July 30, 2016

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Child scalded, man jailed 3-year-old allegedly sprayed with hot water by sitter’s boyfriend BY ADRIENNE SARVIS adrienne@theitem.com

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

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SERVING SOUTH CAROLINA SINCE OCTOBER 15, 1894 3 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES | VOL. 121, NO. 241

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Sumter County Sheriff's Office arrested a man on Friday for allegedly spraying a 3-year-old boy with scalding water, causing secondand third-degree burns, reportedly because the child made a bowel movement in his pants and inside the shower on Monday. Steve Johnson, of 4627 Blanche Road, Lot 13, is charged with unlawful neglect of a child or helpless person for spraying the child’s buttocks and legs with scalding water using a shower wand while in the

4600 block of Blanche Road. According to the sheriff's office, the child screamed throughout the entire incident. The child was first taken to Palmetto Health Tuomey before being transported to Augusta Burn Center for treatment. JOHNSON Ken Bell, public information officer for the sheriff's office, said Johnson is the boyfriend of the child's babysitter. He said Johnson's girlfriend agreed to live in the same house

with the child and his mother rent free in exchange for caring for the boy. They were all friends, Bell said. He said the incident occurred when Johnson was visiting the home. Johnson faces a fine at the discretion of the court and a maximum of 10 years in prison if convicted, he said. Bell said Johnson is charged with unlawful neglect instead of child abuse because he is considered a caregiver for the child. The penalties for both charges are essentially the same, he said.

SENIORS Children’s home back in action Age better Our annual guide to making life’s later years its best C1 REVIEW

The newest resurrection of Jason Bourne A5 NATION

AP fact checks Hillary after DNC speech A6 PHOTOS BY KONSTANTIN VENGEROWSKY / THE SUMTER ITEM

Above, a model train runs in front of the Turbeville Children’s Home. The home was purchased by the International Pentecostal Holiness Church in October 2015 and reopened in March. Below, Mike Dillard, new director of the children’s home, stands in front of the main office on Friday.

DEATHS, A7 Roger L. Regalado Joseph V. Brown Maxie L. Coleman Stevie L. Hall Willie M. Prince

Turbeville facility run by Pentecostal Holiness Church serves children from South Carolina

WEATHER, A8 ANOTHER SCORCHER

BY KONSTANTIN VENGEROWSKY konstantin@theitem.com

Hot and sunny today; chance of storms this evening. HIGH 98, LOW 76

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After being closed for two years, Turbeville Children's Home has reopened its doors under new ownership. The home has been in existence in Turbeville since 1949 and was owned for 65 years by the South Carolina Free Will Baptist State Association. In February 2014, the association voted to close the home because it was not being able to operate at full capacity with the flow of income and expenses, according to a statement made on the home's former website. In October 2015, the home was purchased by the International Pentecostal Holiness Church. The facility is a division of Falcon Children's Home and Family Services,

a private nonprofit institution that also operates a children's home in Falcon, North Carolina. The children's home officially reopened on March 1, and the demand for it was immediately felt, said Mike Dillard, the new director of the facility. "A week before we opened, we received a call from the South Caroli-

Shaw spouses deliver gifts to Sumter police BY ADRIENNE SARVIS adrienne@theitem.com Shaw Air Force Base spouses delivered 124 gift bags and three cases of water to Sumter Police Department to show their support for the law enforcement agency on Thursday. A representative of the group who did not wish to share her name said the spouses prepared the gift bags on Wednesday night. She said the gifts were prepared by many people and she did not want to take the spotlight away from the group. Although this may not be some of the spouses' hometown, it is their home right now, she said. The Shaw group wants to show its support of local first responders during a time when there are some unpleasant things are happening across the country, she said. The representative said the spouses also plan to deliver gifts to other first responder agencies in Sumter and at Shaw within the next few weeks. Attached to each gift bag was a letter from the Shaw group stating that the spouses appreciate

SEE SPOUSES, PAGE A7

na Department of Social Services inquiring if we could house eight children," Dillard said. The home has a maximum capacity to house 36 children, and 26 are residing there. The children, ranging in age from seven to 17, came through DSS and may have a

SEE HOME, PAGE A7

Bishopville municipal election set for Nov. 8 BY JIM HILLEY jim@theitem.com

KEITH GEDAMKE / THE SUMTER ITEM

Patrolman Michael Roberson lets his K-9 “ Riley” look inside the goody bag donated by the wives of Shaw Air Force Base on Thursday morning. The wives donated treats for the dogs and a bag of candy and snacks for the officer.

In addition to voting for president and other candidates in the general election, Bishopville residents will choose six city council members when they go to the polls Tuesday, Nov. 8. The Bishopville Election Commission met Thursday and voted 2-0 to hold a special municipal election in concurrence with the general election. The special election was made necessary by a South Carolina Supreme Court ruling affirming the commission’s decision to invalidate an election for city council held in May 2015. That decision was appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, which caused a delay of more than a year before a special election could be held. A vacancy on the council was also created by the death of Councilman Michael Morrow on May 11. Committee members Delphine Peterson and Meoceania Wells met with Bishopville City Attorney Will Wheeler, City Administrator Gregg McCutchen and Lee County Voter Registration Office Executive Director Stan Barnhill, who provided assistance to the committee members in making a decision. A third member of the commission,

SEE ELECTION, PAGE A7


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SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

THE SUMTER ITEM

Call: (803) 774-1226 | E-mail: pressrelease@theitem.com

LOCAL & STATE BRIEFS

Police seek 5 in alleged mob assault

FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS

Clarendon County woman dies in fire Clarendon County Fire Department and South Carolina Law Enforcement Division are investigating a mobile home fire that claimed the life of a Summerton woman Thursday night. Paralee Sabb, 65, of 1728 Ferris Street, died in the fire that engulfed her home, according to Clarendon County Deputy Coroner Bucky Mock. Mock said an autopsy will be performed today to determine the cause of death. Clarendon County Fire Department Chief Frances Richbourg said the 911 call came in at 9:09 p.m., as a structure fire with the possibility of someone inside. The mobile home was totally engulfed when the first firefighter arrived on the scene five minutes later, she said. Firefighters could not enter the structure due to the intensity of the flames, Richbourg said. About 30 firefighters battled the blaze for several hours, she said. Richbourg said after the fire was put out, the body of the female victim was recovered. SLED is investigating the cause of the fire.

All lanes on Lafayette Bridge open for traffic South Carolina Department of Transportation Resident Construction Engineer Jeffrey Wilkes said grading work on Lafayette Bridge was finished on Friday and all lanes are open for traffic. There are temporary traffic markings currently on the roadway and permanent markings will be painted in two weeks, he said. Wilkes said the asphalt needs to cure for a minimum of two weeks before the paint can be added.

2 rallies planned today after police shootings COLUMBIA — Black Lives Matter and the nonprofit Building Communities and Families are holding separate rallies outside the Statehouse. Spokesman Chris Sullivan says the BCF event from 9:30 a.m. until noon Saturday is meant to provide people a safe, peaceful way to voice their concerns about racism and get involved. Attendees can register to vote and sign up to volunteer with various organizations. Sullivan says the event will include role playing on how people can help themselves during a traffic stop. Attendees are encouraged to bring water, school supplies and nonperishables for distribution. Black Lives Matter will rally from 3-7 p.m., according to its reservation application.

Sumter Police Department has released warrants and is looking for five men involved in a mob assault on Marilyn Avenue on July 13. Detectives are also working to identify a sixth man involved in the assault, states a release from the police department. Reports indicate the victim, whose injuries were not life-threatening, was punched about the face and body by a group of men. According to the release, the reason for the attack remains under investigation. Wanted are Dontrell Devontae Dean, 22, last known address 927 Mathis St., Apt. B; Tavoris Lamont Gaillard, 22, last known address 1054 Porter St.; Kennan Alonza Georgia, 24, last known address 1068 Fireglow St., Manning; Bernard Colin Peoples, 22, last known

address 945 Gaines Road; and Arkeylin Keytron Scott, 23, last known address 23 W. Patricia Drive. Each suspect faces a charge of assault and battery by mob, third degree. The men are also wanted for questioning regarding the shooting death of 28-year-old Ante’ Witherspoon. Witherspoon was shot to death on July 15 near his family’s home on Dibert Street. The release states that a suspect, Bernie Peoples, 28, turned himself in to police the next day and remains at Sumter-Lee Regional Detention Center on a murder charge. Anyone with information about the whereabouts of the five men, the July 13 attack or July 15 fatal shooting cases are asked to call Sumter Police Department at (803) 436-2700.

DEAN

GAILLARD

PEOPLES

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Information can also be given anonymously by calling Crime Stoppers at (803) 436-2718 or 1-888-CRIME-SC. A reward could be available for information leading to arrest.

Group feeding children needs 200 volunteers FROM STAFF REPORTS The group organizing the Feed Our Starving Children MobilePak needs an additional 200 volunteers to help package 200,000 meals to benefit starving children, according to a news release issued Thursday. The event, in which local volunteers work together in human assembly lines to package nutritious meals, will be held Tuesday and Wednesday at Sumter County Civic Center. Sumter Feed My Starving Children Lead Coordinator Sarah Bradham said the organization plans to double its size from last year by putting 1,000 volunteers to work to reach the 200,000 meal goal. In 2015, the local group packed 111,024 meals which fed 304 children one meal a day for a year. The meals contain specially formulated ingredients of a vitamin powder, dried vegetables, soy and rice which are packed and sealed in bags to ship to distribution partners throughout the world.

PHOTO PROVIDED

Volunteers work in shifts in a human assemly line to package food for children throughout the world. Organizers need to raise $44,000 to purchase the ingredients to package. So far, the organization has raised more than $37,000, including a $7,500 sponsorship from Palmetto Health Tuomey. Children as young as 5 years old can volunteer with their parents and there are jobs available for all ages and physical abilities, says Traci Morse, Sumter volunteer leader for the organization.

If you're interested in volunteering, you can register in advance for available shifts online at www.fmsc. org/mobilepack/events and select South Carolina to find the Sumter event. Because the event requires organizers to have an exact number of volunteers to organize the process, volunteers cannot just show up to help on the day of the event. The event also has its own Facebook page at Sumter Feeds My

Starving Children. For more information or to volunteer, contact Bradham at spbradham@gmail. com or call (803) 968-1686. Feed My Starving Children tackles world hunger by sending volunteer-packaged meals to an estimated 70 countries where they're used to operate orphanages, schools, clinics and feeding programs to break the cycle of poverty, according to the news release.

Man used stolen debit card number to make purchases FROM STAFF REPORTS Sumter Police Department needs help identifying a man who allegedly used a fake card with a stolen debit card number to make purchases at a shoe store in Sumter Mall at 1057 Broad St. The victim discovered the fraudulent transaction earlier this week after receiving her bank statement, according to a news release from the department. After reporting the transaction to her financial institution, her card number was traced to a purchase made earlier in the month at the local shoe store. Surveillance video recorded inside the store captured an unidentified man making a purchase of more than $180. Anyone with information is asked to call Sumter Police Department at (803) 436-2700. Information can also be given anonymously by calling Crime Stoppers at (803) 436-2718 or

PHOTO PROVIDED

Sumter Police Department is seeking the identity of the photographed man, captured on surveillance footage, for allegedly using a stolen debit card number to make a purchase at a shoe store in Sumter Mall earlier this month. 1-888-CRIME-SC. If you think you could be a victim of a fraudulent debit or credit card trans-

action, please notify local law enforcement and your financial institution immediately.

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20 N. Magnolia St., Sumter, S.C. 29150 (803) 774-1200 Jack Osteen Editor and Publisher / Advertising jack@theitem.com (803) 774-1238 Michele Barr Rick Carpenter Business Manager Managing Editor michele@theitem.com rick@theitem.com (803) 774-1249 (803) 774-1201 Gail Mathis Jeff West Clarendon Bureau Customer Service Manager Manager jeff@theitem.com gail@theitem-clarendonsun.com (803) 774-1259 (803) 435-4716 Member, Verified Audit Circulation

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The Sumter Item is published six days a week except for July 4, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years Day (unless it falls on a Sunday) by Osteen Publishing Co., 20 N. Magnolia St., Sumter, SC 29150. Periodical postage paid at Sumter, SC 29150. Postmaster: Send address changes to Osteen Publishing Co., 20 N. Magnolia St., Sumter, SC 29150 Publication No. USPS 525-900


LOCAL | NATION

THE SUMTER ITEM

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

BY IVY MOORE ivy@theitem.com

Botts' Beans and butterscotch beer. At 12:01 a.m., technically on Sunday, July 31, when the book can be released legally, the Books-A-Million staff will pass out the books. In order to get one of the first editions, you must have a voucher, obtained at Books-A-Million by

MIAMI (AP) — Mosquitoes have apparently begun spreading the Zika virus on the U.S. mainland for the first time, health officials said Friday, a longfeared turn in the epidemic that is sweeping Latin America and the Caribbean. Four recently infected people in the Miami area — one woman and three men — are believed to have contracted the virus locally through mosquito bites, Gov. Rick Scott said. No mosquitoes in Florida have actually been found to be carrying Zika, despite the testing of 19,000 by the state lab. But other methods of Zika transmission, such as travel to a stricken country or sex with an infected person, have been ruled out. "Zika is now here," said Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Still, U.S. health officials said they do not expect widespread outbreaks in this country like those seen in Brazil, in part because of better sanitation, better mosquito control and wider use of window screens and air conditioners. The virus has triggered alarm across the Western Hemisphere's warmer latitudes. While most people who get Zika don't even know they are sick, infection during pregnancy can cause severe brain-related birth defects, including disastrously small heads. More than 1,650 people in the mainland U.S. have been infected with Zika in recent months, nearly all

paying in advance. The pre-release voucher is $20.99 and is sold until midnight tonight; after 12:01, if any books are left and you don't have a voucher, the price is $29.99, Miller said. For more information, call Books-A-Million at (803) 7731091.

2 San Diego police officers shot, 1 fatally SAN DIEGO (AP) — Two San Diego police officers were shot — one fatally — after a latenight stop turned into a gunfight, triggering a manhunt that led to the capture of one wounded suspect in a ravine and an hours-long SWAT standoff Friday that ended after officers detained a second man who may have been involved.

