Archive for Lynette

Minimizing the Impact of Tobacco Advertising on Madison Youth

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
When it comes to marketing know-how, the tobacco industry is a force to be reckoned with, seemingly always a step or two ahead of efforts to discourage or prevent tobacco initiation among teenagers and children. Tobacco-free initiatives are often working to counter the industry’s latest marketing strategy.

When cigarette sales to minors were banned outright, the industry began marketing candy-flavored tobacco products which, it could be argued, are made to appeal to minors. Tobacco-free initiatives have been working hard to counteract this tactic and educate the community about the addictive nature and health risks associated with all tobacco products, whether candy-flavored, smokeless or otherwise. Tobacco Free Madison and local Students Working Against Tobacco (SWAT) members, have secured resolutions from the Board of County Commissioners, the Town of Lee and the City of Greenville, encouraging tobacco retailers to consider the benefits of voluntary policy that restricts the sale of flavored tobacco products in their stores. This means that retailers are being asked to consider that if they chose to not sell flavored tobacco products in their stores, fewer youth would be influenced by the marketing tactics of Big Tobacco which means fewer Madison youth will become addicted to tobacco.

Every day, nearly 4,000 minors try their first cigarette, and of those, nearly 1,000 become daily smokers. Successful efforts to keep children tobacco-free until age 18 will reduce their likelihood of becoming adult smokers to around 10 percent.

In 2009, The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was given the task of regulating the sale of tobacco products. It has added rules and regulations in an effort to make tobacco products less accessible and less appealing to the underage crowd. The effort goes from federal, through the state, right on down to the local level.

Federal law now requires large, readily visible warning labels on all tobacco products and also mandates that vendors check ID for anyone who looks under 27 years of age; vending machines are restricted to adults-only areas, away from children; vendors may not give away free samples of tobacco products, nor may they sell or give away items such as hats or t-shirts with tobacco company logos. They are also prohibited from breaking open packs of cigarettes or other tobacco products and selling the items individually, a practice that would appeal greatly to minors who might not have much money to spend on tobacco products.

State law now specifies the type, location, and wording of signs required within the retail establishment, clearly stating that tobacco sales to minors are prohibited.

At the local level, the Madison County Health Department’s tobacco program has been surveying five local tobacco retailers in Pinetta, Lee, Greenville, and the I-10 area, to determine how familiar they are with the new FDA regulations.

The survey also assessed arrangements the retailers have with their tobacco suppliers. These arrangements often exchange wholesale discounts on tobacco products for prime advertising locations in the store. To counter the influence of tobacco advertising, retailers are being offered tobacco-free functional items and posters to promote resources available to help people quit. One retailer wanted to also provide Quitline information in their break rooms for their employees to help provide them access to tobacco use cessation resources.

In combating the tobacco industry’s advertising clout, Tobacco Free Madison is working at the local level: to build relationships with area retailers to help minimize the impact of tobacco advertising: to educate people, especially youth, about the health risks associated with tobacco use; and to get the word out about the free help available to those who are addicted and want to quit.

A smoker who stands in line at a gas station to buy cigarettes who sees the Florida Quitline poster prominently displayed nearby will know there is free help available should he want to quit. A minor who has no access to tobacco products during adolescence has more time to learn about the harmful consequences of tobacco use and make an informed decision upon reaching adulthood.

In mid-December, Tobacco Free Florida re-launched its website, www.tobaccofreeflorida.com, to help Floridians quit tobacco, with the latest updates on why you should quit and how to go about it.

In early 2012, the Tobacco Free Florida website will also include sections on how you can help others quit.

If you would like to quit, there are several free resources to help you:

Phone: Florida Quitline, 1-877-U-CAN-NOW. A Quit Coach will help you assess your addiction and map out a personalized quit plan.

Online: The Web Coach, www.quitnow.net./florida. You can create a web-based quit plan that’s right for you.

In Person: Contact Preston Mathews, (850) 728-5479. You can sign up for Quit Smoking Now group classes at your local AHEC (Area Health Education Center)

Finally, smokers who don’t manage to quit with their first attempt shouldn’t be discouraged. Nicotine is a powerful addiction, and most smokers have to make multiple attempts or even try different methods before they finally make the break.

The important thing is, there is free help available. Just ask.

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Closing the STEM/CTE Gap: Sam Stalnaker Addresses School Board

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
Sam Stalnaker, former principal of Madison County Central School, addressed the School Board at their final meeting for the year, Dec. 20. Speaking as the new Coordinator for North Florida Career Pathways Consortium that serves the six county area of Madison, Jefferson, Taylor, Lafayette, Hamilton and Suwannee, he stressed the importance of STEM/CTE coursework and the need for getting more high school students into STEM/CTE courses. His presentation explained the Consortium’s purpose and goals, asking school board’s help and support in the Consortium’s effort to close the STEM/CTE gap.

The STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) gap he referenced was the difference between supply and demand for employees who are “STEM-capable,” or proficient in such areas.

Florida’s high schools are not graduating enough STEM-capable students to fill the growing demand of 21st century jobs in four different career groups, Stalnaker told the board members. The four major career groups that will be looking for future workers are computer technology, mathematical sciences, engineering/surveying and the natural/physical/life sciences.

According to the 2010 Florida Council of 100 Report, “Closing the Gap,” by the time current high school STEM students graduate from college, 9 out 10 new jobs may be in STEM areas. The Florida K-12 STEM Ed Report Card 2011 estimates that the state will need to fill approximately 411,000 new STEM-related jobs by 2018.

Part of Stalnaker’s mission as Coordinator for the North Florida Career Pathways Consortium is to encourage more students to go into STEM studies in preparation for future employment in one of the four growing career groups. Careers in some of these groups can command as much as $74,000.

“That may turn some heads,” said Stalnaker.

Another gap is the CTE (Career Technical Education) gap, or what used to be known as “vo-tech.”

Stalnaker described CTE as “teaching a skill set for something the student can become certified in and be qualified enough to apply for a job,” using as an example, the job of certified nursing assistant – a student completing the CTE curriculum for certified nursing assistant would be able to sit for the exam and pass, becoming eligible for employment in that area.

“Not all our students want to go to college,” he said. “But all our students need a job.”

There are 16 “career opportunity clusters” in the CTE group, offering certifications in a variety of industries. Stalnaker highlighted several of the clusters that offered opportunities right here in Madison, including: agriculture, food and natural sciences; arts, A/V technology and communications; education and training; health science; information technology; and law, public safety, corrections and security.

Examples of specific jobs included electricians, welders, cosmetologists, equipment operators, drafting, surveying, animal sciences and agritechnology.

He also talked about a curriculum of “foundation knowledge and skills” that would make students more employable, teaching things like getting to work on time, ethical practices, problem solving and working as part of a team.

