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Century of history Sumter County Museum celebrates as Williams-Brice house turns 100 years old C1
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Alice Drive to participate in Teach to Lead
Shiloh water delivery debated Clashing concerns drive line extension question BY ADRIENNE SARVIS adrienne@theitem.com Concerns about providing clean water to residents while maintaining reserve funds drove Sumter County Public Utilities Committee’s meeting on Tuesday evening as the group discussed how to pay for two Shiloh water line extensions with limited money.
All Sumter County Council members were present during the meeting; the committee only consists of councilman Charles Edens, councilman Jim McCain and councilman Gene Baten. The first item discussed by the committee was the possibility of extending Shiloh water lines to Caution Lane and Rush Street, both located off of Narrow Paved Road. Sumter County Administrator Gary Mixon said county council chairwoman Vivian Fleming-McGhaney asked
county staff to review the revenue capacity to determine if the expansions would be feasible. Sumter County Water Utility Engineer Mike Weatherly said there are eight existing homes on Caution Road and 17 existing homes on Rush Road. Extending the water lines to Caution Road would cost approximately $47,000 and extending to Rush Road would cost approximately $206,000, he said.
School 1 of only 12 in nation selected BY KONSTANTIN VENGEROWSKY konstantin@theitem.com
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those who must keep a constant watch over a glassdoored cooling unit which houses the bags of plasma and blood cells. The cooler is
Alice Drive Middle School, a nationally certified Science, Technology, Engineering and Math school, has been selected as one of 12 schools in the nation, and the only one in South Carolina, to participate in the 2016-17 Teach to Lead initiative. The initiative is a national program that recognizes and advances “groundbreaking teacher-led work happening across the country,” according to www.teachtolead.org. The program’s mission is to advance student outcomes by expanding opportunities for teacher leadership, according to the website. Teacher Leadership Summits are two-day workshops that involve turning educators’ ideas into action plans. As part of the program, five educators from the school will attend and present at a teacher leadership summit in late September in Long Beach, California. The team will present on its proposal, called “STEM 2.0: Taking our Nationally Certified STEM Program to the Next Level.” The program will be led by Trevor Ivey, the school’s assistant principal, and four of the school’s lead teachers: Christine Shuler, seventh-grade English language arts and STEM teacher; Stephanie Barrineau, instructional coach; Leslie Lloyd, eighth-grade social studies and STEM teacher; and Cindy Parker, sixthgrade math and Project Lead the Way teacher. Ivey said the summit will involve: • Sharing ideas and learning from examples of existing teacher leadership efforts; • Identifying common challenges and creating concrete, actionable teacher leadership plans to address them locally; • Networking and building relationships with other educators and leaders in their region; and • Identifying ideas for followup support through future engagement events.
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Banking on Tuomey to save lives Hospital depends on Red Cross for blood donations BY JIM HILLEY jim@theitem.com Blood, and blood components, have many different uses in modern medicine. Keeping a supply of blood products on hand is crucial for a hospital such as Palmetto Health Tuomey. Depending on the need, medical practitioners may need plasma, blood cells or platelets, and the hospital’s blood bank staff must keep all of those components stored safely for patient needs. Sandra Gerbode is the clinical lab supervisor who oversees the blood bank and hematology department at Tuomey, and she explained that just as different parts of the blood are used for different purposes, the blood components must be stored in different ways. Blood plasma, which is stored as a liquid, must be kept frozen, she said, or the clotting agents in the plasma are destroyed. “Plasma is used for people whose blood is not clotting properly,” she said. “They may be on a blood thinner or aspirin therapy.” Red blood cells must also be kept frozen, she said, but red blood cells are not kept as a liquid. She said red blood cells carry oxygen to the body and are used for people who are anemic or need more oxygen. Red blood cells are often needed by patients undergoing chemotherapy, she said. “Chemotherapy destroys red blood cells,” she said. “Chemo is a wonderful treatment for cancer, but it kills a
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Blood bank supervisor Sandra Gerbode checks on a refrigerator full of blood and its components inside the laboratory at Tuomey Medical Center. lot of stuff we have to replace.” A third blood product is platelets, which are also used to promote clotting, especially when clotting is needed quickly, such as after
an accident, a shooting or surgery, she said. “We use a lot of platelets,” she said. “It can clot relatively quickly.” In the blood bank at Tuomey, Gerbode is among
Feds: Church shooting suspect entrenched in his beliefs COLUMBIA (AP) — A white man charged with the shooting deaths of nine black churchgoers in Charleston “self-radicalized” in the months before the attack and grew more entrenched in his beliefs in white supremacy, according to court papers prosecutors filed this week in federal court. The information filed Monday was part of a list of more than a dozen expert witnesses whom prosecutors intend to call in Dylann Roof’s federal death penalty trial later this year. Roof, 22, is charged in the June 2015 deaths of nine black parishioners at
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Emanuel AME Church. He also faces a possible death sentence if convicted of murder charges in state court. Roof’s actions, according to the government, were “consistent with the concept of leaderless resistance and martyrdom advocated by white supremacy extremist groups and self-radicalROOF ization leading to violence.” Experts in white supremacy, the government notes, are expected to testify on Roof’s “extrem-
ist ideology, including a belief in the need to use violence to achieve white supremacy.” Roof’s increasing tendency toward white supremacist ideology, the government alleges, came in Roof’s “travel to such race-relevant destinations as the site of his crimes and locations that have connections to the antebellum and Confederate eras.” Experts also will comment on patterns in Roof’s travel, personal interests and dress, which the government says will show as being “consistent with the adoption of white supremacist beliefs
DEATHS, B6 Joseph W. Marlowe Marie Pack Wilson Brian David King Zenobia E. Miller
Robert P. Glover Rosa K. Haynesworth Leslie Corbett Willie E. Hammett
through self-radicalization.” Authorities have long said they thought Roof was the author of an online manifesto in which he embraced Confederate symbols and talked about white supremacy. Handwriting analysis experts are expected to testify that he wrote another similar document while jailed after his arrest. Also Monday, a media attorney objected to closing a hearing on request by Roof’s defense to keep some evidence out of Roof’s federal trial. U.S.
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A NICE SUMMER DAY
2 SECTIONS, 20 PAGES VOL. 121, NO. 261
Partly sunny and pleasant today, not so hot; tonight, cooler and clear. HIGH 91, LOW 68
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