The shooting came as departments around the country are on high alert following the killing of officers in Dallas and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, this month. San Diego Police Chief Shelley Zimmerman said it was unknown whether the San Diego attack was premeditated. The chain of events unfolded over more than 12 hours in

POLICE BLOTTER a.m. on Friday. According to an incident report from Sumter Police Department, a Browning pistol was found under the front passenger seat of the vehicle. STOLEN PROPERTY A black 1998 Chevrolet pickup sustained about $1,000 in damage when the vehicle was broken into and the wiring around the steering wheel was pulled out while the vehicle was parked in the 900 block of Wolfpack Court between 9 p.m. on Wednesday and midnight on Thursday. The victim told officers that nothing inside the vehicle was taken but the vehicle will no longer start, according to an incident report from Sumter Police Department.

of diamond earrings. The employee gave the man one earring to hold up to his ear as a reference. The man returned an earring that was later determined to be a fake. A white 2006 Ford F-250, valued at $12,000, was taken from the rear parking lot of a hotel in the 1300 block of Broad Street

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between 8 p.m. on Wednesday and 7 a.m. on Thursday. The four-door truck has tinted windows, a Virginia license plate and an old outline of a Harley Davidson sticker on the back window. According to an incident report from Sumter Police Department, the victim still has the key to the vehicle.

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while traveling abroad. The four people in Florida are believed to be first to contract the virus from mosquitoes within the 50 states. "This is not just a Florida issue. It's a national issue — we just happen to be at the forefront," Scott said. Florida agricultural officials immediately announced more aggressive mosquito-control efforts, and Florida politicians rushed to assure tourists it's still safe to visit the state. Some medical experts said pregnant women should not travel to the Miami area, especially if the visit involves spending time outdoors. The CDC is not issuing such advice, however. Health officials said the U.S. might see small clusters of infections. But "we don't expect widespread transmission in the continental United States," the CDC's Frieden said. The four Florida infections are thought to have occurred in a small area just north of downtown Miami, in the Wynwood arts district, the governor said. The area, known for bold murals spray-painted across warehouses, art galleries, restaurants and boutiques, is rapidly gentrifying and has a number of construction sites where standing water can collect and serve as a breeding ground for mosquitoes. People in Florida's Miami-Dade and Broward counties are being tested to learn whether there are more cases, the governor said.

t u O r ce n Ca

CHARGES Jamaal K. Colclough, 32, of 4525 Patriot Parkway, was arrested about 2:35 a.m. Thursday and charged with driving under suspicion, third offense, after he was stopped at a traffic stop at the intersection of Loring Mill Road and Timberline Meadows subdivision, according to an incident report from Sumter Police Department. Trevon Jackson, 18, of 3475 W. Brewington Road, was arrested and charged with unlawful carry of a weapon after officers smelled marijuana inside his vehicle while at a driver's license and safety checkpoint at the intersection of U.S. 378 and U.S. 521 about 12:50

a blue-collar area of southeastern San Diego with modest single-story homes and streets lined with palm trees. It started about 11 p.m. Thursday when two veteran gang unit officers in bulletproof vests stopped a person on a street. Almost immediately a shootout ensued and the officers called for backup.

A white gold .5 carat diamond stud earring valued at $1,000 was stolen from a jewelry store in Sumter Mall, 1057 Broad St., about 3:30 p.m. on Thursday. According to an incident report from Sumter Police Department, an employee told officers that a black male entered the store and asked to try on a pair

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Mosquitoes now spreading Zika virus in U.S.

Harry Potter’s back at midnight tonight The day boy wizard fans have been waiting nine years for starts at 9 p.m. with today’s release party before "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child" goes on sale at 12:01 a.m. Sunday. Books-A-Million, like hundreds of bookstores around the country, is hosting a big release party at its store in Sumter Mall. As Mad-Eye Moody said, "There's nothing like a nighttime stroll to give you ideas." Those ideas might help Potter fans come up with winning costumes for the event. "We're going to have lots of fun activities to pass the three hours until 12:01," said Tracy Miller, store manager. The staff will be dressed as characters from J.K. Rowling's series of Harry Potter books, and the store is having a costume contest for Potter's fans. Also during the three hours before the books are offered up for sale will be a wandmaking class, face painting and a trivia contest based on the books, she said. "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child: Parts I & II" is not a novel, but the script of a play, which is now running in London's West End. Author Rowling has managed to keep most spoilers from being widely publicized. The store will also have Harry Potter-themed snacks on sale. Among them are Harry Potter frogs, Bertie

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For more information or to reserve a lane for this event, please contact Kathy Stafford at 803-774-1212 or email kathy@theitem.com

All proceeds will benefit The Sumter Item’s photographer, co-worker and friend -- in his fight to beat lung cancer. Make checks payable to: Keith Gedamke Chomp Out Cancer Fund.


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(N) (HD) Justice (HD) 131 (6:30) Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (‘05, Fantasy) aaac Daniel Radcliffe. A young wizard competes in (:15) Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (‘09, Fantasy) aaa Daniel Radcliffe. A wizard a hazardous tournament between rival schools. (HD) finds a book that unlocks his powerful enemy’s mysterious past. (HD) 42 MLB Baseball: Philadelphia Phillies at Atlanta Braves from Turner Field z{| (HD) Post Game Post Game MLB Baseball: Philadelphia vs Atlanta (HD) For Love & Honor (‘16, Romance) James Denton. A retired Army colonel Gold. Girl Lottery Golden Girls: Gold. Girl: Stan 183 Summer Villa (‘16, Romance) Hilarie Burton. A celebrity chef and a romance novelist meet accidentally at a French villa. (HD) clashes with the academic dean of a private school. (HD) winner. Scared Straight Takes a Wife 112 Property Brothers (HD) Property Brothers (HD) Beachfront Bargain Hunt: (N) House Hunters (N) (HD) Hunters (HD) Hunters (HD) Beachfront 110 American Pickers (HD) American Pickers (HD) American Pickers (HD) American Pickers (HD) Ozzy and Jack’s World (HD) Am. Picker 160 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit: Law & Order: Special Victims Unit: Law & Order: Special Victims Unit: Law & Order: Special Victims Unit: Law & Order: Special Victims Unit: Law & Order: Pretend Fight on tape. (HD) Screwed (HD) Alternate Child abuse. (HD) Avatar Virtual gamer. (HD) Impulsive (HD) SVU (HD) Killer Coach (‘16, Thriller) Keesha Sharp, Javicia Leslie. (HD) (:03) Killer Assistant (‘16, Thriller) Arianne Zucker. Magazine editor’s assis- (:02) Killer Coach 145 You May Now Kill the Bride (‘16, Thriller) Tammin Sursok. (HD) tant becomes obsessed with her after one-night stand. (HD) (‘16) (HD) 92 Dateline NBC (HD) Dead Men Talking: Trail (HD) Dead Men Final Exit (HD) Dateline NBC (HD) Dead Men Talk (HD) Lockup (HD) 210 Thunderman Thunderman Thunderman Nicky (N) Dudas (N) Shakers Full House Full House Friends (HD) Friends (HD) Friends (HD) 153 Cops (HD) Cops (HD) Cops (N) (HD) Cops (HD) Jail (N) (HD) Cops (HD) Cops (HD) Cops (HD) Cops (HD) Cops (HD) Cops (HD) Sharknado 2: The Second One (‘14, Science Fiction) aa Ian Ziering. Zombie Shark (‘15, Action) Cassie Steele. Friends battle 152 Sharknado (‘13, Science Fiction) a Tara Reid. Deadly sharks and high-speed tornadoes terrorize a collapsing Los Angeles. (HD) Storm unleashes tornado with sharks. experimental shark. 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Full Frontal (HD) Wrecked Great (:01) Angie 156 (HD) (HD) (HD) Theory (HD) Theory (HD) Theory (HD) Theory (HD) Theory (HD) escape. (HD) Tribeca (HD) The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (‘66, Western) aaaa Clint Eastwood. Three disparate lowlifes decide to (:15) The Lineup (‘58, Crime) aaa Eli Wallach. Two 186 Logan’s Run (‘76, Science Fiction) aac Michael York. Death at 29. team up to hunt for a Confederate treasure. hitmen search for lost drug shipment 157 48 Hours: Hard Evidence (HD) 48 Hours: Hard Evidence (HD) 48 Hours: Hard Evidence (N) 48 Hours: Hard Evidence (N) 48 Hours: Hard Evidence (HD) 48 Hours: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (‘03, Fantasy) aaaa Ian McKellen. One 158 (6:00) The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (‘02, Fantasy) aaaa Elijah Wood. Frodo and Sam continue their quest to destroy the One Ring in Mordor. (HD) Ring’s influence on hobbit increases as he nears end of his journey. (HD) 129 Carbonaro Carbonaro Jokers Inside Jokes Inside Jokes Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) (:02) Jokers 161 Reba (HD) Reba (HD) Reba (HD) Reba (HD) Loves Ray. Loves Ray. Loves Ray. Loves Ray. Queens (HD) Queens (HD) Queens (HD) (6:00) The Bourne Iden tity (‘02, Ac tion) aaa Matt The Bourne Su prem acy (‘04, Ac tion) aaac Matt Damon. Bourne is blamed for mur der in Mod ern Fam ily: Mod ern Fam ily Mod ern Family 132 Damon. An amnesiac flees from secret agents. a failed CIA operation and goes on the run. Snip (HD) (HD) (HD) 166 Law & Order: Mother Love (HD) Law & Order Navy murder. (HD) Law & Order (HD) Law & Order: Jurisdiction (HD) Law & Order: Virus (HD) Law & Ordr 172 xXx (‘02, Action) aac Vin Diesel. Outlaw agents battles Russian gang. (HD) xXx: State of the Union (‘05, Thriller) ac Ice Cube. (HD) Person of Interest (HD)

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‘Sharknado: The 4th Awakens’ brings vaudeville to mind BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH At the dawn of television, snarky critics defined TV as “terrible vaudeville.” Six decades later, they’re still partly right. The key to vaudeville was its onslaught of variety. As the old saying went, if you don’t like something (or someone) on stage now, stick around 90 seconds and you’ll see somebody or something else. Vaudeville comes to mind while watching “Sharknado: The 4th Awakens” (8 p.m., Sunday, Syfy, TV-14). As the title implies, it kicks off with an extended “Star Wars” gag. But like most of the bits in the movie, this ends up going nowhere, unless giving way to another pop culture sight gag is a destination in itself. This installment of the spoof movie series takes place in the American heartland, far from shark-infested seas. But not far enough from Hollywood to jar us with the appearance of 1970s supermodel Cheryl Tiegs as a simple Kansas farmer who happens to be Fin Shepard’s (Ian Ziering) mother. The action takes us to Las Vegas, a destination city that gets plenty of product placement before being laid waste by a sandstorm-based SharkNado, or SandNado. Not to give too much away, but one of the recurring gags here are the ever-shifting origins of these killer weather phenomena. Over the course of the two-hour assault, we will experience a BoulderNado, FireNado, NukeNado and an OilNado, as mayhem follows Fin from Vegas to Buffalo by way of the Grand Canyon and Kansas. This curious trajectory allows for a gazillion cameos from the worlds of reality TV, shock rock, pro wrestling and YouTube celebrity. Familiar faces and has-beens from oldfashioned “TV” shows are growing increasingly rare. That doesn’t stop David Faustino (“Married With Children”) from showing up early as a degenerate gambler. Paul Schaffer makes a cameo, and David Hasselhoff resumes his role as Gil Shepard, dragging a few “Baywatch” references along. Stacey Dash, credited here as actress and “pundit,” makes a

dence on “The Night Of” (9 p.m., HBO, TV-MA). • Laurel and Gareth grow closer on “BrainDead” (10 p.m., CBS, TV-14). • Winston gets schooled by a legend on “Roadies” (10 p.m., Showtime, TV-MA). • Reggie and Missy wonder if manners matter on “Survivor’s Remorse” (10 p.m., Starz, TV-MA).

CULT CHOICE

TYLER GOLDEN / SYFY

Ian Ziering, left, stars as Fin Shepard and Tara Reid as April Shepard in “Sharknado: The 4th Awakens,” premiering at 8 p.m. Sunday on Syfy. brief appearance as the mayor of Chicago, in a storyline that simply withers away. Carrot Top crashes the scene as a chatty Uber driver. He’s also among the first to die. You could probably watch this a dozen times and not register or “get” all of the references. At one point, April (Tara Reid) appears in a ridiculously contrived nod to the cover of Action Comics No. 1, the very first Superman comic book, before quickly giving way to a shark-festation of Salt Lake City’s comic convention and moving on to other absurd, fish-way-out-of-water sight gags. • They don’t make, or promote, live-TV daredevil events the way they used to. “Heaven Sent” (8 p.m., Saturday, Fox) presents skydiver and precision flier Luke Aikins as he attempts to jump from an airplane at 25,000 feet — with neither parachute nor wingsuit, nothing but the clothes on his back — and land safely on earth. Just why this death-defying moment is consigned to a Saturday night on the last weekend of July is anybody’s guess. Evel Knievel would have expected a higher profile.

• “Boston EMS” (10 p.m., Saturday, ABC) returns for a second season. The documentary series rides along with members of the Boston Emergency Medical Services. These same first responders rushed to the injured after the Boston Marathon bombing three years back. In the season opener, the EMS paramedics rush to attend to a stabbing victim in a crowded park. Once there, they begin to worry that his baggy outfit might hide an explosive device and that he may have been rigged as a “human bomb.” A grim day’s work, complete with a “ticking clock” storytelling device essential to thrillers both real and scripted. ABC has been attracting a true-crime audience with “20/20: In an Instant” (9 p.m., Saturday, r). Tonight’s story recalls a gunman who held a hospital maternity ward hostage.

SATURDAY’S HIGHLIGHTS • Syfy anticipates its latest spoof sequel with “Sharknado” (7 p.m., TV-14) and “Sharknado 2: The Second One” (9 p.m., TV-14). • An Olympic hopeful discovers that her mentor is a

madman in the 2016 shocker “Killer Coach” (8 p.m., Lifetime, TV-14). • Dee raises money for a Fairbanks clinic on “Dr. Dee: Alaska Vet” (8 p.m., Animal Planet). • An intense retired colonel (James Denton) learns he must loosen up to save his school and his family in the 2016 romance “For Love & Honor” (9 p.m., Hallmark, TV-PG). • The stories of Sitting Bull, Wyatt Earp and Jesse James conclude on the season finale of “The American West” (10 p.m., AMC, TV-14).