However, there are some issues, including a lack of knowledge and awareness of the full range of opportunities available through STEM/CTE, both in and outside of Madison. There is a self-perception of CTE, leftover from “vo-tech” days, a perception that needs to be improved and brought more in line with reality. There is a lack of local role models in some career fields that could help students visualize their own goals for the future. There is also a need for more resources for recruiting and training students.

Students who want or need further training in their chosen fields have a choice of several institutions within a 90-mile radius of Madison, including North Florida Community College, Suwannee-Hamilton Technical Center, Taylor Technical Institute, FSU, FAMU, Valdosta State and Wiregrass Georgia Technical College; additionally, students in Madison and Hamilton Counties can pay in-state tuition rates at Valdosta State and Wiregrass.

The Consortium’s mission is to increase awareness of STEM and CTE, creating partnerships between schools and the workforce, improving the effectiveness of current STEM and CTE programs, and increasing the range of choices available to students.

The problem of resources and budgeting is another challenge. Stalnaker is working on getting some grant money and getting advocacy groups and schools to support the Consortium’s goals to reach families and students, closing the STEM/CTE gap, as they prepare students to thrive in a future that is closer than they may think.

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World War II, the Cross-Florida Pipeline and Madison County

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.

World War II came a lot closer to Mainland American shores than most people might realize, especially in Florida. With almost 1200 miles of coastline, Florida was a great asset to the military, with its mild climate for year-round training and strategic locations for military bases. Yet those 1200 miles of vulnerable, exposed beaches also posed a significant liability; before the explosive population growth brought on by World War II and especially the post-war boom years, Florida was largely a state of sleepy little southern towns, rural/agricultural lands and few urban areas, with large areas of coast sparsely populated, if at all.
The danger was mainly from German U-boats of Nazi Germany’s “Operation Drumbeat,” patrolling just off the coast, not only in the Atlantic, but also in the Caribbean…and even the Gulf of Mexico.
In fact, the early days of the war saw as many as 20 U-boats in a single fleet regularly patrolling the Gulf, determined to disrupt the shipment of military hardware and other supplies to Europe.
The merchant ships were particularly hard hit, and the German subs were especially determined to disrupt the vital flow of oil via tanker ships from ports in Texas and Louisiana. In the early days of the war, they were so successful that two U-boat captains earned Germany’s Distinguished Iron Cross for their efforts, according to Logan Hawkes of www.wintertexansonline.com/uboats. 56 ships are officially listed as having been sunk in the Gulf of Mexico; 39 of those are now believed to have been in state or Federal waters off the Texas, Louisiana and Florida coastlines. The Florida Memory Project (www.floridamemory.com) puts the total number of ships lost in the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean and Gulf Stream at over 100.
Another threat was the presence of Nazi war agents operating throughout Mexico. Nazi Germany imported over half of Mexico’s oil production, and Italy, another Axis power, imported another 25 percent.
In response, oil production was ramped up in the Texas and Louisiana oil fields, but there remained the problem of German U-boats patrolling the Gulf, Caribbean and Atlantic as tanker ships rounded the Florida Keys to haul oil to England and the rest of Europe. In February of 1942, German U-boats attacked four merchant ships just off the coast of Cape Canaveral. In another attack, the passenger ship SS Robert E. Lee was sunk just a few miles from the mouth of the Mississippi River. The U-166, the submarine responsible, was also sunk just a few hundred yards away, the only U-boat officially listed as sunk in the Gulf by Allied forces.
Even though the production of oil had been increased, getting that oil from ports on the Gulf coast to its destination was a troublesome and dangerous venture. Even domestic shipments of oil were not safe. On April 22, 1942, the SS Gulfamerica, carrying 90,000 barrels of fuel oil from Port Arthur, Texas to New York, was torpedoed just four miles off Jacksonville Beach. Dozens of other ships were attacked and sunk a mere handful of miles off Florida’s Atlantic and Gulf Coasts.
German U-boat captains used the light of coastal cities to spot the silhouettes of target ships traveling near shore, prompting blackout orders among many coastal cities, but deep-water travel made ships even more isolated, vulnerable to attack, and farther from the safety of land for any survivors.
In early 1943, U.S. Naval ships were assigned to accompany convoys of freighters and passenger ships. The Civil Air Patrol was organized in March of 1942 to protect Florida coasts, aided by the “Mosquito Fleet,” groups of volunteer civilian boats, who patrolled the waters off the coast, looking for submarines and performing search-and-rescue operations in the aftermath of torpedo attacks. Thousands of other volunteer civilians, known as “spotters,” were trained to watch the skies and keep track of air activity up and down both coasts.
All of these measures served to greatly diminish the carnage inflicted by “Operation Drumbeat,” but did not eliminate it entirely. Attacks and sinkings continued until the end of the war.
The Gulf of Mexico remained a dangerous place, as was the Caribbean Basin and the Atlantic.
Thus, the Cross Florida Pipeline came about, beginning in St. Marks and running through Madison County, just south of where I-10 is now, south of the town of Lee, across the Suwannee River, and ending in Jacksonville, which had a big port to accommodate the huge tankers that came in, and a pumping station to fill them. Madison County was the location of another pumping station that pumped the oil into huge storage tanks and maintained the pressure in the pipeline.
Herman Cherry, former Madison Chief of police, was in the 10th grade when the war broke out in the 1940’s and remembers “a pile of pipes stacked up at Lee, and a pile of welders,” waiting to weld them together when the pipeline was first being built. He also recalls “the pumping station was built on Tommy’s (Tommy Greene of Greene Publishing) daddy’s land.” After an oil tanker filled up at the port of Jacksonville, which took about five hours, the pumping station at Madison would build up the pipeline pressure again to fill the next tanker.
The tankers could then join the transatlantic convoys well protected by Naval gunboats and submarine-detecting planes, and make it to England in about eight days’ time as opposed to the 30 days it had taken before the pipeline became operational. As Cherry explained, the longer those ships stayed in the water and the greater the distance they had to travel, the more vulnerable they became to the German U-boats. The Cross Florida Pipeline was faster and safer for getting the vital gas and oil from the Gulf side of Florida to the Atlantic side.
Tommy Greene’s brother, Bubba Greene, recalls “when they mapped that pipeline out, they pretty well went in and took the land they needed (through eminent domain).” However, in those post-Pearl Harbor days, there was a lot more cooperation. “There was a war on and people generally wanted to help out the military,” said Greene.
However, “during the war, a lot of this was secret,” Greene added, explaining that folks in the north part of the county generally had no clue what was going on in the southern end; most probably weren’t even aware there was a pipeline. In the north part, the emphasis was more on the “volunteer patrol families” who took turns spending the night in the fire towers across the county, watching the skies, tracking and reporting any unrecorded, undocumented planes in the area, much like the “spotters” on both coasts of Florida.
“It wasn’t something that was publicized,” agreed his brother Tommy, speaking of the pipeline. “You didn’t want it sabotaged.”
