Archive for April 2011

Jake Sam Haynes, Sr. To Turn 100 Sunday

jakesamhaynes

Born on April 17, 1911 in Madison, Jake Sam Haynes, Sr. started what turned out to be a very great and wise life, according to his grandson, Anthony Curtis Haynes, Sr.

“He, along with my grandmother, Mamie Lee Haynes, raised five of us grandchildren, three in Madison,” said Anthony Curtis Haynes. “Grandpa always wanted us to do the very best in all we did in life, and when we would call home, he would always make sure that we were doing our best in whatever we were doing. I just cannot tell you of the love Grandpa showed us along the way, when we were growing up in Madison.”
Addressing his grandfather directly, Anthony Curtis said, Granddaddy, I just wat you to have a very happy 100th birthday. I love you and I hope I shared some happiness with you.”

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Jacob’s Ladder

Jacob Bembry, Editor

Jacob Bembry, Editor

I was so proud of myself Sunday afternoon. I was in the game. I was getting much-needed exercise. I was standing on a broken down tennis court in Lee, volleying tennis balls with one of the youth in my church.

I had played tennis on a team in high school and I played for myself in college. I was amazed Sunday afternoon as the swing and the grip came back to me. The fellow across the court was not hitting the ball very hard or very often, but I was burning calories. Everything was going fine until he hit the ball and it traveled to the out-of-bounds marker.

In high school or college, I could have easily hit the ball back to young J.W. Phillips. I made a move that back in the day would have been balletic, even poetic, as I hit the ball and followed through; not this time, however.

What should have been a graceful, athletic move turned into disaster. I must have looked like a whale trying to beach himself. Somehow, as I saw eminent disaster looming, I had the mental state to remind myself to dive for the grass and not fall on the court. I managed to get most of my body on the grass with only my feet and the lower half of my shins on the court. If I had not done that, it would have meant broken bones, including probably broken ribs. I survived with a few scratches and minor bruises.

It was at my church’s Family and Youth Day at Lee Town Hall and my pastor, Retis Flowers, said that I had taken the chain like fence on the side out. I think the fence was like that before and I do not remember hitting it. He fixed what I think had already been leaning over.

Jacob Everhart, the church’s youth director, jumped the fence to help me up. I just wanted to lie there for a moment because I had no breath left. I don’t think it was from getting it knocked out of me, though. I think it was because I had exhausted all of my energy hitting the ball around. It felt good, though; even the pain from the fall.
It is so hard to take time to get the physical exercise one needs. This past week, I’ve had to run from one end of the county to the other covering things for the newspaper. I spent last weekend working and I spent a couple of nights this week doing things for the newspaper. By the time I get home, it’s hard not to just sit and chill. My mind hurts and my body aches. I know the tonic for both problems, though.

The remedy for the body aches is to exercise and the remedy for the mind hurts is to pray and read God’s Word, to meditate on Him and to find quiet time alone with God.

For more writings and thoughts on life, books, music and the universe in general, please visit www.jacobbembry.us

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First UMC Holding Palm Sunday Cantata

First United Methodist Church invites you to their Palm Sunday Cantata, this Sunday, April 17th at 11 AM.
The title is Forsaken: Remembering The Last Days of Christ. It will be presented by the Chancel Choir with narration by Pastor Bob Laidlaw and Penny Worden.
There will be solos by Terry Fall, and Mike Norfleet, with special guests playing a flute, oboe, horn, and double bass accompanying the songs.

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MCCS Yearbook Staff Celebrates An Awesome Year

The 2010-2011 yearbook staff is seen above. Front row, from left to right, are Amanda Miller, Katlynn McGuire, Tara Gill, Jacob Moore, Kameshia Frazier and Alex Henderson. In the middle row from left to right are Devin Dyke, Zori Resendiz, Ashley Ragans, Makayla Usina, Taylor Killingsworth, Briana Hodge, Kylie Greenlee, Kaylee Kopke, Tessa Andrews and Heather Welch (Sponsor). On the back row from left to right are Doris Murdoch (Sponsor), William Terry, Talena Voss, Miranda McCammon, Hope Smith, Ryan Tramell, Alex Brown, Marc Robinson, Anna Robinson and Konstience Jones. Not pictured is Alexis Frazier.