TCM recalls “race films,” movies of the 1930s and ‘40s created by black filmmakers for black audiences. Spencer Williams wrote, directed and appears in “The Blood of Jesus” (8 p.m., Sunday, TCM), a 1941 religious melodrama about the fate of the soul of a woman accidentally shot by her husband. Her proximity to heaven or hell is underscored by the use of gospel music or raunchy blues numbers. “Dirty Gertie from Harlem USA” (9:15 p.m.) follows.

SATURDAY SERIES A serial killer resumes work on “Rush Hour” (8 p.m., CBS, TV-14) * Results are read on “America’s Got Talent” (8 p.m., NBC, r, TV-PG) * Separate spaces on “Last Man Standing” (8 p.m., ABC, r, TV-PG) * Laughter and medicine on “Dr. Ken” (8:30 p.m., ABC, r, TV-PG) * Two helpings of “48 Hours” (9 p.m., CBS) * Two hours of “Dateline” (9 p.m., NBC) * Humanity’s fate hangs by a thread on “Wayward Pines” (9 p.m., Fox, r, TV-14).

SUNDAY’S HIGHLIGHTS • Scheduled on “60 Minutes” (7 p.m., CBS): Freed from death row; Greenland’s glaciers face climate change; a village for children in Tanzania. • Justin Timberlake will be recognized for his enduring appeal on “Teen Choice 2016” (8 p.m., Fox, TV-PG). • A college tour grows contentious on “Madam Secretary” (9 p.m., CBS, r, TV-14). • The town waits while Jesse seeks answers from beyond on the season finale of “Preacher” (9 p.m., AMC, TV-14). • Stone scours for new evi-

SUNDAY SERIES Julie Chen hosts “Big Brother” (8 p.m., CBS, TV-14) * Boldfaced mirth on “Hollywood Game Night” (8 p.m., NBC, r, TV-14) * A plug for the “Bachelor” franchise on “Celebrity Family Feud” (8 p.m., ABC, TV-PG) * Hoosier finals on “American Ninja Warrior” (9 p.m., NBC, r, TVPG) * Celebrities hog the spotlight on “The $100,000 Pyramid” (9 p.m., ABC, TV-14) * Alec Baldwin hosts “Match Game” (10 p.m., ABC, TV-14). Copyright 2016 United Feature Syndicate


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Hollywood Game Night: Way-ans to American Ninja Warrior: Indianapolis Finals The City Qualifier’s top 30 par- WIS News 10 at Go! Two contestants lead team in ticipants gather to complete 10 obstacles. (HD) 11:00pm News games. (HD) and weather. 60 Minutes (N) (HD) (:01) Big Brother (N) (HD) Madam Secretary: Higher Learning BrainDead: Notes Toward a News 19 @ 11pm protesters ambush Elizabeth at col- Post-Reagan Theory of Party Alliance, The news of the lege. (HD) Tribalism, and Loyalty (N) (HD) day. America’s Funniest Home Videos Celebrity Family Feud Celebrities The $100,000 Pyramid Alfonso Match Game (N) (HD) ABC Columbia Highlights of the best home videos. compete in a trivia contest to win Ribeiro takes on Mario Batali. (N) News at 11 (HD) (HD) cash for charities. (N) (HD) (HD) Deep City: The Birth of the Miami Dancing on the Edge Louis hides Masterpiece: Inspector Lewis, Series VII: Beyond Good The Tunnel The police may have fiSound (N) (HD) from the police. (N) (HD) & Evil Lewis’ first successful case as a detective inspec- nally found a lead during the fifth and tor is reopened on an appeal. (HD) final “truth.” (N) (HD) The Simpsons: Bob’s Burgers: Teen Choice 2016 Teen voters choose the winners of the 2016 awards in WACH FOX News Ring of Honor Wrestling (N) (HD) Lisa with an “S” Lice Things Are the fields of television, music, film, sports, fashion and comedy and the pre- at 10 Nightly (HD) Lice (HD) sentation of the Decade Award. (HD) news report. How I Met Your How I Met Your Movie Family Guy: Run- Family Guy: Movie Mother: Band or Mother: Ring Up! ning Mates There’s SomeDJ? (HD) (HD) thing About Paulie

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Bones: The He in the She (HD)

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Lest We Forget A Survivor’s Story The Big Bang Theory Penny worries. (HD)

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Intervention: Then & Now: Daniel Drug addict. (N) (HD) (:55) Preacher: Finish the Song Jesse runs. (HD) North Woods Law: On Hunt (N) Bobby Jones Gospel (N) (HD)

Intervention: Robert Crack addict. (N) (HD) Preacher: Call and Response Heaven’s answers. (N) (HD) (:01) North Woods Law (HD)

Escaping Polygamy: Crossing Enemy Lines, Part 2 (HD) (:20) Talking Preacher Season One finale. (N) (HD) (:02) Lone Star Law (HD) Bobby Jones Gospel (HD)

(:01) Born This Way: Game of Love (:03) IntervenMegan in Colorado. (HD) tion: Daniel (HD) (:20) Preacher: Call and Response The town waits for answers from heaven. (HD) North Woods Law: Hunt (HD) North Wood BET Inspiration

The Real Housewives of New Jer- Shahs of Sunset: OMGG (N) The Real Housewives of New Jer- What Happens Shahs of Sunset: OMGG sey: A Life to Envy (N) sey: A Life to Envy (N) (HD) 84 Undercover Boss (HD) Undercover Boss (HD) Undercover Boss (HD) Undercover Boss (HD) Undercover Boss (HD) Undr. Boss 80 CNN Newsroom Sunday Declassified (HD) Declassified Iraq dictator. (HD) Declassified (HD) Declassified (HD) Spies (HD) (:54) Jeff Ross Presents Roast Bat- (:55) Jeff Ross Presents Roast Bat- Jeff Ross Presents Roast Battle: (:10) Jeff Ross Presents Roast Battle: Live Finals (HD) 136 (6:48) Jeff Ross Presents Roast Battle: Day 1 (HD) tle: Day 2 (HD) tle: Day 3 (HD) Live Finals (HD) Bizaardvark: Bizaardvark: Bizaard: Frankie Bizaardvark: The Backstage: Stuck in the Mid- Girl Meets World Girl Meets World Bizaardvark: The Backstage: Austin & Ally 200 Draw My Life Superfan Has a Hater Collab (N) Showtime (N) dle (HD) (HD) (HD) Collab Showtime (HD) (HD) 103 Naked and Afraid (HD) Naked and Afraid (HD) Naked and Afraid XL (N) (HD) Naked and Afraid (N) (HD) (:02) Naked and Afraid (HD) Nkd & Afrd 35 Baseball Tonight: Sunday (HD) MLB Baseball: Seattle Mariners at Chicago Cubs from Wrigley Field z{| (HD) SportsCenter (HD) 39 Sports (HD) CFL Football: Toronto Argonauts at Ottawa Redblacks from TD Place Stadium z{| (HD) Sports (HD) World Armwrestling League ESPN FC (HD) 109 Guy’s Grocery Games (HD) Guy’s Grocery Games (N) (HD) Food Network Star (N) (HD) Cooks vs. Cons (N) (HD) Cooks vs. Cons (HD) Star (HD) 90 FOX Report Sunday (HD) FOX News Channel FOX News Channel The Greg Gutfeld Show FOX News Channel FOX Report 131 (5:00) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 (:45) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (‘11, Fantasy) aaac Daniel Radcliffe. Harry, Ron and Hermione search for the Joel Osteen (‘10, Adventure) aaac Daniel Radcliffe. (HD) three remaining Horcruxes. (HD) 42 World Poker Tour no~ (HD) World Poker Tour no~ (HD) XTERRA World Championship World Poker Tour no} (HD) World Poker Tour no} (HD) MLB Game Gold. Girl: Love 183 Hearts of Spring (‘16, Romance) Lisa Whelchel. A blogger learns that a like- Valentine Ever After (‘16, Romance) Autumn Reeser. A woman finds new The Golden Girls: Gold. Girl able single father has been leaving harsh comments. (HD) opportunities while visiting a dude ranch with her friend. (HD) Blind Date Me Tender 112 Lakefront (HD) Lakefront (HD) Hunt (N) (HD) Hunt (N) (HD) Mexico (N) Mexico (N) Hunters (N) Hunters (N) Hunters (HD) Hunters (HD) Mexico (HD) 110 American Pickers (HD) American Pickers (HD) American Pickers (N) (HD) Ozzy and Jack’s World (N) (HD) (:03) American Pickers (HD) Am. Picker Leverage: The Rashomon Job Past Flashpoint: Jumping at Shadows Flashpoint (HD) 160 Leverage: The Boost Job The Lever- Leverage: The Three-Card Monte Job Leverage: The Underground Job age team steals cars. (HD) Nate’s past. (HD) Mine explosion. (HD) jobs. (HD) Shots fired in home. (HD) My Stepdaughter (‘15, Thriller) aa Emmanuelle Vaugier. Jill suspects (:02) Killer Coach (‘16, Thriller) Keesha Sharp, Javicia 145 Killer Coach (‘16, Thriller) Keesha Sharp, Javicia Leslie. (HD) stepdaughter of murder. (HD) Leslie. (HD) 92 Interrogation (HD) Dateline NBC (HD) Dateline NBC (HD) Lockup (HD) Lockup (HD) Lockup (HD) 210 Thunderman Thunderman Nicky Crashletes Full House Full House Full House Full House Friends (HD) Friends (HD) Friends (HD) 153 Bar Rescue Florida tiki bar. (HD) Bar Rescue (HD) Bar Rescue (N) (HD) Bar Rescue British pub. (HD) Bar Rescue (HD) Bar Rescue 152 (6:00) Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No! (‘15, Sharknado: The 4th Awakens (‘16, Action) Ian Ziering. April’s alive; Gil re- (:01) Van Helsing (:45) Sharknado: The 4th Awakens (‘16, Action) Ian Ziering. April’s alive; Science Fiction) Ian Ziering. turns from the moon; cownadoes rise; everything’s crazy. (N) Gil returns from the moon; cownadoes rise; everything’s crazy. (6:00) The House Bunny (‘08, Com We’re the Mill ers (‘13, Com edy) aaa Jennifer Aniston. A drug dealer hires a fake fam ily as a Hor rible Bosses (‘11, Comedy) aaa Jason Bateman. Three friends devise 156 edy) aac Anna Faris. (HD) cover while shipping marijuana. a way to forever rid themselves of their horrible bosses. (:45) Verdict Not Commandment (:45) TCM Scar of Shame 186 (6:15) A Hard Day’s Night (‘64, Musi- Blood of Jesus (‘41, Drama) Spencer (:15) Dirty Gertie from Harlem U.S.A (‘46, Drama) cal) aaac The Beatles. (HD) Williams. Devil’s temptation. aa Francine Everett. Love on an island. Guilty (‘33) (‘40) (‘27) aac 157 My Big Fat Fabulous Life (HD) My Big Fat Fabulous Life (HD) Return to Amish (N) (HD) American Gypsy Wedding (N) Return to Amish: You Lie! (HD) Wedding (HD) 158 (6:30) National Treasure: Book of Secrets (‘07, Comedy) aaa Nicolas The Last Ship: Sea Change Mutated Murder in the First: Sam I Am Miss- The Last Ship: Sea Change Mutated Murder in the Cage. Mystery behind Lincoln’s assassination. (HD) virus. (N) (HD) ing suspect. (N) (HD) virus. (HD) First (HD) 129 Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) Fameless (HD) Fameless (HD) Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) Jokers (HD) Fameless (HD) 161 Reba (HD) Reba (HD) Reba (HD) Reba (HD) Loves Ray. Loves Ray. Gaffigan (N) Gaffigan (HD) Queens (HD) Queens (HD) Queens (HD) Law & Or der: Spe cial Vic tims Unit: Law & Or der: Spe cial Vic tims Unit: Law & Or der: Spe cial Vic tims Unit: Mo tive: The Scor pion and the Frog (:01) Law & Or der: Spe cial Vic tims Law & Order: 132 Theatre Tricks (HD) Learning Curve (HD) Criminal Stories (HD) Reopened case. (N) (HD) Unit: Official Story (HD) SVU: Raw (HD) 166 CSI: Miami: All Fall Down (HD) CSI: Miami: Fallen (HD) CSI: Miami: Sudden Death (HD) CSI: Miami: See No Evil (HD) CSI: Miami: Meltdown (HD) CSI Miami 172 xXx: State of the Union ac (HD) Tremors (‘90, Horror) aaa Kevin Bacon. Worms attack town. (HD) Tremors (‘90, Horror) aaa Kevin Bacon. Worms attack town. (HD) Terminator

Digital dragnet tightens around ‘Jason Bourne’ JAKE COYLE AP Film Writer Jason Bourne, as played by Matt Damon across four movies, is forever disappearing off the grid only to reluctantly resurface years later and again menace the CIA. He’s the spy who came in from the cold only to return to the cold, come in again, and, yet again, head back to the cold. In the chilly and bleak “Jason Bourne,” the amnesiaed assassin has been resurrected again, along with director Paul Greengrass, with whom Damon returns to the franchise after a nine year break. Bourne is still brooding. Greengrass’ hand-held camera is still frenetic. And the saga’s lethal precision is still sharp. The spy game, already far from a martini-sipping affair in previous installments, is resolutely grim in “Jason Bourne.” The superspy, now a hulking mass of bullet-scarred muscle, is spending his days torturing himself in bare-knuckle brawls, haunted by his past. In shattering set-pieces and terse emotionless dialogue, any remaining sunlight has been drained away. The amount of people brazenly killed by Vincent Casell, the “asset” in Bourne’s pursuit, may well outnumber the words spoken by Bourne in the entire film. Though first conceived in

1980 by Robert Ludlum, Bourne is perhaps the ultimate post9/11 hero. Especially in the hands of Greengrass, Bourne is a wrecking ball of accountability for America’s clandestine past. He’s part fantasy (his preternatural control of out-ofcontrol events is reassuring) and part reality (American disillusionment made visceral). In “Jason Bourne,” the digital dragnet is tightening around Bourne. The film is self-consciously set in a postSnowden world; the CIA is hacked by Nicky Parsons (Julia Stiles, whose smarts have given all of these films a kick), who’s threatening to reveal the covert Treadstone operation. The film, penned by Greengrass and Christopher Rouse (editor of previous “Bourne” films, and also this one), introduces a tech magnate (Riz Ahmed) whose celebrated social networking platform is secretly feeding information to CIA director Robert Dewey (Tommy Lee Jones). In a way, Bourne is himself a leak. He’s a rogue weapon who can’t remember his own encryption code. Here, the mystery he’s trying to solve revolves around his father’s role in his initial recruitment. But aside from updating to today’s surveillance state, “Jason Bourne” largely sticks to the franchise’s familiar moves, and they often don’t

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In this image released by Universal Pictures, Matt Damon stars in a scene from the movie “Jason Bourne.” have the same kinetic finesse they used to. Here again are scenes of digging through old CIA documents, breathless stretches of crowded escapes and public rendezvous where Bourne fools lurking agents. The film is essentially sandwiched between two mammoth, extended set pieces: First, a fiery riot in Athens where Bourne comes out of hiding to meet Parsons; and later, a showdown in Las Vegas that brings him back to U.S.

soil. Both outstay their welcome (a vehicle plowing through traffic in Vegas has unfortunate shades of the tragedy in Nice) and the franchise’s propulsion gives way to a pummeling blunt force. The exception is Alicia Vikander, who enters the franchise as the CIA’s cyber ops head and has her own motives of tossing aside the agency’s old guard. Whenever she’s on screen, her steely but agile presence brightens the film’s

dour gaze. Yet even when “Jason Bourne” doesn’t click with the same rhythm as its predecessors, it has a weight that outclasses nearly every other big action movie around. National identity is investigated and violence has repercussions: both astonishing things in a summer blockbuster. But if Bourne re-emerges again, hopefully Greengrass and company can at least give him someone to talk to.