The danger of saboteurs was a justified concern at the time; in the summer of 1942, four German saboteurs carrying munitions supplies made it ashore from a German sub off Ponte Vedra Beach just south of Jacksonville. Intent on blowing up Florida’s railroad lines to disrupt the shipment of war supplies and the transportation of military personnel, they were arrested before they could carry out their plans. Had they known about the pipeline, it too might have been a likely target.
Every inch of pipeline was inspected daily for leaks or damage, whether due to sabotage or any other causes. Local resident Henry Lewis had uncles who were part of the daily inspection teams that consisted of two men either setting out on foot or riding out on horseback in opposite directions from a single point on the pipeline, looking it over for any signs of something amiss; Tommy Greene believes that these men were also armed, with at least a rifle, or something, “for snakes if nothing else,” since they had to cross a lot of swampland. The men would generally ride about half a day’s journey along the pipeline (where the pipeline crossed ponds or rivers, there was a narrow walkway built across the water alongside it) until they met up with another inspector coming from the opposite direction; then, confirming that everything was as it should be, the two would turn around and ride back to where they had started their journey.
The Madison pumping station itself became quite an installation during the war years. On what had once been farmland, there were huge storage tanks of oil and gas, perhaps 40 feet wide by 40 feet across, as Tommy Greene recalls; he remembers them being about as big across as they were tall, and also remembers the big tractors pushing up the large earthen berms that completely encircled each tank, high enough to contain an oil spill should any of the tanks rupture, spit or leak. The pumping station operated 24 hours a day during that time, running thousands upon thousand of gallons of gas, oil and diesel through the facility.
There were also five identical little white government-built houses for the families of the men who lived and worked at the pumping station. Roy Milliron, Sr., was the plant supervisor.
With several miles of pipeline running through Madison from Aucilla to the Suwannee River, engineers tried to keep it mostly as level as possible, and above the waterline wherever it crossed water. There were also the several miles of the wooden walkways that went with the pipeline across the rivers, ponds and swamps.
However, while there was a war on as many people probably said with great frequency, and the danger was as close as the Gulf, at times it could seem far away to a quiet little place like Madison County. There was the rationing, the shortages and the stories on the radio and in the newspapers. There were the families with a loved one in the war and the volunteer patrol families that spent nights in fire towers watching the skies overhead.
Still, there was normal daily life for many. While the pipeline pumped oil for the war effort overseas, life went on back home as it was meant to. Children still played after school and explored the great outdoors if the weather was good; those who lived near the pipeline even played on part of the pipeline infrastructure. Those little walkways that went next to the pipeline where it crossed ponds and rivers and swamps with the handrails on one side were like miniature bridges, perfect for children, especially little boys, to play on. Herman Cherry remembers a very young Bubba Greene being especially fascinated by the walkways and thinking they were “really cool” or whatever the equivalent vernacular was during the war years.
The little bridges were also excellent fishing spots for a cast from a cane pole to hook a few fish. They also made great places from which to lower wire or wooden fish traps into the water beneath. Tommy Greene also remembers seeing fish traps made from 55-gallon drums with a hole cut in one end, allowing the fish to enter, and smaller holes at the opposite end for drainage when lifting the drums out.
Brothers Tommy and Bubba frequently played with two boys named Rudy and Grady, who belonged to one of the families employed by the government to run the pumping station. They lived in on e of the five little white houses next to the facility, and the four boys spent many Sunday afternoons playing together, but now, neither Bubba nor Tommy can recall the other boys’ last names.
After the war ended in 1946, the pipeline was dismantled and taken up; some people say it was because the government didn’t really have “official” easement or right of way for much of the line, just the good graces of citizen landowners who wanted to help out with the war effort. Others say it was mainly due to the trucking unions who wanted to eliminate the competition the pipeline posed to the fuel hauling business.
Whatever the reason, the pipeline was taken apart. Some local residents bought pieces of the pipeline and used them to build things like cattle gaps. The large storage tanks were taken out; all that remains are the berms that once surrounded them, some four to eight feet high.
The families who had once lived in the little white wooden houses at the pumping station packed their belongings and moved away. The government wanted to move the houses off the property, but didn’t want to relinquish the lease on the land in case they needed it again. However, in order to get to the houses and relocate them, they had to cross more land owned by the Greenes, land that wasn’t leased to the government.
Eventually, as Bubba and Tommy both recall, the government reached an agreement with their father, relinquishing the lease on the land where the houses sat, in order to be able to get to the little houses and move them.
At least two of those houses still remain in the city of Madison, one on SW Madiosn Ave., just off Lake Frances, and the other on Range Street, about a block or so south of Gordon’s Tractor.
Of the families who used to live there, Tommy Greene recalls that one of them owned a German Shepherd dog they were unable to take with them; they finally ended up giving the dog to the Greene family.
“I can see the image of the man who gave us the dog,” says Tommy Greene, even though he has long forgotten the man’s name. “That was the best dog I ever had.”
Of the pipeline that was once so vital to the war effort, very little evidence remains. A few relic pieces of pipe, perhaps on some land in the southern part of the county. Some of the earthen berms that surrounded the huge storage tanks are still there. A couple of the little government houses now occupied by families in other parts of town.
The rest is mostly whatever those who lived in those days can remember of the pipeline. Perhaps somewhere there are photograghs or documents tucked away in trunks or boxes, along with family photographs and papers that would tell more of the story about the vital link that once ran through the state from coast to coast and undoubtedly saved lives and ships from the U-boat infested waters off Florida.
This report was supplemented with information from www.floridamemoryproject.com, http://fcit.usf.edu/florida/lessons/ww_ii, www.wintertexansonline,com/uboats, and www.floridavets.ord/wwii/history/asp.

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Carolyn Rowe Wins Yard of the Month for December

Nothing says “Christmas in Florida” like a combination of palm trees and decorations. This pretty gazebo and decorations in the backyard, along with the decorations and landscaping in the front, earned Carolyn Rowe the Yard-of-the-Month Award from the Madison Garden Club.

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Chamber to Have Christmas Open House December 20

By Lynette Norris

Greene Publishing, Inc.

 

The Madison County Chamber of Commerce is having an ‘All Day Christmas Open House’ Tuesday, Dec. 20, for all those who would like to drop in at their convenience to visit, mingle and socialize.

Cindy Vees, Chamber director, says that while the Chamber is open every day, the Open House occasion is a “warm and fuzzy” event for the Chamber and the people of Madison, as well as a way “to express our gratitude to everyone who has supported the Chamber over the past year.”