The 2010-2011 yearbook staff is seen above. Front row, from left to right, are Amanda Miller, Katlynn McGuire, Tara Gill, Jacob Moore, Kameshia Frazier and Alex Henderson. In the middle row from left to right are Devin Dyke, Zori Resendiz, Ashley Ragans, Makayla Usina, Taylor Killingsworth, Briana Hodge, Kylie Greenlee, Kaylee Kopke, Tessa Andrews and Heather Welch (Sponsor). On the back row from left to right are Doris Murdoch (Sponsor), William Terry, Talena Voss, Miranda McCammon, Hope Smith, Ryan Tramell, Alex Brown, Marc Robinson, Anna Robinson and Konstience Jones. Not pictured is Alexis Frazier.

By Kristin Finney
Greene Publishing, Inc.
The yearbook staff at the Madison County Central School has spent the majority of this year preparing a one of a kind yearbook. Thanks to new software and great opportunities, the students were able to pull off this feat with few obstacles. This year’s yearbook will be in full color, thanks to the use of a new program called Yearbook Avenue.
The staff this year was sponsored by Doris Murdoch and Heather Welch. Both teachers were new to the journalism programs and software. Welch said, “By the time the yearbook was finished, the students were teaching us so many things that we had no idea the program could do. They just work so well together and have learned so much.”
Yearbook Avenue is done all online and is ran by Josten’s. It allows students to build pages and upload pictures, no matter where they are. It even allows parents to upload pictures directly to the site if they want or need to. The program also gives students their own personal login information so that other students cannot make changes to their pages.
Each student, or group of students, was assigned pages that were their responsibility for the year, such as boy sports, volleyball, clubs, classes, etc. The students also got to build their own ads for the back of the yearbook.
When asked what their favorite part of being on the yearbook staff was, students began shouting all kinds of responses. Some students talked about the software, explaining how fun it was to work with and how easy it was to personalize the pages.
Others talked about all the activities the staff  got to be a part of, such as ad sales day and Spirit Week. Ad sales day is the day where the students get to go to different businesses in town and sell them ads for the back of the yearbook. Spirit week allows staff members to dress up in funny outfits to gain awareness for book sales. Staff members got to dress up like rock stars and wear their pajamas for Spirit Week.
Doris Murdoch stated, “The experience has been great and the kids are wonderful. They are so eager to learn and they are just great kids.”
The staff of the MCCS yearbook would like to thank the community for their continued support for the program and would like to give a special thanks to those businesses that supported them this year. They would also like to let the community know that they still have about 25 books left available for sale. They are also selling last year’s yearbooks for $20, and any yearbooks older than that are only $10. Anyone interested in purchasing a yearbook can do so by visiting the Media Center at the school.

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Shannon Curtis, Cancer Survivor, In Relay For Life

Shannon Curtis begins another spring day in Madison shortly after dropping her three daughters off at school.

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
“I think it’s very important that any sign of any change in your body be checked out immediately,” said Shannon Curtis.  “I didn’t do that.”
Curtis, who had just had her youngest child and just passed her six-week check-up, dismissed the lump she later found in her breast as a clogged milk duct, or fibrous tissue.  There was a history of cancer in her family, but not in someone as young as Curtis, only 32 at the time.  Her aunt, Martha Scott, is a three-year survivor of breast cancer at age 70, and her grandmother, first diagnosed with lung cancer at age 83, is now battling lymphoma at age 85.  It has spread to other parts of her body including her throat and bronchial tubes.  She is currently undergoing chemo and radiation and has a feeding tube, but she hasn’t given up yet.  She was discharged from the hospital Wednesday to carry on her fight at home, but “it isn’t pretty,” said Curtis.

Shannon Curtis begins another spring day in Madison shortly after dropping her three daughters off at school.