Family keeps hit songwriter Lori McKenna grounded, inspired KRISTIN M. HALL The Associated Press NASHVILLE — Singer-songwriter Lori McKenna now has a Grammy trophy sitting on her piano at her home in Massachusetts, thanks to Little Big Town’s hit song “Girl Crush,” but her five kids still don’t think that makes her cool. “They are impossible to impress,” the 47-year-old McKenna said during a recent interview in Nashville, Tennessee, with a laugh. “But thank God for them, because I would get too much into it and take myself too seriously. If someone wasn’t asking me when dinner was, I think I would be in trouble.” Over her career, which spans back into the late 1990s, she’s written songs for Faith Hill, Alison Krauss, Reba,

Keith Urban and Hunter Hayes in her basement just outside of Boston, between loads of laundry and cooking. But recently she’s been on a successful streak, winning a Grammy this year for best country song for co-writing “Girl Crush” with Liz MCKENNA Rose and Hillary Lindsey. “When you get a Grammy, you’re supposed to drink champagne out of it,” McKenna said. “We were kidding at my house, like we should really eat mac n’ cheese out of this.” On Friday, she released her 10th album, “The Bird & the Rifle,” which includes her version of “Humble & Kind,” a No. 1 hit for country star Tim McGraw that has spawned a music video

collaboration with Oprah Winfrey and even a book that was released this year. “I just wrote it one day when the kids were at school, and I literally was thinking about, ‘Have we told them everything we want to tell them?’” she said. Her kids are really proud of that song because it’s all about them, she said. And she manages to impart advice to her children, such as don’t lie, don’t cheat and don’t steal, without sounding preachy. “The Bird & the Rifle” was produced by Dave Cobb, who helped country singer Chris Stapleton and Americana artist Jason Isbell also pick up Grammys this year, and together they achieve a nostalgic collection of folk-country songs filled with vivid imagery and honest, authentic lyrics. “You always feel like you’ve written a

good song if it feels like an old song,” McKenna said. McKenna’s skill as a songwriter is finding inspiration in the most mundane places, such as on the title track, “The Bird & the Rifle.” She was folding laundry and listening to a rerun of the ABC sitcom “Modern Family” when one of the characters makes a joke about a mother and daughter getting matching tattoos of “a bird and a rifle.” The songwriter turned that punch line into an extended metaphor about the tortured relationship between a woman who wants to spread her wings and the man who wants to keep her close. “I think it makes it cooler in a way that it comes from a joke ’cause itsounds really dark,” McKenna said. “And maybe it is, but she does fly away.”


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NATION

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

THE SUMTER ITEM

Misfires abound in Hillary Clinton’s speech AP FACT CHECK A look at the veracity of claims by political figures WASHINGTON (AP) — In her speech accepting the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton wrongly implied Donald Trump has proposed banning Islam in America and sketched out a plan for defeating Islamic State militants that merely mirrors what the U.S. is already trying to do. Clinton spoke Thursday night to the largest TV audience she is likely to have until the presidential debates, meaning many Americans were probably hearing of her agenda for the first time. Although she brings plenty of policy detail when stacked against the broad-brush ideas of her Republican rival, in some cases there’s less than meets the eye to what she says she will do. A college education, for example, might not end up as debt-free for everyone as she suggested. For his part, Trump spun a story about the Iran nuclear deal that was more fiction than fact at an Iowa rally that preceded Clinton’s convention speech. Here is a look at some of the claims from the political maelstrom: CLINTON: “I’ve laid out my strategy for defeating ISIS. We will strike their sanctuaries from the air, and support local forces taking them out on the ground. We will surge our intelligence so that we detect and prevent attacks before they happen. We will disrupt their efforts online to reach and radicalize young people in our country. It won’t be easy or quick, but make no mistake — we will prevail.” THE FACTS: Clinton might as well have said she laid out President Obama’s strategy for defeating Islamic State militants. Everything she mentioned, the Obama administration already is trying to do.

CLINTON: “Bernie Sanders and I will work together to make college tuition-free for the middle class and debt-free for all.” THE FACTS: Tuition-free for students who go to an in-state public college or university. Debt-free is a harder lift. Clinton has adopted parts of Sanders’ plans to defray some of the costs of higher education. Under her proposal, the government would pay for tuition at in-state colleges and universities for students from families earning less than $125,000 a year. That would leave students still bearing the cost of room and board, which makes up more than half of the average $18,943 sticker price at a fouryear public university, according to the College Board. Experts worry about other impacts: Will colleges raise tuition once the government starts paying, increasing the cost to taxpayers? Will more students flock to public colleges because of the subsidy, also raising costs? CLINTON: “In my first 100 days, we will work with both parties to pass the biggest investment in new, good-paying jobs since World War II.” THE FACTS: It would be the biggest since World War II only if you don’t count Obama’s $814 billion 2009 stimulus. Clinton doesn’t have price tags on all her proposals, but the bulk of the investment appears to be her plan to spend $275 billion over five years on roads, bridges and other infrastructure. Obama’s stimulus included infrastructure as well as tax cuts and aid to state and local governments, all intended to boost the economy and hiring. CLINTON: “We will not ban a religion.” THE FACTS: Trump never proposed banning Islam in the U.S., as Clinton seems to suggest. He proposed a freeze on the entry of all foreign Muslims into the U.S., then adapted the idea with several iterations. Recently he said he’d stop immigration from any

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton waves after taking the stage during the final day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia on Thursday. See the full article with Trump fact check at theitem.com. country compromised by terrorism, or impose “extreme vetting” on people coming from places with a history of terrorism. He’s also spoken in support of surveillance on mosques in the U.S. As contentious as his thinking has been on the subject, it hasn’t extended to outlawing a religion. CLINTON, on taxing the wealthy and corporations: “Because when more than 90 percent of the gains have gone to the top 1 percent, that’s where the money is.” THE FACTS: While vague, Clinton’s claim probably relies on outdated figures and exaggerates inequality. Her assertion echoes similar claims made by Sanders during the primary campaign, though it’s not clear if she is referring to income or wealth or over what time frame. Ac-

cording to Emmanuel Saez, the University of California at Berkeley economist whose research on the wealthiest 1 percent helped spark the Occupy Wall Street protests, income gains have been more widely shared in recent years. The top 1 percent captured 52 percent of the growth in incomes from 2009 through 2015, still a hefty amount. But that’s down from the 2009 through 2012 period, when the top 1 percent captured 91 percent of the growth. CLINTON: “In Atlantic City, 60 miles from here, you’ll find contractors and small businesses who lost everything because Donald Trump refused to pay his bills. People who did the work and needed the money, and didn’t get it - not because he couldn’t pay them,

but because he wouldn’t pay them.” THE FACTS: Indeed, Trump casinos failed on several occasions. During the bankruptcy of the Taj Mahal Casino in the early 1990s, some contractors who’d helped Trump build the property went bust because Trump’s company didn’t pay what it owed them. Trump himself was short on cash at the time, though his bankers did give him a $450,000-amonth allowance to maintain his lifestyle while his debts were renegotiated. DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION VIDEO, narrated by Morgan Freeman: “She could have joined a big law firm, been a corporate bigwig. Instead she chose the Children’s Defense Fund. There, she went doorto-door gathering stories to help children with disabilities over denied schooling.” THE FACTS: She had a “bigwig” path in her legal career, too. Although Clinton did devote her early career years to the Children’s Defense Fund, she also worked at the Rose Law Firm, a prestigious Little Rock, Arkansas, firm and the third oldest in the United States. Clinton became its first female partner when her husband, Bill, was the state attorney general and then governor. Among the firm’s clients were Tyson Foods, Wal-Mart and several brokerage houses. It became wellknown during the Whitewater scandal, when investigators probed real estate deals between the Clintons and a Rose client, Jim McDougal.

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NATION

THE SUMTER ITEM

ELECTION FROM PAGE A1 Bill Tindal Jr., was not present. According to South Carolina law, public notice must be given at least 60 days before any election, and filing for candidates must be open for two weeks, Wheeler said. He told the commission members filing must end by Aug. 15 in order to have the election take place in conjunction with the general election on Nov. 8 or a week before on Oct. 25. Having the election on Nov. 8 would allow the city to escape some of the costs of the election, such as hiring poll workers and printing ballots, McCutchen said, but it may confuse voters. Peterson and Wells were concerned that having a sep-

arate election so close to the general election could also create confusion. “I am concerned people may not be able to come out twice,” Peterson said. Wells said the municipal election has never been part of the general election, and that could also lead to confusion. She also wondered how voters who vote in Bishopville precinct polling places but are not city residents could be prevented from voting in the city election. “Do we have a way of making sure we don’t have an overvote?” she asked. Barnhill assured the commissioners the state’s electronic voting system would automatically give voters the proper electronic ballot style that matches their address. He said voters who live inside the city would have an

additional page, or screen, on the voting machine’s display to select city candidates, as well as an additional screen with any ballot questions, such as the Sunday alcohol sales questions likely to be included for voters in Lee County. The machines do not allow voters to cast their votes without making selections in each race, he said. With the commissioner’s concerns addressed, the two members in attendance voted for Nov. 8 as the election date. The six candidates in election who receive the most votes will be elected to Bishopville City Council. The commission also decided to place the mayoral election on the ballot. Mayor Alexander Boyd will appear on the ballot unopposed. Since the mayor’s election was not protested, filing does not

Members of First Baptist Church on East Liberty Street delivered snacks and beverages to personnel at Sumter Police Department on July 11.

SPOUSES FROM PAGE A1 the officer’s efforts to serve and protect the community. “I see that you are hurting as the world watches you bury your brothers and sisters that died because they were guilty of one thing, wearing a uniform with a badge,” states the letter. “I see that you are flesh and bones just like me. I see that you are a human being who has a heart that beats for your calling to serve and protect.” Also, included inside each gift bag, referred to as “Officer’s Survival Kit,” was a list of the candies inside and their significance. The list includes Starbursts for a burst of energy, gum to help everyone stick together and Laffy Taffy to remind officers that laughter is a great stress reliever. The Shaw spouses also sent treats for the police department’s K-9 unit. Sumter Police Department Public Information Officer Tonyia McGirt

said the department has been receiving gifts and messages of support on social media from the public since the shooting in Dallas when five police officers were killed on July 7. The shooting took place during a march in protest of the killings of black men a few days prior. McGirt said the department has received flowers, sweets, beverages and cards from the community. Sometimes the gifts come as a surprise, she said. Sumter Police Chief Russell Roark III said first responders and military personnel share much in common. “A kinship exists between us,” he said. The recent outpourimg of support will further solidify the relationship between law enforcement and the community, he said. Roark said improving the quality of life for Sumter residents will continue to be the overarching goal for the department. The department enjoys having a great relationship with the community, he said.

OBITUARIES Roger Lynn Regalado Sr., 55, beloved husband of 38 years to Martha Elizabeth Bowers Regalado, died on Thursday, July 28, 2016, at his residence. Born in Rapid City, South Dakota, he was the son of Irma Hinojsa Regalado REGALADO and the late Louis Lorenzo Regalado. He enjoyed music, playing his guitar and fishing. He was a hard worker and worked continuously even through his illness. He loved his family and his wife, Libby, said that he gave her the best 41 years of her life. He will be remembered as a very loving husband, father, papa, brother and friend. He will be dearly missed by all who knew him. Surviving in addition to his wife and mother are one son, Roger Lynn Regalado Jr.; two daughters, Beverly Lynn Regalado and her fiancee, Robbie, and Erica Renee Anderson and her husband, Allen, all of Sumter; four brothers, Reggie Regalado and his wife, Tammy, of Sumter, Marty Regalado and his wife, Christy, of Florence, Valentine Regalado of Columbia and J.R. Regalado of Columbia; one sister, Linda McCoy and her husband, Billy, of Florence; four grandchildren, Santana Regalado, Zachary Regalado, Ethan Regalado and Lil Allen Anderson; and several nieces and nephews. In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by his father-in-law, Clinnon F. Bowers. A funeral service will be held at 3 p.m. on Monday at Bullock Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Tim Williams

and the Rev. Brent Thigpen officiating. Interment will follow at Providence Baptist Church Cemetery. Active pallbearers will be Rusty Bochette, Allen Clark, Raymond Haas, Kenny Johnson, Terry Johnson and Gerald Stephens. The family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. on Sunday at Bullock Funeral Home. Memorials may be made to American Cancer Society, 128 Stonemark Lane, Columbia, SC 29210. You may go to www.bullockfuneralhome.com and sign the family’s guest book. The family has chosen Bullock Funeral Home for the arrangements.