There will complimentary hot cider, coffee and hot chocolate for guests, as well as some light snacks.  Maybe some danish or “we might even bring in some Johnson donuts,” said Vees.

The Open House will be going all day during regular business hours for the convenience of as many people as possible who’d like to drop in for a few pleasant minutes to have a hot beverage and a light snack while they chat and visit with Chamber representatives and each other.

“Come whenever you can,” said Vees.  “And come as you are!”

 

 

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A Very Merry Mayberry Christmas at Madison Academy

By Lynette Norris

Greene Publishing, Inc.

 

Mayberry, that quintessential small American town where many of us sometimes wish we lived, makes the perfect theme and setting for a musical Christmas trip down memory lane, full of nostalgia and childhood memories of Christmases past.

Thursday evening, Dec. 8, the students of Madison Academy did just that with their Christmas musical presentation, “A Very Merry Mayberry Christmas,” taking to the stage at the Van H. Priest Auditorium on the NFCC campus.  The eighth grade class brought back those beloved characters of Mayberry, gathering at the Mayberry Courthouse for a visit with Aunt Bee, Opie, Sheriff Andy, Barney, Goober, Ben Weaver, Mr. Sam and Miss Betty.

Musical performances included the Madison Academy Choir opening with “Merry Mayberry Christmas,” followed by each different grade/class presenting a song and dance of its own, in celebration of the holiday season.  Even “Our ‘Darlin’ Teachers” got in on the act, with a rendition of “Jingle Bells.”

As they treated the audience to other well-known Christmas classics such as “Up on the Housetop” (4K class) who couldn’t help but remember singing those very same songs many years ago, back when we were small, believing in Santa and waiting to hear noises on the roof before we fell asleep on Christmas Eve?

Celebrating the joy of the season was the Fifth Grade Chime Choir with “O Christmas Tree,” the second grade class with “Go Tell it on the Mountain,” the third grade with “Come On, Ring Those Bells,” and the first grade’s “Joy to the World, It’s Christmas.”

The fourth grade brought out the funny side of naughty-or-nice with “I’m Getting Nuttin’ for Christmas” and the 5K class, dressed in chefs’ hats and aprons, sang a song of “Christmas Cookies.”

The 3K class wondered “Donde Esta Santa Claus,” while the seventh graders rocked out to “Jingle Bell Rock.”

Finally, singing of the real reason we celebrate Christmas, the sixth grade performed “God Speaks” and the entire assembly closed with “Silent Night.”

Have a Very Merry Mayberry Christmas.

 

The eighth graders bring Mayberry to life. Standing, left to right: Teagan Dunn (Aunt Bee), Michael McCammon (Andy), Zachery Peterson (Barney), Clay Hall (Goober) and Kyle Rogers (Opie). Seated, left to right, are Dallas Walker (Miss Betty) and Dalton Gramling (Mr. Sam).

Kim Wigham’s first grade class presents “Joy to the World, It’s Christmas!”

The 5K class’s song, “Christmas Cookies,” brings out the chef in everybody (Mary Lu Pfeil, teacher).

 

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Tommy Hardee is New Supervisor of Elections for Madison County

By Lynette Norris

Greene Publishing, Inc.

 

Having been appointed by Gov. Rick Scott to finish out the current remaining term of Madison County’s Supervisor of Elections, Thomas R. “Tommy” Hardee was officially sworn into office in the main courtroom of the Madison County Courthouse, Wednesday, Dec. 14 at 5 p.m.

After a brief opening prayer by Jenny Andrews, Hardee’s wife Kaila held the Bible while Judge Wetzel Blair administered the oath of office, as a courtroom filled with family, friends, neighbors and citizens witnessed the occasion.

The office had been vacant a little over six weeks when Hardee stepped in, after having been selected a few days earlier by Gov. Scott from a pool of several applicants.

The son of Cary A. Hardee (of Cary Hardee Law Firm) and his wife Patsy, the younger Hardee, an insurance agent and volunteer firefighter, became slightly emotional when he addressed the gathered crowd after the brief ceremony.

Stating that he had met with one of the best election supervisors in the state of Florida over in Bay County, he had several ideas for changes in the Madison Supervisor of Elections office, “changes for the good…the door will always be open.”

His words reflected those of Octavius Tookes, who spoke of “a peacemaker in the midst of our trials.”

Hardee and his wife Kaila remained in front of the courtroom for several minutes afterward as well-wishers came by to shake hands and congratulate the new Supervisor of Elections for Madison County.

Hardee will finish out the current term, which expires Nov. 19, 2012.

Kaila Hardee (center) holds the Bible while Judge Wetzel Blair (left) administers the oath of office to her husband, Tommy (right).

Left to right, new Supervisor of Elections Tommy Hardee (holding son Tuff), wife Kaila Hardee, parents Patsy and Cary Hardee, sister-in-law Suzi and brother Bo Hardee.

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All About Choices: Career Day at MCCS

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.

It’s all about choices, as several of the career presenters pointed out to the groups of students – not only the career path the students will decide upon in the years ahead, but also the choices they make today while they are young, that will prepare them for those future decisions.

Lt. Ramon Dansey, Officer Patricia Hall and Officer Amanda Smith of the Madison Correctional Institute brought a scale model of the MCI facility to show the children how the prison was laid out and explain the purposes the various buildings served as they described their various jobs at the prison.

In answer to one student’s query about what makes a person choose to “be bad” and end up in prison, Smith replied that often the person does not have an education, and thus lacks the ability and/or good judgment to make wise choices. Dansey, a 17-year veteran with MCI, added that anyone who had ever been in a prison could never work in a prison, one example of how one bad decision in the present could limit choices in the future.

Ralph Campbell, of the Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms Division of the Police Department, had the students don a pair of “drunk-vision” goggles and try simple things like catching a ball or walking in a straight line while their eyesight was blurred and impaired.

“Now imagine trying to drive a car like that,” he said, adding that alcohol and drugs could also affect their still-growing bodies in ways that could harm their health years into the future. He also spoke about some of the responsibilities of police and ATF officers in general, and even had one of the children, Devonte Collins, try on the bulletproof Kevlar vest and several other pieces of a police/ATF officer uniform.

Vernon Reddick, retired Senior Master Sergeant, Air Force, talked about learning how to stay on task and stay focused as he described a career in the military.

Jerome Wyche talked about the county’s recycling program and Rusty Smith was on hand to represent Tri-County Electric.

Several emergency service careers were represented in front of the school where Chief Fire Inspector Juan Williams waited beside Madison’s aerial ladder truck and talked to the children about fire safety and what a firefighter’s job was like, while Tinarius Irvin and Mica Taylor represented Madison’ Emergency Medical Service with one of the county’s ambulances; additionally, Chief Clay Phillips represented Brooks County Firefighters.

