able to doublestack for a total of eight. Great location. Reg. $3,200 - now for $2,000 each. Call 242-0219 or leave message SIAMESE MIX Spayed with Up-to-date Shots (864) 616-2016 Buying Silver Coins Silver Coins Dimes • Quarters Half Dollars • Dollars $14.00 for $1 Worth of Silver Coins Call: 864-901-7999 VACATION Schedule vacation in resort to beneÞt Missions! Call (864) 246-7393 or (864) 354-3895 FOR SALE FOR SALE Antique clock. Made by the Sessions Clock Company, Forestville, Conn. Keeps good time. $75.00. Call 848-0368. Handcrafted Barbie Doll Dresses. Over 100 available. All kinds, from simple dresses to evening dresses, etc. $100 & up. Or make an offer for all. Call 848-0368. GRANDFATHER CLOCK Howard Miller 2002, Cherry Finish, Moon Face. Westminster Melody. Cost $1,100 - negotiable. Call 864-325-0466 NICE ANTIQUE DINING ROOM TABLE WITH SIX CHAIRS, SOLID WALNUT FOR $950. CALL 423-8226 OR 268-5364. MAHOGANY ANTIQUE DRESSER W/VANITY STOOL 2 ANTIQUE LAMPS. PRICE: $150.00 CALL: 246-5306 1 SUIT LENGTH & 1 DRESS LENGTH GARMENT BAG BOTH $10 • 241-0921 ORIENTAL WOVEN BASKET 24” high x 12 1/4” wide. Hide covered rim, aged patina, Oriental writing on bamboo handles; rings for hanging to protect food from varmints. Excellent condition. $85 Call 288-2191 2 Two-tape VHS motivational programs. “Where there’s a will there’s an A.” VHS, HIgh School and College Levels, $15 each , phone 864234-7968 99 Crysler Sebring 2 door - Hard top High Performance V-6 Everything works. low mileage $1,795.00 • 864-608-1780 First Edition of Bruce Cannon’s Trilogy, The Centennial History of the Civil War for $50. Also an original movie poster called a “lobby card,” of To Hell and Back, starring Audie Murphy for $25. Call 423-8226 or 268-5364. SHOTGUN for Sale Ithaca “Featherlight” Model 37, 12 gauge, with 28” vent rib barrel. Cost $999 new. Very slightly used $900 OBO. 864-292-8872 FOLDING SHOPPING CART $10 --- 241-0921 Black Male Labrador Puppies 14 Weeks old. Vaccinated. Best Offer - 864-678-0573 USED GAS LOGS folding glass doors Good Condition Please Call 864-230-6272 $50.00 USED GIRLS BICYCLE 10 Speed with Shocks and Like New Please Call 864-230-6272 $35.00 1 Sleeper-sofa - $250 Call (864) 801-1383, and leave a message. Portable (non-working) Sewing Machine - $35 Sears XC1000 Exercise Bike $40 Jason Constellation Telescope 280 - $40 Call Mark Days at (864) 439-2525 HAMMOCK Free standing - Metal Base BEST OFFER - 864-322-8620 Kurzweil Mark 150/10 Electric music system, excellent condition. Cost $3800, selling for $1200 - Appointments 864-640-7340 2006 Toyata Camry Solara Sunroof • 2 door - V6, Silver VGC • 73K miles • $7,800 Anderson - 864-224-9225 WALNUT COFFEE TABLE BEAUTIFUL CAMEO TOP $160.00 CALL (864) 848-0368 COMPLETE SET OF LOUIS LA’MOUR BOOKS ALL 17 SACKETT BOOKS, 69 OTHERS HAVE TWO COPIES OF SOME $1.50 EA. OR $100.00 IF ALL TAKEN CALL (864) 848-0368 TREAD MILL - PRO-FORM CROSSWALK 375 E ALL THE BELLS & WHISTLES, INCLUDING: CALORIE COUNT, GOALS, PROGRAMS & FACE COOLING FAN FOLD-UP PROSOFT WALK PAD - FLOOR MAT INCLUDED $125.00 CALL (864) 848-0368 The Times Examiner Wednesday, April 6, 2016 The Battle of Anderson PHOTO COURTESY OF JULIA BARNES Federal camp featuring Sgt. Chuck Yeager and young recruit. The 13th Battle of Anderson Civil War reenactment & living history event will feature Confederate & Federal troops, cavalry, artillery, and home-front demonstrations. This year’s event will be held April 15-17. Friday, April 15, is Education Day, starting at 9 AM. The reproduction of the H. L. Hunley will be on display for the event starting at 4 PM on Friday. Information regarding the Educational Events and the weekend military reenactments may be obtained from Julia Barnes at juliabarnes@charter.net; John Vaughn, at 864-607-2062 and email AOCVAUGHN@BELLSOUTH.NET or Allen Ashley at 864-934-4075. The location is 715 Due West Road (Hwy. 20), Honea Path, SC 29654. Education Day Admission is $5, with free pass for Saturday or Sunday, when accompanied by an adult. Ticket Prices: $10.00 ~ Children under 6 are free. The Battle of Anderson was a minor skirmish during the American Civil War, fought in Anderson County, South Carolina, on May 1, 1865. The battle was one of the final conflicts PHOTO COURTESY OF JULIA BARNES John Vaughn as Confederate commander on crowd favorite “Hawk’s Dixie Chick.” of the war, taking place three weeks after Robert E. Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House. The Battle of Anderson County was fought in the closing days of the Civil War... after the issue had largely been decided. Still... while it might not have the same recognition as a “Gettysburg” or an “Antietam,” the Battle of Anderson has drawn sufficient interest, from those with a love of history, for there to be a reenactment of the clash which features the Citadel Cadets. The battle... according to reenactment organizers was the last Civil War battle, or skirmish... east of the Mississippi River. According to history, the Confederate forces suffered no casualties... and the Union forces had two casualties in a skirmish that took place on May 1, 1865. Where the exact battle took place is a subject of debate among historians. While it appears to be true that it took place in what is now Anderson County... there is no consensus of the exact spot. But we do know where it will take place this month – on Due West Road outside of Honea Path, SC! 15 16 The Times Examiner Wednesday, April 6, 2016 Wednesday, April 6, 2016 The Times Examiner 17