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A7

JIM HILLEY / THE SUMTER ITEM

Lee County Voter Registration Executive Director Stan Barnhill, Bishopville City Attorney Will Wheeler, and Bishopville City Administrator Gregg McCutchen meet with Bishopville Municipal Election Commission members Delphine Peterson and MeoceanIa Wells to set a new municipal election in the Lee County seat.

history of either abuse or neglect, Dillard said. The facility can legally accommodate children under 21 years old. The length of stay at the home varies, based on each child’s case, he said. “It could be a year, for some it could be several years, for others several weeks,” he said. “The ultimate goal is reunification with their families.” Dillard said the facility includes three dormitories, with an employee, or “house parent,” who stays at each facility 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The house parents work one week and take a week respite, switching out with another house parent. House parents, Dillard said, not only cater to a child’s physical needs, but their also emotional needs. “We want to develop a sense of family here,” he said. “I know we can’t replace their real family, but we want them to feel as part of a family as much as possible.” Bridget Evans, a house parent, said it is a demanding job but also extremely rewarding. “We are ‘mamas’ to them,” she said. “We treat them as our own children. Many of them at first may be scared or angry, but they are seeking care and happy to be here.” Evans said she attempts to build a positive relationship with the children in her care. “It’s about building a certain level of trust and letting them know that

Louis, Missouri; one granddaughter, Cassie Jolley (Chaz) of Naperville, Illinois; and his beloved dog, Ma-Li. He is also survived by his special friends, Ed and Gloria Frenz, Phil and Sharon Ehlen, Brian Husky and Trey Howell, all of Sumter. A funeral service was held at 6 p.m. on Wednesday at the Elmore-Cannon-Stephens Funeral Home Chapel. The Rev. Charles Clanton officiated. A private burial was held in the Plainfield Cemetery in Plainfield. The family received friends from 4 to 6 p.m. on Wednesday at Elmore-Cannon-Stephens Funeral Home, 515 Miller Road, Sumter. Memorials may be made to First Baptist Church-Sumter, 107 E. Liberty St., Sumter, SC 29150 or Sumter SPCA, 1140 S. Guignard Drive, Sumter, SC 29150. Elmore-Cannon-Stephens Funeral Home and Crematorium of Sumter is in charge of the arrangements.

day after the election if they are all available for that date, McCutchen said.

have to be reopened. Those elected will most likely be sworn in the Sun-

HOME FROM PAGE A1

PHOTO PROVIDED

ROGER L. REGALADO

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

we’re here to help them, not to hurt them,” she said. She said many times the children come from homes with little or no structure, and that may be a challenge, adjusting to a place where structure is required. “The most rewarding thing is seeing a smile I didn’t see before,” she said. “Seeing them start to converse and blend in with the group is also great.” Dillard said the home also houses abused or neglected teenage mothers and their babies through a special program. Children all have a daily schedule they have to follow and will be attending local schools in the fall, he said. During the summer, the facility hires two seasonal workers who provide daily recreational activities. Children take field trips and enjoy activities at the Sumter Family YMCA. “We have been very fortunate to have the partnership with the Sumter Family YMCA and them allowing us to use their facilities for our children,” Dillard said. “We’ve also been blessed by the generosity of other churches, businesses and individuals who have assisted us.” The home is primarily funded through DSS and supported by the International Pentecostal Holiness Church. Monetary donations should be designated to “Turbeville Children’s Home” and sent to P.O. Box 229, Turbeville, SC 29162. For more information, contact the home at (843) 659-2880.

MAXIE L. COLEMAN BISHOPVILLE — Funeral services for Maxie Lewis Coleman, who passed away July 27, will be held at 4 p.m. today at the Chapel Norton Funeral Home, Bishopville.

STEVIE L. HALL Stevie Lee “Steve” Hall, 57, husband of Amy McLendon Hall, died Wednesday, July 27, 2016, at MUSC in Charleston. Born on March 1, 1959, in Welch, West Virginia, he was a son of the late Roy and Angelina Lucion Hall. Survivors include his wife of 30 years; two children, Gaffney Brown (Todd) and Lucion Hall, all of Sumter; a sister, Pam Samonia (Aron) of Sumter; a niece, Jamie Rogers (Brandon) of Sumter; and two great-nieces, Lillie Rogers and Mollie Gray Rogers. A memorial service will be held at 1 p.m. today at Wise Drive Baptist Church with the Rev. Dearld Sterling officiating.

The family will receive friends at the home. Memorials may be made to American Cancer Society, 950 48th Avenue North, Myrtle Beach, SC 29577 or to American Heart Association, 4217 Park Place Court, Glen Allen, VA. 23060-9979. Elmore-Cannon-Stephens Funeral Home and Crematorium of Sumter is in charge of the arrangements.

WILLIE M. PRINCE Willie Mae Felder Prince, 61, widower of James Edward Prince, died Thursday, July 28, 2016, at her residence, 80 Fair Forest Drive, Sumter. She was born on Aug. 10, 1954, a daughter of the late Willie Felder and Mary Emma Chandler Felder Geter. The family is receiving friends at the home of her daughter, Geneva Prince, 2961 American Avenue, Olanta. These services have been entrusted to Samuels Funeral Home LLC of Manning.

JOSEPH V. BROWN Joseph Vernon Brown, 80, widower of Carolyn Janet Brown, died on Sunday, July 24, 2016, at Palmetto Health Tuomey. Born in Asheville, North Carolina, he was a son of the late Eugene D. and Mary Ella Brown Insko. Mr. Brown attended First Baptist Church of Sumter. He served 12 years in the U.S. Air Force and was a veteran of the Korean War. He retired from Caterpillar Inc. after more than 40 years of service. He was a member of the Lions Club and American Legion Post 15. Survivors include four children, Susan Bostanche (Dave) of Yorkville, Illinois, Edward A. Brown (Thi) of Alexandria, Virginia, John E. Brown of Plainfield, Illinois, and Ronald J. Brown (Dorothy) of St.

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SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

AROUND TOWN An evening of fashion and fun, at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 9, at Shiloh-Randolph presented by Taw Caw Enjoy an evening of fashion and fun Manor, 125 W. Bartlette St. Community Outreach CenChief Rose, of the Sumter ter, will be held at 4 p.m. County Fire Department, today at 1130 Granby Lane, will speak. Transportation Summerton. Tickets: $10 provided within the coveradults; $5 for children ages age area. Contact Debra 5-12. Canty, chapter president, at The National Council of Negro (803) 775-5792 or debra. Women (NCNW) Clarendon canty@frontier.com. DonaSection will meet at 5 p.m. tions are welcome and can on Monday, Aug. 1, at the be mailed to NFB Sumter Council of Aging, 201 S. Chapter, P.O. Box 641, SumChurch St., Manning. ter, SC 29151. Google Debra The League of Women Voters Canty’s story on YouTube. of Sumter County will host a The Thunderguards of Sumter candidates workshop from 7 to 9 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 1, will hold its annual back-toschool bash 11 a.m.-4 p.m. at Sumter School District Saturday, Aug. 13, at the Office, 1345 Wilson Hall Thunderguards clubhouse, Road. The purpose of the 104 E. Bee St. Free event. For workshop is to provide indetails, call DuckTape at formation about how to (803) 651-0482, Brascoe at conduct campaigns in accordance with South Caroli- (803) 622-4685 or WildChild na law to individuals, candi- at (803) 983-8715. The Sumter SPCA Dog Days of dates and potential candiSummer Beach Bash will be dates in the non-partisan elections for Sumter School held 7-11 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 27, at the Elaine D. District trustee and Sumter Korn Memorial Center, 1100 City Council. S. Guignard Drive. Music The Lincoln High School Preswill be provided by The ervation Alumni Association Footnotes. Enjoy dancing to will sponsor an indoor / outthe oldies and light hors door yard sale and breakfast d’oeuvres. Cost is $25 per fundraiser 7 a.m.-noon on person (must be 21 years or Saturday, Aug. 6, Council Street. Furniture and a vari- older) and all proceeds benefit the SPCA. Call (803) ety of items will be sold. 773-9292. Breakfast will be served in the cafeteria. Cost is $7 per Sumter High School Class of 1976 will celebrate their person. Dine in or take out. Call James L. Green at (803) 40th class reunion FridaySunday, Sept. 2-4 as fol968-4173. lows: 7-10 a.m. Friday, meet Broken Wings, an eight-week grief support group hosted by and greet at Sumter Art Amedisys Hospice Care, will Gallery; 7 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday, blue and gold gala at be held 10 a.m.-noon each the Lincoln High School Saturday from Aug. 6 gym; and 8-10 a.m. Sunday, through Sept. 24. Meetings worship service at Golden will be held at the AmediCorral. Call Ruthie Dow sys Hospice office, 198 E. Prince at (803) 406-8874, Wesmark Blvd., Suite 2, Benita Duncan at (803) 840(803) 774-4036. There is no 4118, Louella Nelson McGee charge and the public is inat (803) 840-1748 or Marcia vited. Bethue China at (803) 236The Sumter County Prevention 3284. Team will sponsor a “Parents The Sumter Combat Veterans Accessing Resources 4 Kids” (PARK) event from 10 a.m. to Group will hold a golf tournament on Saturday, Sept. 17, 1 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 6, at Sumter High School, 2580 at Crystal Lakes Golf McCrays Mill Road. The pur- Course, 1305 Clara Louise Kellogg Drive. There will be pose of this awareness event is to provide informa- a 9 a.m. shotgun start. Registration fee is $50 per golftion on available communier limited to the first 20 ty resources to parents of youth ages 0-18 years old in teams. Fee includes continental breakfast, lunch, Sumter County. souvenirs, cart, green fees, The Campbell Soup friends refreshments during play lunch group will meet at and door prizes. Team for11:30 a.m. on Saturday, Aug. mat will be Captain’s 6, at Golden Corral. Choice Four-Person Team. The Sumter Police DepartCall Earnest Roland at (803) ment’s Annual Back-to-School 840-0935 or Johnny Goodley Bash will be held 9 a.m.at (803) 236-0488. noon on Tuesday, Aug. 9, at Edmunds High School Class of Crosswell Park. There will 1966 will hold its 50th rebe food, balloon artists, union on Saturday, Sept. 24, face painting, free haircuts, at the Sumter County Muwater park and music. All seum. Cost is $30 for sinchildren must be accompa- gles, $60 for couples. Kent nied by a responsible adult Mims and Coty Cuttino are 18 years of age or older. organizing a golf outing for The Sumter Chapter of the Na- the afternoon of Friday, tional Federation of the Blind Sept. 23. Call Myra Moore of South Carolina will meet Wilt at (803) 491-4624.

DAILY PLANNER

THE SUMTER ITEM

WEATHER

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

AccuWeather® five-day forecast for Sumter TODAY

TONIGHT

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

Hot with some sun

A t-storm around this evening

A t-storm around in the p.m.

An afternoon t-storm or two

Partly sunny with a t-storm

A stray afternoon thunderstorm

98°

76°

96° / 74°

93° / 74°

93° / 73°

94° / 72°

Chance of rain: 25%

Chance of rain: 40%

Chance of rain: 55%

Chance of rain: 60%

Chance of rain: 55%

Chance of rain: 40%

WSW 7-14 mph

SSW 4-8 mph

SW 6-12 mph

WSW 6-12 mph

NNE 4-8 mph

SE 6-12 mph

TODAY’S SOUTH CAROLINA WEATHER

Greenville 93/72

Gaffney 93/71 Spartanburg 94/72

Columbia 100/77

Temperatures shown on map are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

IN THE MOUNTAINS

ON THE COAST

Charleston 98/79

Today: A thunderstorm around in the afternoon; hot. High 93 to 99. Sunday: Widely separated afternoon thunderstorms. High 91 to 97.

SUMTER THROUGH 4 P.M. YESTERDAY

Temperature High Low Normal high Normal low Record high Record low

98° 78° 90° 70° 103° in 1949 65° in 1954

Precipitation 24 hrs ending 4 p.m. yest. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date

NATIONAL CITIES City Atlanta Chicago Dallas Detroit Houston Los Angeles New Orleans New York Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix San Francisco Wash., DC

Today Hi/Lo/W 93/74/pc 75/63/c 98/79/pc 80/67/c 94/77/pc 85/67/s 92/79/t 82/71/t 94/76/t 85/73/t 104/86/t 71/57/pc 86/74/t

LAKE LEVELS Full pool 360 76.8 75.5 100

Lake Murray Marion Moultrie Wateree

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Your EUGENIA LAST adaptable attitude will result in emotional encounters with someone you care about. Try to be reasonable and listen to both sides of a situation before making an irreversible decision. Avoid anger and offer love. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Participate in an event that interests and motivates you to learn all you can from someone with more life experience than you. A former colleague will be able to offer you good advice or a tempting offer to consider. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What someone else does shouldn’t influence you. Look at your situation realistically and make choices based on what will serve you best. It’s OK to do things differently. A personal change at home will turn in your favor, offering you greater freedom. CANCER (June 21-July 22): You’ll gain ground by forming an alliance with someone who supports your unique way of doing things. Making domestic alterations is a good idea, but don’t let an emotional influence tempt you to overspend. Stick to your plans and a set budget. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Do more to improve your community. Your input will give you greater control of your future. Make a motion to bring about the changes that will help you achieve a healthier and happier lifestyle. Celebrate your success with someone you love.

with no remorse. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Speak up, have your say and express your feelings. If you want to bring about change, you have to be vocal. Plenty of good things will transpire if you are true to your beliefs and willing to protect your rights. Romance is encouraged. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Take care of any health problems that arise quickly. Your immediate attention to money matters and personal contracts will be required. Protect yourself from future losses by cutting ongoing costs now. Practicality is your best bet. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Keep an open ear. Listen and you will discover the motives behind an offer someone has made. Try to avoid interacting with someone who is trying to take something from you. Focus on your own wellbeing rather than someone else’s. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): A fair assessment of what everyone is contributing and who should receive what will determine the outcome of a work or family situation you face. Do your best to offer open and concise information in order to come up with the best outcome. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): What you offer others you will get back in return. Your kind, humanitarian way of helping others will be appreciated and bring about positive changes in your life. Spend the evening with someone you love.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Use your energy and enthusiasm to recruit the help you need to make VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Refuse to get all worked up about nothing. positive changes to your living An emotional situation will surface quarters. A healthy attitude will if you allow others to pressure you lead to a favor from someone. A proposal will clear up any into doing something you don’t want to do. Be willing to walk away uncertainty about your future.