Shane Wells, Ryan Rowland and Chris Norris were on hand to represent the Florida Forest Service; Alan Huff and Clay Whigham had brought out their airboat for their presentation.

Careers all across to the board were represented, from politics (Renetta Parrish, Tim Sanders) to banking (Willy Gamalero, Renae Wills) to medicine (Dr. Chester Aikins) to law enforcement (Tina DeMotsis) to restaurant management (Will Milton of the Ruby Tuesday restaurant), to name just a few.

It was an enormous undertaking, said Kay Williams, of the MCCS staff, to plan something on such a large scale that involved so many people, but many of the faculty and staff believe it is important to give the students a glimpse of some of the possibilities out there, and give them time to prepare by staying on course and staying in school, things that will help when the time comes to make a choice. If they can see the possibilities in the future, they can see the reasons for wise choices in the present.

Besides, as several students remarked, Career Day was “really fun.” Seeing the new aerial ladder truck, or an ambulance or an airboat up close was a treat for the day, no matter what they may eventually decide to do. But, when they do make that decision, things like career days will have given them a little more information, a little more knowledge, to help them on their way.

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New FCAT Could Mean Fewer High School Graduates

By Lynette Norris

Greene Publishing, Inc.

 

The FCAT 2.0, that School Superintendent Lou Miller described as “new different, more rigorous” raises the bar from the previous FCAT test administered to tenth grade students.

The new “cut score” recommended on the FCAT 2 is 243, or Level Three.  Two reactor panels have already recommended raising the cut score, but the new FCAT 2 will also mean fewer students will graduate, because fewer will pass the tenth grade FCAT.  Even though the students will have two more chances to retake the test in the 11th grade and another two chances in the 12th grade, Miller told the Madison County School Board at their Dec. 6 meeting that an estimated 7,965 students statewide would be unable to pass the FCAT in the tenth grade.

The Commissioner of Education will make the recommendation to the state board of education, and that board will vote on Dec. 19 whether or not to approve the new cut score.  The Madison County School Board would then know what level of performance will be expected from Madison’s current class of tenth graders when they take the test in April.

 

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Junk In The Trunk, A Hidden Treasure On Pinkney Street

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
For artistically talented sisters Cheri Green and Michelle Mandziara, everything in life has a (re)purpose – even old transmission plates.

That’s the core idea behind their hidden treasure of a shop at 297 SW Pinkney Street. Around the corner from Madison Florist, sandwiched between Madison Tax Services and the narrow alley that runs between the shop and the Rancho Grande Restaurant, Junk in the Trunk is filled with little gems created from mundane, everyday, even throwaway items used in new, wonderful, almost unrecognizable ways.

From the front door inscribed with the words “Rescue, Reuse, Recycle,” customers enter to find purses created from old jeans and old shorts, old jeans legs recycled into water bottle carriers and plastic grocery bags crocheted into water bottle bags. The swirling red and silver patterns of earrings, on closer inspection, are part of a Coke can logo. Other earrings are cut from tin can lids; still others are created from old watch gears – all of them hanging from old shutters, old kitchen cabinet drawers made into display cases and old transmission plates Cheri salvaged from her husband’s junk pile when he was rebuilding an engine.

Old belts become bracelets, old ties become stuffed snakes with button eyes and old skeleton keys on chains and delicate ribbons become charming necklaces.

It started out with little charms. Cheri and Michelle discovered that they loved making little charms with images of about a square inch in size, encased in glass. Soon they began making them for family and friends. Then, they were traveling to festivals all over the region to see if their ideas would sell.

Then, they began coming up with other creative ideas.

“We had been talking about ideas for going into business together for about six or seven years,” says Cheri. “When we got the opportunity to open in this spot, we took it.” They have been in the shop since April 1, 2011.

After having been closed a lot during the fall (the best time to do festivals, Cheri explains, when the weather is so nice), they are now keeping the shop open Tuesday thru Friday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

They have been approached by other local artists who want to place items in their shop, but because space is so limited, what they do is feature an “artist of the month,” showcasing a different local artist each month in one of their front windows. Sometimes, they have a waiting list.

Currently their featured artist is Shabby T, unique cards, gifts and jewelry by Vicki Bass and Angie Lott of Live Oak.

Junk in the Trunk is not only a business, it’s an outgrowth of a philosophy the sisters share, a passion for creating products that reduce the impact on the environment and embrace the values of “Frugality, Creativity, Ingenuity, Industriousness and Meticulousness.” They have even created a line of five-petaled flower pins made from fabric scraps representing each of these five values.

“Our generation’s legacy should reflect the values that made us the greatest nation on earth, rather than the addiction to convenience and disposability that pervades our culture,” states a printout about their shop. “We hope to pass this on by inspiring you to support local businesses that have similar goals, or at least rescue, repurpose and recycle a little bit more than you did yesterday.”

For more information about Junk in the Trunk, visit their facebook page at www.facebook. com/junkndtrunk.

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Dr. Stuart Steiger Speaks At Rotary Club

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
After being introduced by Vicki Howerton, Dr. Stuart Steiger of Madison Chiropractic Center took the floor as the guest speaker at the Rotary’s Nov. 30 meeting. He began with the subject of chiropractic medicine in general, the third largest branch of medicine in the health care industry, a branch that approaches the human body from a more natural perspective than “traditional” medicine.

He also discussed a couple of other forms of alternative medicine, in particular, the closely related field of osteopathy, explaining how both had originated in the late 1800s, but osteopathy evolved into a focus on the musculoskeletal system, while chiropractic medicine focused on the spine and nervous system.

In speaking of his own particular practice, he began by explaining that his goal for his patients was to “be proactive rather than reactive…to create health rather than treat disease.”

If something with the spine or nervous system is out of line of out of whack, it throws off the entire body. Doing an adjustment and getting everything back into alignment benefits the entire body and allows the body to begin functioning properly again, creating better health and a better quality of life.

Talking to the patient was key, he told the audience. Many times, he did a lot of explaining of medical reports patients brought to him from other doctors; doctors who didn’t take the time to talk to their patients or did only a cursory job of explaining.

Listening to patients was important as well. “If you listen, the answers are there,” he said. “It is like putting together the pieces of a puzzle.”

In the era that has seen more and more specialized medicine, he sees the future of healthcare in the next 10-15 years as reversing this trend and slowly becoming more integrated again, as the AMA gets more on board with the more holistic approach and the industry recognizes the importance of seeing the body as a whole, an integrated system rather than a collection of discrete parts. He would like to see a future where a chiropractor and a medical doctor would work right across the hall from each other, rather than in separate hospitals, consulting with each other and caring for each other’s patients in an integrated fashion – treating the whole patient.

