Midweek 8-24-16

Page 1

Little Rock, AR 72202 Permit No. 471

PRS RT S TD U.S . PO S TA G E PA ID

Wednesday, August 24, 2016 Number 34, Volume 37

MID-WEEK

MARKETPLACE

Servin g th e H ot Sprin gs / G a rla n d C ou n ty a rea s in ce 19 77

Submitted photo

SUNNY DAYS: Lake Hamilton graduate Whitney Clement takes in the sun along the Appalachian Trail recently. Clement has completed a little more than half a thru-hike of the trail. Photo courtesy of Robert Tung.

LH hiker makes halfway point of Appalachian Trail MARA KUHN

The Sentinel-Record

Lake Hamilton graduate Whitney Clement passed a significant milestone last week in her journey of a lifetime, completing a little more than half a thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail.

In a cellphone interview from Gun Cannon, Pa., Clement said she has hiked nearly 1,150 miles so far. She began her hike in mid-May at the beginning of the trail in Springer Mountain in Georgia, headed to Mount Katahdin in Maine. At the end of her journey she will

have hiked more than 2,000 miles through 14 states. Clement said her favorite part so far is the friendships she has made. “The people out here make it 10 times better,” she said, because everyone on the trail is experienc-

ing the same things and having the same hardships. “It’s great having people out here that know what’s going on and know what you are going though,” she said. Even the people she has encountered who are not hiking the

trail have been wonderful, she said. The people she has met in the towns, those who have seen her walking and given her rides, the trail maintainers and the park rangers have made her experience better, she said.

CLEMENT, PAGE 2

The Sentinel-Record/Mara Kuhn

UPGRADES AHEAD: Hot Springs Mall Cinema, located behind Hot Springs Mall on Central Avenue, will begin improving its facilities

in the next couple of weeks, including the installation of leather reclining chairs for viewing movies and the addition of food such as burgers and pizza to the menu.

Local Cinema to upgrade facilities MAX BRYAN

The Sentinel-Record

A local theater will soon be raising the bar for movie watching in Garland County. Hot Springs Mall Cinema, located behind Hot Springs Mall on Central Avenue, will upgrade the moviegoing experience when it installs items such as leather reclining chairs, a full dining menu and additional screens. It will begin the process of adding these features soon, according to Matt Smith, the theater’s owner. These additions are part of the process of bringing Hot Springs Mall Cinema up to the level of Smith’s Little Rock theater, Riverdale 10. “Expanding there in Hot Springs has always been something that I’ve wanted to do; I’ve just had other projects on the drawing board,” Smith said. “Now, I’ve been able to circle back.” Smith purchased the theater in 2009 and immediately began remodeling the building to make moviegoers’ experience more enjoyable. His push for more comfortable seating and more food options is the latest in his efforts to improve his theater. Smith said that the theater will begin this phase of improvement by installing a full-service kitchen, which will be used to cook the items on the new menu, in the next few weeks. Some of the new menu items planned are handcrafted pizza, boneless chicken wings and cheeseburgers,

along with the typical movie fare of popcorn, soft drinks and candy. The next phase of upgrading will consist of installing reclining leather seats into the theaters. The electric recliners will have built-in food and drink trays. The chairs’ installation process will begin around the beginning of September, he said. Ronnie Smith, general manager of Hot Springs Mall Cinema, said that customers have reacted well to the model recliner sitting in the theater’s lobby. “We’ve had a huge positive response over the seats,” he said. “I think it’ll be a great addition and I think it’ll bring in a lot of new customers.” Matt Smith plans to have these two additions ready for use by the fall. The next phase to follow will be adding new screens to the facility, taking the theater from having five screens to 10, which will begin once the other two projects have been completed. “We’ll have to get through this remodel that we’re doing,” he said. “Get our seats in there, get our kitchen equipment in there, get that up and running. Then we’ll be looking at expanding.” Matt Smith said that he hopes that his theater will be up to 10 screens by next summer. In doing this, he hopes to keep a few screens open for movies that are not recent Hollywood blockbusters, just as he has at Riverdale 10.

“If you look at the Riverdale 10, we’ll have seven or eight big-budget Hollywood films that play everywhere,” he said. “We want a couple of cool films — foreign, or international, or documentary or art-type movies.” He said the additional movies will hopefully afford him the opportunity to partner with local entities to regularly hold a feature film viewing event, like his “Too Cool Tuesday” event at Riverdale 10, in which people with film-related professions in Little Rock promote a weekly Tuesday night viewing of a classic film. “That’s the kind of thing I’d like to do in Hot Springs,” he said. “Every Tuesday night, do some special programming.” Hot Springs Mall Cinema is also working to improve the overall appearance of the theater itself. Ronnie Smith said he will soon be installing new poster boxes on the theater’s exterior and replacing the marquis signs with flat-screen TVs. Ronnie Smith said he believes the new chairs, wider variety of food and other improvements will bring a “huge response” and the once-neglected theater will be much more attractive to anyone who had previously passed it up. “It’s going to bring people who have, in the past, kind of looked down on this theater as being rundown or not very well kept,” he said. “The new additions and upgrades that we’re doing will bring people back out to us.”

Submitted photo

ALL SMILES: Kindergarten students, from left, Price White, Tuck-

er Davenport and Mackenzie Jackson said they were ready to begin the school year on Aug. 15 in Ashley Hemleben’s class at Lakeside Primary School. The seven Garland County public school districts opened the 2016-17 school year Aug. 15.

Classes back in session JAY BELL

The Sentinel-Record

Gloomy skies and rain greeted families the morning of Aug. 15 as students returned to school, but officials said the 2016-17 school year opened without any major issues. A downed tree affected traffic at Lakeside Intermediate School and a closed lane on Malvern Avenue slowed drop offs that morning. Superintendent Shawn Cook said the rest of the first day went smoothly. “The new roundabout works very well,” Cook said. “It’s nice to see all of the kids’ smiling faces. They came in and got to watch the little pre-K kids as they

• 300 Spring St. Hot Springs, AR 71901 • To subscribe or place an advertisement, call 501-623-7711 or 922-0979 in Hot Springs Village •

were bused over going to the cafeteria this morning. Just watching their first experience being on a school bus is really neat.” Cook said the district expects the traffic issues to be resolved. “Things are going really good,” Cook said. “We are looking forward to a great new school year.” “The first day of school has gone very smooth,” said Lake Hamilton Superintendent Steve Anderson. “With the higher than usual morning traffic and the morning rain combined, we did have a soggy beginning with a few expected delays. However, for the most part, things

SCHOOL, PAGE 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.