SUN AND MOON 7 a.m. yest. 356.29 74.69 74.62 97.47

24-hr chg -0.03 -0.03 -0.04 +0.04

RIVER STAGES 0.00" 4.62" 5.17" 29.60" 24.01" 28.09"

Sun. Hi/Lo/W 93/73/t 79/64/pc 98/79/s 80/63/pc 94/77/t 83/67/pc 91/79/t 80/71/t 93/75/t 85/74/t 98/85/t 73/57/pc 90/76/t

Myrtle Beach 94/80

Aiken 96/73

River Black River Congaree River Lynches River Saluda River Up. Santee River Wateree River

Flood 7 a.m. stage yest. 12 7.15 19 2.56 14 3.16 14 1.75 80 75.46 24 8.38

24-hr chg -0.31 -0.41 -0.39 -0.01 -0.10 -0.50

Sunrise 6:32 a.m. Moonrise 3:24 a.m.

Sunset Moonset

8:24 p.m. 5:38 p.m.

New

First

Full

Last

Aug. 2

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High 6:31 a.m. 7:08 p.m. 7:31 a.m. 8:04 p.m.

Ht. 2.9 3.5 2.9 3.6

Low Ht. 1:15 a.m. 0.2 1:21 p.m. -0.4 2:13 a.m. 0.1 2:17 p.m. -0.5

REGIONAL CITIES City Asheville Athens Augusta Beaufort Cape Hatteras Charleston Charlotte Clemson Columbia Darlington Elizabeth City Elizabethtown Fayetteville

Today Hi/Lo/W 86/67/t 95/73/pc 99/73/pc 99/79/t 88/80/t 98/79/t 95/72/pc 96/74/pc 100/77/pc 96/78/pc 90/76/t 97/77/pc 97/77/pc

Sun. Hi/Lo/W 86/66/t 95/72/t 96/73/t 97/78/t 89/78/t 95/79/t 95/71/t 95/74/pc 98/75/t 94/76/t 92/75/t 94/76/t 96/75/t

Today City Hi/Lo/W Florence 97/78/pc Gainesville 97/74/t Gastonia 94/72/pc Goldsboro 95/76/t Goose Creek 98/80/t Greensboro 91/72/pc Greenville 93/72/pc Hickory 90/70/t Hilton Head 95/81/pc Jacksonville, FL 96/74/t La Grange 94/73/pc Macon 96/73/pc Marietta 90/73/pc

Sun. Hi/Lo/W 96/76/t 96/74/t 93/72/t 95/75/t 94/79/t 91/71/t 92/71/t 90/69/t 93/81/t 96/75/pc 95/73/t 95/72/t 92/72/t

Today City Hi/Lo/W Marion 89/67/t Mt. Pleasant 96/81/t Myrtle Beach 94/80/t Orangeburg 97/77/pc Port Royal 97/80/t Raleigh 93/74/t Rock Hill 95/71/pc Rockingham 96/74/pc Savannah 98/77/t Spartanburg 94/72/pc Summerville 98/78/t Wilmington 95/78/t Winston-Salem 91/72/t

Sun. Hi/Lo/W 89/67/t 93/81/t 93/79/t 96/75/t 94/80/t 94/73/t 95/72/t 96/74/t 96/77/t 92/72/t 94/77/t 92/77/t 90/70/t

Weather(W): s–sunny, pc–partly cloudy, c–cloudy, sh–showers, t–thunderstorms, r–rain, sf–snow flurries, sn–snow, i–ice

516 W. Liberty St. • Sumter, SC 29150 803.773.9300 • dentistsumtersc.com Dr. Allison A. Reeves, DMD

GENERAL FAMILY DENTISTRY

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SUMTER SPCA CAT OF THE WEEK Michelangelo, a housebroken 3-month-old gray-and-white male American short hair, is available for adoption at the Sumter SPCA. He adores playing with other kittens and cat toys. Michelangelo isMichelangelo gentle, is a gentle, active and loves being friendlycuddled kitten who loves being held and cuddled. He would be a great new buddy for any family. The Sumter SPCA is located at 1140 S. Guignard Drive, (803) 773-9292, and is open 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. every day except Wednesday and Sunday. Visit www.sumterscspca.com.

The Sumter SPCA Dog Days of Summer Beach Bash will be held 7-11 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 27, at the Elaine D. Korn Memorial Center, 1100 S. Guignard Drive. Music will be provided by The Footnotes. Enjoy dancing to the oldies and light hors d’oeuvres. Cost is $25 per person (must be 21 years or older) and all proceeds benefit the SPCA. Call (803) 773-9292.

The SPCA relies heavily on community support and donations. Currently, the biggest needs are for dry puppy and kitten food; wet cat food; cat litter; and cleaning supplies. The following are also appreciated: Newspapers; stuffed animals; heavy duty trash bags (30 gallon or larger); dishwashing liquid; laundry detergent; bleach; paper towels; sheets and comforters; baby blankets; canned dog and cat food; dry dog food; treats; leashes and collars; disinfectant spray; all-purpose cleaner; air freshener; no scratch scrubbers; two-sided sponges for dishes; litter freshener; and, of course, monetary donations are also gratefully accepted.


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Saturday, July 30, 2016 Call: (803) 774-1241 | E-mail: sports@theitem.com

prep football

college football

Spurrier returns ‘home’ as Gator By MARK LONG The Associated Press

RICK CARPENTER / THE SUMTER ITEM

Lakewood High School’s Tyreek Johnson (3), Zaire Cain (99) and Greg Brunson (40) swarm a line coach simulating a quarterback during the first day of football practice on Friday at the school. For Cain, it’s been a long journey back to the field after health issues sidelined him from playing football for nearly two years.

Field of dreams

After health issues kept him sidelined for nearly 2 years, Lakewood’s Cain enjoying every minute of football practice

BY JUSTIN DRIGGERS justin@theitem.com

“That was the happiest day of my life,” Cain said laughing. “I was so excited. I was The near 90-degree heat and telling everyone and posted on the sweat and grind of another Facebook that I could play year of high school football again.” practices still couldn’t wipe And so Cain rejoined his the smile off Zaire Cain’s face teammates for the majority of on Friday at Lakewood High the spring and summer workSchool. outs and practices -- or as he Nearly two years away from put it, rejoined his “family. the game puts those kinds of “This team is like a family to things in perspective, he said. me, so missing that really Cain, the Gators senior dehurt,” Cain said. “So to be fensive tackle, was likely back on this field running among the happiest players to with everybody feels amaztake the field as the new high ing.” school season began in earnest Friday was a welcome rewith practices opening up turn to the normalcy of footacross the state. ball practice. Defensive drills It was during the summer were his favorite part of the leading up to the 2014 season day, Cain said, followed by a that, for reasons still not fully likely even more enjoyed popknown, Cain collapsed on the sicle break. field and had to be rushed to It has been a grind though, the hospital. He was placed in Cain admitted, as he’s working a medically-induced coma for himself back into shape and about six weeks before recovback to where he was originalering, although he now has a ly in terms of his ability. pacemaker and regularly “I’ve been working a lot on scheduled visits with the cargetting my footwork back to diologist. where it needs to be,” Cain In spite of the health scare said. “That’s one of the biggest and the subsequent recovery things along with just getting RICK CARPENTER / THE SUMTER ITEM time, Cain got the news he was in football shape and losing Lakewood High School defensive back Zach Coulson (42) turns hoping for in May when docweight. to intercept a pass on Friday during the opening day of football tors told him he could play See cain, Page B5 practice at the school. football again.

pga championship

Streb joins the ‘63 in a major’ club By DOUG FERGUSON The Associated Press

Dufner in 2013 at Oak Hill. Streb badly missed a 15foot birdie putt on the eighth SPRINGFIELD, N.J. — hole, and he was determined Robert Streb became the latto at least give himself a est player to shoot 63 in a chance on the ninth. He major, and hardly anyone knew was at stake, and so noticed in a PGA Championdid the small gallery that ship with endless action gathered around the ninth across Baltusrol on Friday. green. Streb was on the far end of “It was pretty noisy for the the rain-soaked course when 15 people that were out he hit 6-iron into 20 feet on there,” he said. his last hole, the par-3 ninth, Most of the crowd was at and made the putt to become the par-5 closing holes at BalThe Associated Press the 28th player with a 63 in a tusrol, and there was no Robert Streb became the 28th player in history to shoot a 63 in a major. It was the third round shortage of entertainment. of 63 in a major in the last 16 major tournament Friday at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfield, N.J. In a summer of scoring redays, following Phil Mickelcords at the majors, Walker son (first round) and Henrik ing,” Streb said. They were at 131, matching looked as though he would Stenson (fourth round) at the Equally thrilling was to be the 36-hole record at the PGA set the 36-hole mark when he British Open. tied for the lead with Jimmy Championship first set in was at 10 under with two par “Happy to join the club Walker, who shot a 4-under 1983 by Hal Sutton at Riviera See PGA, Page B5 that seems to be ever grow66. and last done by Jason

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Just call him the Head Ball Consultant. Steve Spurrier, who already has a statue outside Florida’s football stadium and recently had the field named after him, will now serve as ambassador and consultant for the school’s athletic department. Spurrier resigned from a similar position at South Carolina on Friday before the Gators announced his new role at his alma mater. He already has an office spurrier in “The Swamp” and is planning to move back to Gainesville with his wife, Jerri, and split their time between the college town and nearby Crescent Beach, where they have a home. “I knew my coaching career someday was going to be over,” Spurrier said during a conference call with reporters. “I wanted to do something. I did not want to be a retired dude and do nothing. I wanted to be associated with my alma mater, the University of Florida.” Spurrier stepped down as South Carolina’s football coach last season, but stopped short of saying he was retiring. He talked about possibly doing some consulting and maybe coaching at the high school level. He started talking to Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley about returning to Gainesville

See spurrier, Page B2

usc football

Gamecocks veterans out to remove 3-9 stigma By PETE IACOBELLI The Associated Press COLUMBIA — Elliott Fry hasn’t given up on a successful final season, even if most of what he’s heard and read since last year has told him he should. The South Carolina senior kicker, who’s 42 points away from becomfry ing the school’s career scoring leader, was a freshman on the last of three straight 11-2 seasons from 2011-13. He believes the Gamecocks upperclassmen are poised to take a big step forward with new coach Will Muschamp after last year’s 3-9 flop. “I think everybody on the team wants to get back to 11 and 12-win seasons,” Fry said Friday. “That’s our expectation.” There aren’t many outside the program who share Fry’s vision. South Carolina, which contended for an SEC East title from 2010-13 and voted to win the 2014 crown, were picked dead last in the division by the

See usc, Page B2


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sports

Saturday, July 30, 2016

sports items

SHS swim, girls tennis practices set The Sumter High School swim team and varsity girls tennis team have set times for their first practices leading up to the start of the season. The swim team will hold its first practice on Monday at the City of Sumter Aquatics Center from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. All Sumter School District students in grades 7-12 are eligible to compete. For more information, contact cathykirkhart@yahoo.com. The girls tennis team will begin practice on Tuesday at the top courts at Palmetto Tennis Center from 7 to 8:30 p.m. There will be a brief meeting under the picnic shelter before practice begins. Prospective athletes must have updated physicals forms and concussion forms in order to compete. They can be picked up at the Sumter High main office.

Registration for PTC camp ends today Registration for the PTC Summer Tennis Camp II at Palmetto Tennis Center will close today at noon. The camp will begin on Monday and run through Friday, Aug. 5, from 9 a.m. to noon each day. The camp is open to boys and girls ages 5-13, and the cost is $125 per camper. For more information, call Palmetto Tennis Center at (803) 774-3969 or go to www. palmettotenniscenter.com.

Truex wins Pocono pole LONG POND, Pa. — Martin Truex Jr. has one of his four career Sprint Cup wins at Pocono Raceway. He added his 10th career pole, too. Truex extended Toyota’s recent romp with a lap of 179.244 mph to win the pole Friday. Truex and Carl Edwards made it a 1-2 Toyota front row. Edwards just missed the top spot for Joe Gibbs Racing with a lap of 178.873 and he thought his No. 19 Toyota might have had enough to best Truex’s chart-topping speed. “That must have felt really good because mine was great,” Edwards said. Toyota has 10 wins this season and nine in the last 15 races, highlighted by consecutive wins by JGR drivers Matt Kenseth at New Hampshire and Kyle Busch last weekend at the Brickyard. Truex won his third pole of the season in the Furniture Row Racing No. 78 Toyota and the 10th of his career. His win this season at

usc

From Page B1 media at the league’s recent preseason gathering with little hope of breaking into the top half of the seven-team division. For Fry, it’s a point of pride to prove the doubters wrong. “At the end of the day, Muschamp said it best: They’re never right,” Fry said. “I don’t remember a time they predicted it accurately.” Fry understands the problems of the past two years. The Gamecocks struggled to finish above .500 in 2014 — blowing three double-digit leads in the fourth quarter and losing a fourth at Auburn after entering the final period tied — needing a bowl win over Miami to go 7-6. Then coach Steve Spurrier preached improvement, hope and a return to the top most of the next summer. But South Carolina opened just 2-4 and Spurrier stepped aside. The reeling Gamecocks lost five of their last six under interim coach Shawn Elliott, leading to Mus-

spurrier

nascar LINEUP Sprint Cup Pennsylvania 400 After Friday qualifying; race Sunday At Pocono Raceway Long Pond, Pa. Lap length: 2.5 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (78) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 179.244 mph. 2. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 178.873. 3. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 178.671. 4. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 178.540. 5. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 178.433. 6. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 178.394. 7. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 178.359. 8. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 177.571. 9. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 177.413. 10. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 177.151. 11. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 177.082. 12. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 176.835. 13. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 177.322. 14. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, 177.281. 15. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 177.183. 16. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 177.054. 17. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 176.988. 18. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 176.880. 19. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 176.574. 20. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 176.478. 21. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 176.091. 22. (34) Chris Buescher, Ford, 176.084. 23. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 175.901. 24. (88) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 175.706. 25. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 175.603. 26. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 175.404. 27. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 174.985. 28. (15) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 174.257. 29. (95) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet, 174.236. 30. (7) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 173.826. 31. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 173.534. 32. (38) Landon Cassill, Ford, 173.491. 33. (23) David Ragan, Toyota, 173.077. 34. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 172.874. 35. (44) Brian Scott, Ford, 172.209. 36. (98) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet, 171.716. 37. (32) Jeb Burton, Ford, 171.429. 38. (30) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 170.451. 39. (46) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 169.750. 40. (55) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 158.615.