The problem with too much medical specialization, he said, is that “if your only tool is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a nail.”

Many people started to realize this in the 1990’s and began paying out of their own pockets for alternative medicine. When the insurance companies realized this, they “followed the money” and began to take a more serious look at alternative medicine’s approach to healthcare and reevaluate it. As a result, many insurance companies who once refused to cover chiropractic sessions now do so.

As part of his whole-body, holistic approach to patient care, he also talks to patients about nutrition, about “filling the voids” left by fast food and processed food. Although he admits to going through the McDonald’s line himself at times, and realizes that people become pressed for time with hectic schedules, they should not neglect this important part of their overall health – cleaning up the diet and giving the body what it needs to work properly.

“Human bodies were meant to repair themselves if they’re working right,” he said. But to work right, they need the proper nutrients to work with.

While chiropractic medicine cannot fix or treat every illness, it can help by providing a better quality of life and alleviating pain. It’s all part of the holistic, natural approach that he embraces, an approach that creates health instead of just treating disease, resulting in a better overall quality of life.

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Garden Club’s Mina Bloodworth Talks About Tablescapes

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
When autumn rolls around, so does the holiday season, but having a well-dressed table to go with the different holiday themes and decorations doesn’t have to mean stressing out or going broke.

Mina Bloodworth, speaking at the Dec. 1 meeting of the Madison Garden Club, said that her favorite places to buy floral supplies, including vases, were places like TJ Maxx, Target, Marshall’s and Walmart. She has even used baking pans, bread trays and other containers from her kitchen, she said, picking up a long, low, narrow arrangement of red and white carnations…in an hors d’eourve tray. No one had even guessed that was what it was.

When it comes to flowers, they can be hard to come by after Thanksgiving, but there are certain kinds of flowers like torch lilies that pop up in yards during this season. Sometimes, an arrangement can work even without flowers, consisting things like pine cones, holly berries, cast iron plants and cedar foliage, things she had found in her own yard and that of friend and neighbor Sarah Adams. They work just as well and last a good long time. If candles are used in a tablescape, they should be either above or below eye level, so that they don’t shine directly in everyone’s eyes.

A long table down the center of the room held about a dozen or more examples of Bloodworth’s tablescape designs, which included a floral centerpiece and place setting designed to complement each other. There were examples to suit every almost every occasion, not just the ones that occur in the fall. Her designs included everything from a casual, breezy summer setting with a yellow floral paper plate on a bamboo placemat, to a whimsical Halloween setting with a solid black plate with a black spider napkin ring holding an orange napkin, to an elegant red and white Christmas setting with touches of silver.

As she proceeded down the table, she explained the principles of floral arrangement, discussing such things as pattern, form, color, line and scale, and explained how to pair centerpieces with place settings. For the casual summer tablescape with the bamboo placemat, the centerpiece was a light, airy arrangement of sunny yellow flowers that made great use of open space, in a light vase raised up on legs that made it open underneath. By contrast, one of the more formal autumnal tablescapes with the heavier china plate in muted colors required a more substantial vase and a denser floral arrangement.

The fun Halloween setting was accompanied by a floral arrangement perched high on a tall narrow vase that stood on slender, spiraling metal legs, almost like a spider or jellyfish. The tall narrow legs allowed the guests to see each other through them, and the vase held orange Gerber daisies and contorted mulberry twigs spray-painted black.

Bloodworth and Adams had also been hard at work getting lush, green, fragrant Christmas wreaths together to sell as a fundraiser. About twenty of them were placed on a back table, and several had been sold by the end of the meeting.

With Christmas coming up fast, Martha Beggs reminded everyone that they still needed a few volunteers at the park to finish up decorations in time for Light Up Madison, and thanked those who had worked so hard to deck the halls of the Mansion, dressing it up in all its Victorian glory to delight its many visitors, for what might be the final year.

“Please go by and see it during Light Up Madison,” said Beggs.

It could very well be the last chance anyone would have to enjoy such a sight, she reminded them…unless a miracle happens before next Christmas!

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Knock Tobacco Out of the Park

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
Many people, including teenagers, are probably familiar with the Rick Bender story by now. Bender, nicknamed the “Man Without a Face,” has appeared in a couple of television spots about the dangers of “smokeless tobacco.” A former professional baseball player, he lost half his tongue and lower jaw to oral cancer after more than a decade of “spit tobacco” use, beginning when he was 12 years old.

Although the dangers of cigarette smoking had been well documented for years by then, the dangers of smokeless tobacco, including snuff and chew, were less well known or even downplayed. Although Bender wanted nothing to do with cigarettes, there was enormous peer pressure to use snuff and chewing tobacco. Additionally, there were television ads of professional players endorsing various brands of smokeless tobacco, with the implication that “a pinch instead of a puff” was a safe alternative to smoking.

Bender now tours the country to dispel that myth, sharing his story of pain and suffering, his disfigured face a visible reminder of the dangers of snuff and chewing tobacco.

Yet, there were still the macho images on televised ball games, images of players – popular athletes, heroes to millions of young people – dipping snuff and popping wads of tobacco in their mouths in the dugout, or chewing wads out on the field and spitting between pitches, all while playing America’s favorite pastime (in all fairness, however, this does not include EVERY player).

So, even with the disturbing image of Bender’s face, there has still been the multiple images of player after player dipping, chewing and spitting, in game after game, images that make dipping and chewing look so awesomely “cool.”

All that is about to change with the new baseball season, thanks to the efforts of thousands of supporters behind the “Knock Tobacco Out of the Park Campaign,” a national coalition of over 200 public health groups, notable baseball figures, faith leaders, young ball players and their leagues, and many others.

Two days before Thanksgiving, Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Player’s Association negotiated a new five-year contract restricting smokeless tobacco use on and off the playing field. The Nov. 22 announcement was the first time smokeless tobacco use has ever been addressed in professional baseball. The restrictions become effective when the new contract begins in 2012, and violators will be subject to discipline.

Some of the restrictions include prohibiting big league players, coaches and managers from bringing tobacco or tobacco products onto the playing field, either in their pockets or on their person, thus eliminating camera shots of the snuff can in the back pocket and the chunks of chew going into mouths in the dugout. Players will also be prohibited from using tobacco products during televised interviews, during autograph signings or any other event where fans (especially young fans – teenagers and children) will be present.

Additionally, MLB and MLBPA will team up with The Partnership at drugfree.org for a national public announcement campaign featuring notable players talking about the dangers of smokeless tobacco.

For those players addicted to smokeless tobacco, the MLBPA will provide a Tobacco Cessation Center with resources to educate them about their health and help them quit the habit. They will also receive screenings for oral cancer as part of their annual physicals.