Shannon Curtis was born and raised in Pinetta, and moved to Madison when she married Nathan Curtis.  They have three daughters, Savannah (eight), Sydney (six), and Sadie (two), and have just celebrated 15 years of marriage.  She can’t remember exactly how many years she has been involved with Relay For Life, but she thinks it is probably about seven – first with the team of teachers from Madison County Central School where she taught Kindergarten, and this year, since she is still on sick leave, with the Fellowship Team from Fellowship Baptist Church.
Her husband, Nathan, was working for Homeland Security in San Diego and the baby, Sadie, was just a year old when Curtis went for her routine annual exam with her gynecologist, who asked her if she knew about the lump, and why hadn’t she come in sooner.  After a mammogram and ultrasound, a surgeon removed the lump, which initially was thought benign.  It wasn’t until Curtis and her mother went back to the doctor for a post-op check-up that they learned it was malignant.
“We were just floored,” said Curtis, “that we were talking about cancer.”
She opted for a double mastectomy and began and course of chemotherapy – 16 treatments in all – from June through November of 2010.  And because her cancer was estrogen-induced, a hereditary trait, she elected to undergo a full hysterectomy in December.  “I won’t have this cancer again, because I now have no estrogen in my body,” she said.
As with previous years, with small children, she probably won’t be able to take the entire night for Relay for Life.   She’ll have to leave in the evening and come back in the morning, but she does a lot of the support work.  “I follow directions really well, and I do whatever they tell me to do.”  This year, she has heard that they might have her working on the Luminaria committee, but that hasn’t been confirmed yet.
“God is good,” she said.  “You always hear about how God works in mysterious ways, but it’s true.  My husband was able to get a hardship transfer because of my cancer.”  Nathan Curtis now works out of Tallahassee instead of San Diego, and he is able to be with his family every day instead of having to be away from them for months at a time.
“I love telling the story about how good God has been to us,” Shannon continued.  “And you can’t beat the people of Madison, either.  From day one, friends, family, church members, coworkers…I haven’t gone a day where I needed anything.”
Today at 34, Shannon Curtis is a survivor, with a recent photo of herself with hair again, surrounded by her family, as a reminder of how far she has come.  This year at the Relay For Life, she’ll be out there, where “I’ll just do whatever they tell me they need me to do,” for herself, for her aunt, for her grandmother, for those who have survived, for those who are still struggling, and to honor those who have lost the battle.  There is always hope, because, as she herself will tell you, “God is good.”

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Paul Pitts To Perform At Jasper UMC

Paul Pitts

Paul Pitts will appear in concert in Jasper at the United Methodist Church on Sunday, April 17, at 10 a.m.
An outstanding tenor, Paul has done over 5,500 performances on seven continents to over five billion people by television, radio and personal appears.
Paul Pitts has shared the stage with motivational speakers such as Zig Ziglar and John Maxwell.  He has appeared on “Focus on the Family” with James Dobson, and “In Touch” with Charles Stanley, in addition to the Indianapolis Crusade with Billy Graham. He has performed at the Crystal Cathedral, Alamo Dome, T.D. Waterhouse Arena, Cypress Gardens and Opryland USA. Dr. Pitts plans to fulfill a request to sing at the Vatican as well.
Paul uses his voice to comfort those who are ill, those who have lost loved ones, those who have bitterness in their life, and those who are hurting.  Dr. Pitts sings with a compassion for people.  The St. Petersburg Times quoted Paul as saying, “If I can touch someone’s heart with the love of God I will have lived out my purpose for living.”
Paul has been named one of the “Outstanding Young Men of America” and has received an honorary doctorate from Coral Ridge University.

Paul Pitts

Paul was the soloist for the “Concert of Peace” in Belfast, Ireland, uniting North and South Ireland, held at the Waterfront Arena.  He has sung for the President of the United States, the Queen of England, and members of the Royal Family.  He was the soloist for the 60th Anniversary television special celebrating Israel’s 60 years of Statehood.
“He has appeared on the big screen in “When the Bell Tolls,” with Ben Kingsley (two time academy award winner) and talk show host Montel Williams.
Paul has sung Don Jose in Carmen, Rodolfo in La Boheme, Manrico in Il Trovatore, Lt. Pikerton in Madama Butterfly, Florestan in Fidelio, Canio in Pagliacci, Cavaradossi in Tosca, MacDutt in MacBeth, the Beethoven Ninth, Handel’s Messiah, Verdi Requiem, and has performed the title role of Otello, in New York, with raving review.
Recently Nino Pantano, a critic reviewing a performance of Pagliacci in New York, which Paul sang the role of Canio, expressed, “Mr. Pitts has one of the most beautiful voices in existence today with impeccable diction and admirable declamatory skills. In short, he is the Canio of our time.”

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Way Back When

April 18, 1941
John W. Johnson last week bought the interest of Joe H. Williams’ Sinclair station on the corner of Base and Brookwood Streets and took control Monday morning.
One of the outstanding movies of the current season is Sis Hopkins, starring Judy Canova. The film is to be at the Swan Theatre next Wednesday and Thursday.
Madison High School musicians again brought home many honors when they returned from the northwest state music festival in Defuniak Springs on April 10, 11 and 12.
Miss Eddie Ragans, who is connected with the REA office, is a new resident at the Stroud Hotel.