Charlotte Motor Speedway might have been the most dominant performance by any Toyota driver in a race in years. Paul Menard, Denny Hamlin and Ryan Newman completed the top five.

Cubs 12 Mariners 1 CHICAGO — Jon Lester recovered from a rut of bad starts, pitching six shutout innings that led the Chicago Cubs over Seattle 12-1 Friday for their third straight win. Jason Heyward and David Ross homered as the NL Central leaders improved to 9-5 since the All-Star break following a 1-9 slump. Seattle lost in its first trip to Wrigley Field since 2007. From staff and wire reports

champ’s hire last December. Ever since, the buzz around South Carolina has been bad. Linebacker T.J. Holloman, another senior, says the team has used the negative talk as motivation. “We’re not going to talk about last year, we’re just going to work hard,” said Holloman, who made three starts as a redshirt freshman on the Gamecocks last 11-win team in 2013. “We’re a blue collar team. We’re not the fastest, we’re not the flashiest, but we’re going to go out there and outwork everybody.” Holloman and Fry didn’t have to do much work Friday, entertaining gradeschool children at a yearly “Pigskin Poets” event put on by the Richland County Public Library. Holloman said the support he and other Gamecocks receive at these gatherings powers them into workouts. “We’re just so thankful for the loyalty,” he said. The Gamecocks start the first fall camp with Muschamp on Tuesday. Holloman believes South Carolina’s returning players are better than they showed last season and have been fo-

cused on getting things back on the winning track. “When we came in here, we saw what it took to get to 11-2 and now we’re trying to focus on the little things,” he said. Holloman said first-year strength coach Jeff Dillman ran an intense, high-energy program that the Gamecocks bought into and pushed themselves though to improve. “That’s been the big key for me and I see the difference,” he said. “Everyone said, ‘Yes, sir, let’s go to work.”’ That’s what Muschamp expects from the Gamecocks. He has said both that the team has to own last year’s poor mark and after spring ball that South Carolina had “good enough players to win the East.” Fry accepts that it will take more hard work at practice and in meeting rooms to make anything like that happen. But it’s possible. Just take a look at Auburn in 2013, Fry said, which came off a dismal 3-9 season and went 0-8 in the SEC. “All that (negative talk) is just speculation,” Fry said. “It doesn’t mean anything.”

The SUMTER ITEM

Scoreboard TV, Radio

Oakland Los Angeles

TODAY

8 a.m. – Formula One Racing: German Grand Prix Pole Qualifying from Hockenheim, Germany (NBC SPORTS NETWORK). 9 a.m. – NASCAR Racing: Camping World Truck Series Pocono Mountains 150 Pole Qualifying from Long Pond, Pa. (FOX SPORTS 1). 9 a.m. – LPGA Golf: Women’s British Open Third Round from Milton Keynes, England (GOLF). 10 a.m. – Youth Baseball: U-12 National Youth Championship Semifinal Game (CBS SPORTS NETWORK). 11 a.m. – LPGA Golf: Women’s British Open Third Round from Milton Keynes, England (WIS 10). 11 a.m. – NASCAR Racing: Sprint Cup Series Pennsylvania 400 Practice from Long Pond, Pa. (NBC SPORTS NETWORK). 11 a.m. — PGA Golf: PGA Championship Third Round from Springfield, N.J. (WLTX 19). 1 p.m. – Youth Baseball: National Youth Championship 14U Finals Game from Yaphank, N.Y. (CBS SPORTS NETWORK). 1 p.m. – International Soccer: International Champions Cup Match from Dublin, Ireland – Celtic vs. Barcelona (ESPN). 1 p.m. – Professional Tennis: Rogers Cup Women’s Semifinal Match from Montreal (ESPN2). 1 p.m. – NASCAR Racing: Camping World Truck Series Pocono Mountains 150 from Long Pond, Pa. (FOX SPORTS 1, WEGX-FM 92.9). 1 p.m. – Major League Baseball: Baltimore at Toronto (MLB NETWORK). 1:30 p.m. – Professional Golf: European PGA Tour/Asian Tour King’s Cup Third Round from Pattaya, Thailand (GOLF). 2 p.m. — PGA Golf: PGA Championship Third Round from Springfield, N.J. (WLTX 19). 2 p.m. – IRL Racing: IndyCar Series Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio Pole Qualifying from Lexington, Ohio (NBC SPORTS NETWORK). 3 p.m. – International Soccer: International Champions Cup Match from Ann Arbor, Mich. – Real Madrid vs. Chelsea (ESPN). 3 p.m. – Professional Tennis: Rogers Cup Men’s Semifinal Match from Toronto (ESPN2). 4 p.m. – Major League Baseball: Washington at San Francisco (FOX SPORTS 1). 4 p.m. – Horse Racing: Jim Dandy Stakes, Vanderbilt Handicap, Bowling Green Handicap and Amsterdam Stakes from Saratoga Springs, N.Y. (FOX SPORTS 2). 4 p.m. – NASCAR Racing: XFINITY Series U.S. Cellular 250 Pole Qualifying from Newton, Iowa (NBC SPORTS NETWORK). 5 p.m. – Amateur Basketball: The Basketball Tournament Semifinal Game from Bronx, N.Y. – Always A Brave vs. Team Colorado (ESPN). 5 p.m. – International Soccer: International Champions Cup Match from Charlotte – Internazionale vs. Bayern Munich (ESPNEWS). 5 p.m. – MLL Lacrosse: Charlotte at Denver (FOX SPORTS SOUTHEAST). 6 p.m. – Professional Tennis: Rogers Cup Women’s Semifinal Match from Montreal (ESPN2). 6 p.m. – International Soccer: Mexican League Match – Puebla vs. Queretaro (UNIVISION). 7 p.m. – Amateur Basketball: The Basketball Tournament Semifinal Game from Bronx, N.Y. – City of Gods vs. Overseas Elite (ESPN). 7 p.m. – Major League Baseball: St. Louis at Miami (FOX SPORTS 1). 7 p.m. – Major League Baseball: Philadelphia at Atlanta (FOX SPORTSOUTH, WPUB-FM 102.7). 7:30 p.m. – Major League Lacrosse: Rochester at Florida (FOX SPORTS SOUTHEAST). 8 p.m. – Professional Tennis: Rogers Cup Men’s Semifinal Match from Toronto (ESPN2). 8 p.m. – NASCAR Racing: XFINITY Series U.S. Cellular 250 from Newton, Iowa (NBC SPORTS NETWORK, WEGXFM 92.9). 8 p.m. – International Soccer: Cruz Azul vs. Monterrey (UNIVISION). 9 p.m. – Professional Boxing: Leo Santa Cruz vs. Carl Frampton for the WBA Featherweight and Mikey Garcia vs. Elio Rojas in a Junior Welterweight Bout from Brooklyn, N.Y. (SHOWTIME). 10 p.m. – International Soccer: International Champions Cup Match from Santa Clara, Calif. – Liverpool vs. AC Milan (ESPN2). 10 p.m. – Major League Baseball: Boston at Los Angeles Angels or Kansas City at Texas (Joined In Progress) (MLB NETWORK). 10 p.m. – International Soccer: Mexican League Match – Tigres vs. America (UNIVISION). Midnight – International Soccer: International Champions Cup Match from Carson, Calif. – Paris Saint-Germain vs. Leicester City (ESPN).

MLB Standings By The Associated Press

AMERICAN League East Division Baltimore Toronto Boston New York Tampa Bay Central Division Cleveland Detroit Chicago Kansas City Minnesota West Division Texas Houston Seattle

47 55 .461 11½ 46 56 .451 12½

Thursday’s Games

Minnesota 6, Baltimore 2 Chicago Cubs 3, Chicago White Sox 1 Texas 3, Kansas City 2 L.A. Angels 2, Boston 1

Friday’s Games

Seattle at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m. Baltimore at Toronto, 7:07 p.m. Houston at Detroit, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m. Oakland at Cleveland, 7:10 p.m. Kansas City at Texas, 8:05 p.m. Chi. White Sox at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m. Boston at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.

Saturday’s Games

Baltimore at Toronto, 1:07 p.m. Seattle at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Chi. White Sox at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m. Houston at Detroit, 7:10 p.m. Oakland at Cleveland, 7:10 p.m. Kansas City at Texas, 8:05 p.m. Boston at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.

Sunday’s Games

Baltimore at Toronto, 1:07 p.m. Houston at Detroit, 1:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 1:10 p.m. Oakland at Cleveland, 1:10 p.m. Chi. White Sox at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m. Kansas City at Texas, 3:05 p.m. Boston at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m. Seattle at Chicago Cubs, 8:08 p.m.

National League East Division Washington Miami New York Philadelphia Atlanta Central Division Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati West Division San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado San Diego Arizona

W 60 55 53 47 35

L Pct GB 42 .588 — 47 .539 5 48 .525 6½ 57 .452 14 67 .343 25

W 62 55 52 44 40

L Pct GB 40 .608 — 47 .539 7 48 .520 9 56 .440 17 61 .396 21½

W 59 57 50 44 42

L Pct GB 43 .578 — 45 .559 2 52 .490 9 58 .431 15 60 .412 17

Thursday’s Games

Colorado 2, N.Y. Mets 1 Milwaukee 6, Arizona 4 Philadelphia 7, Atlanta 5 St. Louis 5, Miami 4 Chicago Cubs 3, Chicago White Sox 1 Washington 4, San Francisco 2

Friday’s Games

Chicago Cubs 12, Seattle 1 Colorado at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m. St. Louis at Miami, 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. Washington at San Fran., 10:15 p.m. Cincinnati at San Diego, 10:40 p.m.

Saturday’s Games

Seattle at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m. Washington at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. Colorado at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. St. Louis at Miami, 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati at San Diego, 8:40 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

Sunday’s Games

Colorado at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m. St. Louis at Miami, 1:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Atlanta, 1:35 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m. Washington at San Fran., 4:05 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m. Cincinnati at San Diego, 4:40 p.m. Seattle at Chicago Cubs, 8:08 p.m.

WNBA standings By The Associated Press

EASTERN CONFERENCE

New York Atlanta Indiana Chicago Washington Connecticut

W 18 13 12 11 9 8

L Pct GB 8 .692 — 12 .520 4½ 12 .500 5 13 .458 6 15 .375 8 16 .333 9

WESTERN CONFERENCE

W L Pct GB x-Los Angeles 21 3 .875 — x-Minnesota 21 4 .840 ½ Phoenix 10 14 .417 11 Seattle 9 15 .375 12 Dallas 9 16 .360 12½ San Antonio 5 18 .217 15½ x-clinched a playoff spot

Thursday’s Games

Indiana 82, New York 70

Friday’s Games

Los Angeles 95, Washington 75 Atlanta 93, Dallas 88 Minnesota 79, Seattle 72 Connecticut 94, Chicago 89 NOTE: OLYMPIC Break season resumes Aug. 26

Transactions

W 58 57 55 52 39

L Pct GB 43 .574 — 45 .559 1½ 45 .550 2½ 49 .515 6 61 .390 18½

W 57 54 50 49 38

L Pct GB 42 .576 — 48 .529 4½ 52 .490 8½ 52 .485 9 63 .376 20

W 59 55 51

L Pct GB 44 .573 — 46 .545 3 50 .505 7

said. “It’s a credit to Jeremy to get him back home where he belongs. More than anything, I From Page B1 look forward to actually talkseveral months ago, and dising to him and being around cussions “got pretty serious” him rather than just saying hello to his statue on my way in the last few weeks. to work every day.” His exact role is undefined, Spurrier was Florida’s first but Spurrier expects to work Heisman Trophy winner (1966) primarily as a fundraiser for and the coach who led the Gathe athletic department and tors to their first national help promote the Gators — championship (1996). He alsomething he’s done as well as ready has a Heisman statue anyone for the last 50 years. outside the stadium and is a He might even give Florida member of the program’s excoach Jim McElwain and offile/The Associated Press clusive ring of honor. fensive coordinator Doug Former Florida head coach Steve Spurrier is carried off the field after Spurrier also nicknamed the Nussmeier a little advice. the Gators downed Auburn 28-6 in the SEC Championship at the stadium “The Swamp.” The “I’ll be in and out mostly,” Gators went 122-27-1 in 12 seaSpurrier said. “Coach Mac has Georgia Dome in Atlanta. sons under Spurrier, including welcomed me to come to the 68-5 at home, and won six football offices a little bit. But I little ball with Coach Mac, as the Head Ball Coach. Southeastern Conference tican assure you I’ll stay out of Coach Nuss and might be “I look forward to visiting coach’s way. I’m not going to something we’ll get into.” with him on a lot of occasions tles. Last month, the Gators rebe in coaches meetings or McElwain welcomed the reand picking his brain on a named their football field things like that, just talking a turn of the guy widely known number of issues,” McElwain

By The Associated Press

BASEBALL American League Oakland Athletics — Extended their player development contract with Vermont Lake (NY-Penn) through 2018. National League CHICAGO CUBS — Activated OF Chris Coghlan from of the 15-day DL. Optioned INF Tommy La Stella to Iowa (PCL). MIAMI MARLINS — Acquired RHPs Andrew Cashner, Colin Rea and Tayron Guerrero from San Diego for RHPs Jarred Cosart and Carter Capps, Luis Castillo and 1B Josh Naylor.

after Spurrier, calling it Steve Spurrier-Florida Field at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. Florida will honor Spurrier at the 2016 season opener against Massachusetts during a ceremony that will include the unveiling of his name on the stadium. Now, he’ll likely be at every home game. “It’s a great day for the Gator Nation to be able to welcome Coach Spurrier back home,” Foley said. “He has served as a tremendous ambassador to the university and the athletic department for 50plus years, and it’s only fitting that at this point in his career he is back in Gainesville. Being a Gator has always meant so much to Coach Spurrier, but it means just as much to us have him come home.”


sports

The SUMTER ITEM

Saturday, July 30, 2016

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area Scoreboard SOCCER Fall Registration The Sumter County Recreation Department is taking registration for its fall soccer program through Aug. 11. There will be leagues for children ages 3-18 as of Sept. 1, 2016. The registration fee is $30 for Start Smart, $35 for ages 5-6 and $45 for ages 7-17. No late registration will be taken. There will be a coaches meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 9, at 7 p.m. at the recreation department located at 155 Haynsworth Street for anyone interested in coaching. For more information, call the recreation department at (803) 436-2248 or visit www. sumtercountysc.org.