The Campaign For Tobacco Free Kids has taken another step toward victory with the new MBL contract restrictions that will minimize the chances of young fans seeing one of their heroes using the dangerous, addictive tobacco products.

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It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas

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After eight hours in Four Freedoms Park yesterday, Erin Kelly (a volunteer who is spending her break from college helping), and Kelli O’Quinn and Curt Fletcher of AOK Electric, shown left to right, were back for another day of work running the electrical wiring and putting up the lights on one of the huge trees in the park for Light Up Madison. AOK Electric is donating their time for the project. “It’s our way of giving back to the community,” said O’Quinn. “And it’s a lot of fun, too.” She added that the three of them were enjoying having the cooler weather in which to work. “Feels a lot more like Christmas,” she said. Members of the Madison Woman’s Club and Joyce Wells of Wells Farm Supply are also donating their time to the project.

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The Cowboys’ Wide Receivers

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.

When the quarterback throws the football, somebody with speed and agility (a wide receiver or possibly a tight end) has to be there and be open to catch that pass, hang onto it no matter what – and run with it, if possible, for as far as possible – all the while, outmaneuvering and outrunning the safeties, cornerbacks and other defensive players of the opposing team.

The four young men who play the wide receiver position for the Madison County High School Cowboys are Charles Brown, Jr. (#3), Neal Brown (#19), Tre Arnold (#7) and Jason Hayling (#16).
Neal Brown, a third-year wide receiver and the son of Eric and Kenya Brown, recalls the game played against Live Oak as one of his favorite moments. Only a week after their first game of the season against Colquitt, where they lost by only one point, the Cowboys came back and walloped Live Oak 40-8; however, that isn’t the only reason Neal remembers that game so well.

“I had four catches for 112 yards and one touchdown,” he said of the home game with all their friends, fans and family present. “It was a moment I enjoyed.”

Jason Hayling, on the other hand, recalls the Colquitt Game as “one of several” of his favorite Cowboy moments, “when I saw how well we played together.” The son of Marva Hayling, he has played wide receiver for two years.

Tre Arnold, the son of Sharon Haynes and Chuck Arnold, remembers the game against Taylor County, another Cowboy victory, where he played his first game as a starting wide receiver and made his first catch. Like Hayling, Arnold has been a wide receiver for two years.

Charles Brown, Jr., son of Charles Brown, Sr., is another three-year wide receiver, one who hopes to play college football and loves ESPN, recalling the time spent at the FCA (Fellowship of Christian Athletes) camp as one of his favorite moments.

Hayling also talked about FCA Camp, where he learned all about his teammates, as did Arnold. After hearing some of the stories about their lives, “we felt closer to each other,” Arnold said.

That friendship and closeness, a theme that often comes up when speaking with Cowboy players, the knowledge that they can depend on each other, may be part of why they work together so well as a team and are a force to be reckoned with on the playing field. “When you come out here, you know you’re going to be with friends,” said Neal Brown. “They’re all like family. If you have nobody else to go home to, you know you can go home to them.”

When it comes to other favorite things, Neal likes the movie “ATL” and the TV show “Tyler Perry’s House of Payne.” His favorite food is BBQ, which is also Hayling’s favorite. When it comes to movies, though, Hayling lists “All About the Benjamins” as his favorite. Arnold likes the movie “Blindside,” with his favorite foods being fried chicken and pork-and-beans.

All four young men plan to attend college after graduation. Neal Brown doesn’t speak of a major just yet, but knows he wants to get an education. Charles Brown, Jr. plans to play football and get an education. Arnold hopes to play sports while he works toward a degree in engineering, and Hayling plans to study criminal justice.

Then it’s time to hurry out to the practice field for another daily fast and furious practice session, so they can play another game of great football for all those Cowboy fans come Friday night.
Go Cowboys!

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December 1st Is The Last Chance To Adopt-A-Senior During Christmas

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
If you haven’t yet adopted a senior citizen for the Christmas holidays, you have until Thursday, December 1 to contact the Senior Citizens Council of Madison and fill out your registration form.  It takes only a minute or two, and the forms are available in the front lobby at the Madison Senior Center, 1161 S.W. Harvey Greene Drive.
The holiday season is often a difficult time for seniors, who may be widowed or have limited contact with families, or even no families at all.  Some have limited incomes and little or no transportation for getting out and about.
The Adopt-A-Senior program is sponsored by the Senior Citizen’s Council to provide an opportunity for organizations, businesses and individuals who would like to make the holidays special once more for Madison’s elderly citizens and let them know that someone still cares.
About two dozen people and organizations have signed up already; those who would like to join in the effort to make the Christmas season a joyous one for a senior need to do so right away.  Just swing by the Madison Senior Center before 5 p.m. Thursday.
For more information about the Adopt-A-Senior program, contact Valencia Johnson at the Senior Citizens Council of Madison, (850) 973-4241.

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Nestle Waters Is Donating Money For Playground Equipment

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
Nestle Waters of North America is about giving back to its community, says Lisa Garcia of Ron Sachs Communication.  As the new spokesperson for Nestle, she was discussing one of the company’s most recent projects – the donation of $17,000 for new playground equipment for Lee Elementary School.
Garcia spoke about the project recently when she visited Madison County with a FAMU graduate student, who was preparing a water quality project report.  Garcia wanted to show her the Nestle plant and let her see firsthand not only the water extraction process – Nestle’s commercial venture – but also the various ways in which the company works to care for and protect the source of that water: the environment that produces it, everything from the land to the trees to the rivers.
Nestle not only brings about 175 jobs to the Madison area, she added, it also tries to be a good corporate citizen.
For example, everything Nestle does at the plant is 95 percent recycled, and the plant maintains a gopher tortoise preserve on its property.  Recently, about 30 Nestle employees and their families were part of the annual “Great Suwannee Cleanup,” in which the Nestle team took canoes along the Withlacoochee River, gathering up over 300 pounds of trash that day.
Then, there are the more tangible ways in which the company gives back, including its latest effort, the $17,000 donation for the new playground equipment for Lee Elementary.  But the giving back doesn’t stop there; once the new equipment arrives, the company will again have a team of volunteers assembled from among its own employees, ready to go to work putting the new equipment together and installing it on the school’s property.
The new pieces of equipment will fill in a wide-open area in the playground, adding to the older pieces already in place that were brought over from the old Lee School.  Garcia believes that the entire project should be completed within the next few weeks.
Robin Hill, principal of Lee Elementary, said she had been told the project would begin in November, so she expects the start-up will be within the next few days.  “I believe it’s going to be a lot of climbing equipment,” she said.  “Mainly some monkey bars and some climbing nets.”
“It’s important for every good neighbor to take care of the environment and not just be concerned with the bottom line,” said Garcia.  “They (Nestle) give back…and it’s a good balance.”