April 13, 1951
An event not on the schedule for the recent Madison County Field Day, but, obviously of much interest, was the Fat Man’s Race. Places were accorded as follows: W.H. Wood, E.E. Bradley, A. Livingston, Frank Webb and S.P. Griffin. G.R. Pettis also entered, but fell down, according to the Enterprise-Recorder account.
Calvin Buchanan and Billy Littleton, Pinetta and Madison High School seniors, have joined the Army Air Force.
Mr. Cary Phillips was in the city Monday morning, making the necessary arrangements to enter his daughter, Annie Laura, age 10, at Hope Haven for treatment of burns which she received several weeks ago when her clothing caught fire when she was standing near an open fire in the fireplace, at the Phillips’ home. Skin grafting will be necessary to complete her recovery.
Thomas Davison Tadlock, age 73, of the State Forestry Service, died last Friday night in his motor boat on the St. Marks River, apparently of a heart attack.

April 14, 1961
Wiley Selman, playing quarterback for Phi Delta Theta against Sigma Nu at the University of Florida on April 8, threw a 26-yard touchdown pass in the last two minutes of play. Phi Delt won 12-0.
Bob Searcy of United Farm Agency has sold the 310-acre John Tooke farm to Huey F. Baker of Jacksonville.
Gibson Pasture is now open for fishing during daytime hours until further notice.
Carroll Blalock, Jr. was a visitor in Atlanta, Ga., for several days this week.

April 16, 1971
Rip Prine of Ft. Bragg, N.C., is expected April 20 for a visit with his mother, Mrs. R.L. Prine, of Cherry Lake.
Miss Becky Davis of Auburn University is expected home for the Easter holidays.
Miss Peggy Clark of Wesleyan College is spending Easter holidays here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William B. Clark.
Attorney Bill Daniel has written a legal analysis of the trial of Vietnam solider, Lt. William Calley, a Gainesville resident, tried and convicted of murder for his role in the My Lai Massacre in Vietnam on March 16,    1968.

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Trail Riders Raise Money For St. Jude’s

Jason Kinsey, Jackie Kirland, Laura Sykes, Jeremy Kinsey, C.B. Knight, Tim Day, David Crockett, Connie Day, Ruthanne Gardner, shown left to right, represented the Madison County Sheriff’s Posse during the trail ride.

Jason Kinsey, Jackie Kirland, Laura Sykes, Jeremy Kinsey, C.B. Knight, Tim Day, David Crockett, Connie Day, Ruthanne Gardner, shown left to right, represented the Madison County Sheriff’s Posse during the trail ride.

By Jacob Bembry
Greene Publishing, Inc.
The Madison County Trail Riders and the South Georgia Trail Riders teamed up to raise money for St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital on Saturday, April 9.
Members of both clubs gathered at the Ellaville Tract of the Twin Rivers State Forest at 9:30 a.m. They rode down the trail as far as the interstate. Riding back, they arrived shortly after noon. The Madison County Central School FFA had barbecue sandwiches, chips, dessert, fruit and beverages waiting for them. Donnie and Mickie Salter, and their daughter, Savannah Salter; and Dannitte and Dani Mays and their daughters, Sunni Mays and Katie Mays represented the group. Money for the meals sold will benefit the FFA and its projects.
An auction was held to raise money for St. Jude’s. Ron Smoak served as the auctioneer.
The trail boss for the ride was J.L. Williams.
Outriders for the day were Ron Smoak, Roger Parsons, David Sykes, Allen Frierson, Don Snyder and David Crockett.
Members of the Madison County Sheriff’s Posse who rode during the day were C.B. Knight, Jason Kinsey, Jeremy Kinsey, Laura Sykes, Tim Day, Connie Day, Ruthanne Gardner and David Crockett.
Members of the St. Jude’s Trail Ride committee, who helped organize the event were Jo Williams, J.L. Williams, Ana Portillo, Betsy Pertierra, Bernita Broome, Cheryl Kelty, C.B. Knight, Roger Parsons, Betty Parsons, Jean Stick, Pat Shartran and Jackie Kirkland.
A host of members from both clubs showed up early to do volunteer work. Area businesses and individuals provided extra necessities for the ride.
A total of $2,217.00 was raised from the ride fees, the auction and other donations.

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