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First 4-H Holiday Bake-Off A Tasty Success

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
Madison County Extension Agent Becky Bennett was pleased with the high level of participation in the first ever 4-H Holiday Bakeoff – nine out of eleven categories had entries – and even more pleased with the high quality of those entries.
The Bakeoff wasn’t a “traditional” contest, in the sense that the children were allowed to have an adult help/supervise their baking efforts, and all entries were judged according to whether the level of quality was blue ribbon, red ribbon, or white ribbon; each was awarded a ribbon accordingly.
“We had mostly blues,” said Bennett, indicating a table full of blue-ribbon entries.  “And about five or six reds, and no white.”
However, the judges (all out-of-county) did choose one top entry from each category for a Golden Whisk Award, as well as one overall top winner and one runner-up for the Master Chef Award.
The Golden Whisk winners were: Ellie Cherry (Cakes); Gage Washington (Cookies) Journey Aust (Pies); Conner Waller (three wins – Candies, Breads and Appetizers); Noah Blanton (Brownies/Bar Cookies); Emily Minor (Decorated Cakes); and Alexandria Barker (Specialty Items).
The top honor of the evening, the Master Chef Award, went to Journey Aust, 10, for her apple pie with the golden brown crust sprinkled with red and green decorations.  Ten-year-old Gage Washington’s colorful peppermint pinwheel cookies were chosen as the overall runner-up.
The awards were handed out Monday evening at the Madison County Extension Office.  Even though some of the children were unable to attend, it was a fun, festive occasion for those present and Bennett, pleased with this year’s efforts, was already looking ahead to next year, with many more 4-H’ers involved in an even bigger 4-H Holiday Bakeoff for 2012.

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The Cowboys’ Starting Defensive Line Up

By Lynette Norris

Greene Publishing, Inc.

The Monday before Thanksgiving, the Cowboys are still hard at work with daily football practice, and their hard work shows in the 11-game winning streak that has now has them in the state playoffs.  Part of what makes the team so successful is their defense, as head coach Mike Coe has said on previous occasions when speaking of the hard work the defensive line puts forth.

Eddrick Williams, #12, defensive end, Brandon Crawford, #11, defensive end and Keldrick Williams, #6, nose guard, together form the Madison County High School Cowboys starting defensive lineup.

Eddrick Williams, son of Latonya Boldin and Bobby Williams, Jr., has been part of the starting lineup for one year, and likes “Dragonball Z,” hot wings and French fries.

Like Eddrick, Brandon Crawford has also been part of the starting lineup for one year.  The son of Carol and Solomon Griffin, Sr., he also lists French fries as his favorite food.

Keldrick Williams, son of Jerry Miller and Sonya Williams, has held the nose guard position for two years and says his favorite food is pork chops and his favorite TV show is “Sanford and Son.”

One thing they all have in common is when they talk about their favorite Cowboy moment – the Gainesville game, a 21-17 win for the Cowboys.

“Everybody thought we would lose,” said Keldrick Williams of the Oct. 28 game.  “But we beat their expectations.  That’s the best moment for me.”

“I have to agree with him about that game,” said Crawford.  “It showed how much we had improved since that first game.”

Eddrick Williams also named the Gainesville game as one of his favorite moments, but he went on to include that very first game against Colquitt, the one Crawford mentioned.

Even though they lost, and it was their first game of the season, Williams chose it “because of how hard we played against Colquitt as a team.  Being the first game, we played better than we thought we would.”

The Cowboy defense held the Colquitt Packers to only 20 points; the Cowboys lost by a mere one point.  The final score, 19-20, is their only loss so far this season.

The Cowboys went on from there to trounce the Suwannee Bulldogs 40-8 and the Jefferson Tigers 42-7, and score their highest total so far, 55-14 against the Taylor County Bulldogs.

In the majority of their games since then, the Cowboy defense has held opponents to less than 20 points.  By the time they played Gainesville, they did indeed show how much they had improved, as Crawford noted; not just winning, but winning a game people thought they would lose – beating the expectations.

All three players also plan to go on to college after graduation, although their final choices about where to go are still up in the air.  Crawford says he might like to go to Alabama, but it’s not definite yet.  Keldrick Williams and Eddrick Williams are still unsure about which college, but as they look toward the future, as Eddrick puts it, “I just know I want to go.”

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Remodeled Laundromat Part Of Revitalization Of Downtown Madison

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
To Paul Cucinella, who already owns several businesses in Madison, the coin laundromat on Rutledge Street isn’t just another coin laundromat; it’s part of an ongoing effort to revitalize the downtown of a community he knows and loves.
“We live in downtown, we work in down town and we invest in downtown,” Cucinella said of his latest project, the remodeled coin laundromat on the corner of Rutledge and Shelby.  “And we love Madison.”
Cucinella and his wife live in the historic white two-story house that they purchased and restored several years ago.  With its broad front porch and enormous screen porch on the side, it is a gracious, old-fashioned spot of charm that the Cucinellas call home, next to Madison Cleaners, across Shelby Street from the laundromat, catty-cornered from Ron’s Barbershop and within shouting distance of the post office – right in the heart of downtown Madison.
They also purchased and restored the two-storey cinderblock building behind the post office, where Ron’s Barbershop is now; however, when they first bought it, it was a dilapidated eyesore of a place with a reputation for illicit drug activity.
Today, it is more familiar to everyone as the cheerful, sunny-yellow building adorned with a large mural of the American flag, housing several new, successful small businesses.  Ron’s Barbershop is in one end, with its black and white checkerboard windows facing west on Shelby.  Around on the side is the Act 2 Community Resale Shop, a fundraiser thrift shop for the New Testament Church Center, and the Exclusive Hair Salon, each contributing to the revitalization of Madison’s downtown economy.
The renovated laundromat is “the next phase of what we’re trying to do for downtown,” said Cucinella.  He had owned the building for years, but not the business; when he finally took over, he began a complete remodeling job around the first of November, gutting the place of the old fixtures and machines and putting in all new state-of-the art washers (20 in all) and dryers (16).
“Since talking to the customers (after the remodeling) I’ve realized just what a need this was in the community,” he said.  The customers are thrilled with the remodeling that has provided them with a clean, well-lighted place where they can bring their family’s laundry.
The Madison Coin Laundry’s operating hours are from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., seven days a week, and wash and fold service is available from 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Laundry attendant Theresa Smith is on hand to greet customers as they come in.  Smith, who attends the same church as the Cucinellas (New Testament) just started with the laundromat about a month ago.
The laundry is the latest step toward revitalization, but not the last.  Cucinella hopes bring more business and more people back to downtown Madison and hopes others will do the same, making their community a growing, vital place where small business can thrive.
“It’s just a good feeling,” said Cucinella.  “That you did something for your community.”

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