FOOTBALL Flag League Registration The Sumter County Recreation Department is taking registration for its flag football program through Aug. 11. There will be leagues for children ages 5-8 as of Sept. 1, 2016. The registration fee is $50 and no late registration will be taken. There will be a coaches meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 9, at 6 p.m. at the recreation department located at 155 Haynsworth Street for anyone interested in coaching. For more information, call the recreation department at (803) 436-2248 or visit www. sumtercountysc.org.

Photo Provided

The Sumter Dixie Boys 14-year-old all-star baseball team finished 3-2 in the state tournament held recently in Aiken. Members of the team are, first row, left to right: Aaron Carlton, Michael Love, Blaine McFaddin, Sebastian DuCom and Brice Spittle. Second row: AC McKinnon, Seth Posey, Cody Windham, Tommy Pillsbury, JT Stanley and Ethan Brown. Third row: Coach Glenn Posey, Jackson Hoshour, coach Scott Spittle, Josh Burns and coach Jason Stanley.

The Sumter County Recreation Department is taking registration for its fall girls softball program through Aug. 17. There will be leagues for children ages 7-12 as of Dec. 31, 2016. The registration fee is Tackle League $45 and no late registration Registration will be taken. The Sumter County RecreThere will be a coaches ation Department is taking meeting on Thursday, Aug. 11, registration for its tackle footat 6 p.m. at the recreation deball program through Aug. 11. partment located at 155 HaynThere will be leagues for sworth Street for anyone interBASEBALL children ages 9-12 as of Sept. 1, ested in coaching. 2016. The registration fee is $60 Fall Registration For more information, call The Sumter County Recreand no late registration will be the recreation department at taken. Players will have to pro- ation Department is taking (803) 436-2248 or visit www. registration for its fall baseball sumtercountysc.org. vide their own pants. program through Aug. 17. There will be a coaches There will be leagues for meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 9, at TENNIS 6 p.m. at the recreation depart- children ages 7-12 as of April 30, 2017. The registration fee is Twilight tennis in parks ment located at 155 HaynThe final event of Twilight sworth Street for anyone inter- $45 and no late registration Tennis in the Parks, sponsored will be taken. ested in coaching. by Palmetto Tennis Center, There will be a coaches For more information, call meeting on Thursday, Aug. 11, will be held today at Birnie the recreation department at Park from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. at 6 p.m. at the recreation de(803) 436-2248 or visit www. partment located at 155 Hayn- The event is open to children sumtercountysc.org. sworth Street for anyone inter- ages 5-12 with demonstrations from a PTC professional. ested in coaching. CHEERLEADING For more information, call For more information, call Fall Registration Palmetto Tennis Center at the recreation department at The Sumter County Recre(803) 774-3969. (803) 436-2248 or visit www. ation Department is taking sumtercountysc.org. registration for its cheerleadGOLF ing program through Aug. 11. SOFTBALL Churches Challenge It is open to children ages Fall Registration Registration is being taken 5-12 as of Sept. 1, 2016. The registration fee is $50 and no late registration will be taken. There will be a coaches meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 9, at 6 p.m. at the recreation department located at 155 Haynsworth Street for anyone interested in coaching. For more information, call the recreation department at (803) 436-2248 or visit www. sumtercountysc.org.

g n i n o p u

Co

MADE EASY

Advance Order in Bulk! Place your order by Wednesday.*

for the 17th annual Churches Challenge Praise Rally & Golf Tournament, which will be held Aug. 26-27. The praise rally will be held at Alice Drive Baptist Church while the tournament itself will be held at Sunset Country Club. On Friday, Aug. 26, the players, sponsors and families will gather for fellowship, devotion, praise music and food at 6 p.m. at Alice Drive Baptist Church located at 1305 Loring Mill Road. On Saturday, Aug. 27, at Sunset, sign-in for the morning flight begins at 7 a.m. Tee off will begin at approximately 8 a.m. The afternoon flight will have sign-in at 11 a.m. for its 1 p.m. tee times. The cost is $45 per golfer and includes the praise dinner on

Friday as well as lunch and beverages on Saturday. Players can also purchase up to two mulligans for $5 that can be used anywhere on the course. Registration forms can be mailed to CGA, 1285 Clara Louise Kellogg Drive, Sumter, SC 29153 or can be brought to the office at Dillon Park, next to Crystal Lakes Golf Course. The tournament is known for its prizes with none greater than the $51,000 prize if someone sinks a hole-in-one on the 18th hole. Should someone ace the 18th hole, his or her church will receive a check for $50,000 and the player will receive $1,000. For more information, contact the Christian Golfers Association at (803) 773-2171 or (803) 983-3457.

PLACE YOUR AD IN 101 S.C. NEWSPAPERS

and reach more than 2.1 million readers using our small space display ad network

Statewide or regional buys available Alanna Ritchie 888.727.7377 scnewspapernetwork.com South Carolina

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2016 The Sumter Item is asking its readers to join in its efforts to help United Ministries of Sumter County. Please choose to donate to one of the following: CRISIS RELIEF, which assists people who have received eviction and utility disconnect notices, and helps provide food, furniture and appliances for domestic violence victims. HOMELESS SHELTER (Samaritan House), which gives a safe place to sleep for up to 20 men and eight women. HOME REPAIR AND WHEELCHAIR MINISTRY (SAM), which makes homes safe, dry, secure and accessible by repairing roofs, floors, etc. PLEASE APPLY MY DONATION WHERE IT IS MOST NEEDED Name:

The papers will contain all coupons & other material in that sunday’s edition. call (803) 774-1200!

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Please Mail To: The Sumter Item/Summer of Caring PO Box 1677 • Sumter, SC 29150 Drop Off At: The Sumter Item 20 N. Magnolia St. • Sumter, SC 29150


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sports

Saturday, July 30, 2016

The SUMTER ITEM

Mickelson rallies to makes cut, McIlroy bogeys 18 to miss it

pga championship

By BARRY WILNER The Associated Press

The Associated Press

Patrick Reed watches his tee shot on the sixth hole Friday during the second round of the PGA Championship at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfield, N.J.

Reed fires 65 to move into PGA contention By BARRY WILNER The Associated Press

Hawaii. His 3-0-1 showing at the 2014 Ryder Cup was the strongest and most forceful of SPRINGFIELD, N.J. — The any American. question stumped Patrick Yet because he hasn’t won Reed and he asked for it to be this year — he has two runnerrepeated. up finishes and ranks 14th in Or maybe he was simply the world — his confident attistunned that after shooting a tude gets questioned. second-round 65 to move into Reed also was asked why he contention Friday at the PGA hadn’t elevated his game to Championship, someone was match “guys your age?” asking him about his cocki“I’m playing great, I have a ness. lot of top-10s,” he responded Reed’s self-assurance is well emphatically. “I’ve just had my known throughout golf. Why it best finish at a major so far would be a topic following sev- (tied for 12th at the British eral enthusiastic answers Open) and I’ve only been on about his upcoming Olympic the tour for three years. Everyparticipation, and some inone acts like I’ve been on tour sightful thoughts on how Balfor 15, 20 years. I’m only 25.” tusrol played in the second Reed always brightens when round, was somewhat difficult asked about representing his to fathom. country. He actively sought a But Reed scrambled — spot on the U.S. team for Rio, something not required much something he got when Dustin in his seven-birdie perforJohnson pulled out. Reed was mance that placed him at in the middle of a round at the 5-under 135. Scottish Open, where he finAsked about believing in ished tied for 10th, when Johnhimself as a “top-three playson withdrew. er,” Reed seemed somewhat After discussing the options amused. with his “team,” Reed and his “I appreciate you saying top wife, Justine, basically said, three, because I said top five,” ‘’Let’s go.” he said. “And I appreciate you “I can’t wait,” he said. “It’s calling me cocky, as well. I one of those things that just don’t really know how to take talking about it kind of gives that one. me goosebumps, because “You have to believe in your- going over there, wearing the self. If there was not a mic stars and stripes, playing around and you went out and again, it’s going to be great.” asked every single guy, and if His 65 Friday was the best they knew you weren’t media morning round and matched and ... asked every single guy Jimmy Walker’s opening where do you want to be, they score. Reed shot it after an are going to say No. 1 in the overnight change of driver. In world. And if they don’t, then his first round, Reed was those guys also aren’t winning happy with his iron play and every week or even having a his putting. chance to win golf tourna“But I couldn’t keep a driver ments because they are not be- on the planet,” he said. “So I lieving in themselves. switched to my old driver and “But really at the end of the went and hit the driver better. day, when it comes down to it, The difference between a topyeah, I believe in myself. I play 10 and a win out on tour is if golf. I am who I am. ... I’m not you hit fairways, you’ll hit writing the articles. It comes greens, and those 50-50 putts, down to how you all portray you’re always on the right side me, not how I portray myself, of them.” because I didn’t write the artiOne putt that definitely cle. There’s been some I fixed wasn’t a 50-50 proposition and some that are true and I came on the ninth, Reed’s final like the articles. hole. He hit a 6-iron to the par“But at the end of the day, 3, but couldn’t tell how close it all I can do is play golf and be was to the hole. who I am, and hopefully I’ll “So I just thought it might write the good ones.” have been on the green beReed has written an impres- cause not a single person sive story since becoming a clapped,” he said with a PGA Tour regular in 2013. He’s chuckle. “So I walk up there won four times, including beand I realize it’s a foot (from coming the youngest player to the pin). I was just like, OK, I take a World Golf Championguess the rest of the field has ship by winning at Doral in been hitting it inside a foot all 2014. He also won the 2015 day. Didn’t get a single clap, Tournament of Champions in and it’s in there tight.”

pga

From Page B1 5s remaining. But he hit into the hospitality area well left of the 17th and scrambled for par, and then his tee shot narrowly missed its mark and found the water on the 18th, leading to bogey. Even so, he was tied at the halfway point of a major. “It’s going to be a new experience, and it will be fun,” Walker said. “You still have to go perform. Doesn’t matter what tournament it is.” Defending champion Jason Day dropped to even par with a double bogey on No. 7, and that appeared to wake up the world’s No. 1 player. Day went on a tear with seven birdies

over his next eight holes, two of them from 18 feet, one of them from 35 feet. Suddenly, he was on the verge of a shot at 63 until he hooked his tee shot to the base of the hospitality area on the 17th, and pushed a driving iron into the right rough on the 18th. He settled for pars at both for a 65. Day was right where he wanted to be, three shots behind going into the weekend, his name high on the leaderboard for everyone to see. At stake is a chance to join Tiger Woods as the only back-toback PGA champions since the stroke-play era began in 1958. Day was joined at 7-under 133 by Emiliano Grillo, the talented young Argentine who worked hard on his putting at Baltusrol

SPRINGFIELD, N.J. — Phil Mickelson walked off the first green with a disgusted look on his face, as if he’d thrown away any shot at making the cut in the PGA Championship. A 7 on the opening par-4 hole will do that to you. “I think in the history of the PGA Championship, that’s the worst start of any player’s round,” Mickelson said. “I’d have to look that up.” The five-time major winner set about steadying himself, writing the triple bogey on the scorecard and leaving it behind. With four birdies the rest of the way and only a slip-up on 16, Mickelson managed an even-par 70 to advance to the weekend. As usual, Lefty’s gallery was massive — he played with defending champion Jason Day, who is tied for third at 7-under, and Rory

McIlroy, who bogeyed the relatively easy par-5 18th to miss the cut. Those thousands of fans were as stunned with the way Mickelson began as he was. After a 1-over 71 on Thursday, the PGA winner when the tournament last was held at Baltusrol in 2005 hit his drive so far left on No. 1 that its first bounce was on Shunpike Road. It appeared to hang a left on Baltusrol Drive, possibly on its way to the Hudson River. Playing a provisional on the 478-yard hole, Mickelson messed up once more, the ball landing far from the fairway, nestling near a path. His next shot almost landed in the backyard of a home adjoining the golf course. He needed two shots to reach the green, then, thankfully, he one-putted for a 7. “Just a total mental block on that first hole,” he said. “And I don’t even know what to say. It was just horrific.”

Mickelson began his comeback with a birdie on No. 3, got another on the 8th and one on No. 11. A bogey on the par-3 16th jeopardized his standing, but he made sure he would make the weekend with a birdie on the finishing hole. Unlike Mickelson, McIlroy couldn’t respond, though he came close. The two-time major champion came off an opening 74 and needed to post a good number to remain in the tournament. He made his first birdie of the tourney on No. 4 and birdied 6, but bogeyed the ninth. After a birdie on 11, he was in position to stick around, but he bogeyed 13. McIlroy came to the only two par-5s on Baltusrol at 3 over; the cut would be plus 2. He birdied the more difficult 17th, then fell apart after hitting his second shot into the deep rough behind 18. Two wasted shots led to a 6 — and an early exit.

The Associated Press

Fans watch as golfers play the fourth green during the second round of the PGA Championship at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfield, N.J.

PGA championship PAR SCORES At Baltusrol GC (Lower Course) Springfield, N.J. Purse: $10 million Yardage: 7,428; Par 70 (34-36) First Round Jimmy Walker 65-66—131 Robert Streb 68-63—131 Emiliano Grillo 66-67—133 Jason Day 68-65—133 Henrik Stenson 67-67—134 Martin Kaymer 66-69—135 Patrick Reed 70-65—135 Brooks Koepka 68-67—135 Hideki Matsuyama 69-67—136 Harris English 67-69—136 Rickie Fowler 68-68—136 Jamie Donaldson 69-67—136 Yuta Ikeda 70-67—137 Jordan Spieth 70-67—137 William McGirt 70-67—137 Daniel Summerhays 70-67—137 Zach Johnson 71-66—137 Billy Hurley III 72-65—137 Adam Scott 70-67—137 Gregory Bourdy 69-68—137 Hideto Tanihara 71-66—137 John Senden 68-70—138 Alexander Noren 70-68—138 Webb Simpson 69-69—138 Louis Oosthuizen 68-70—138 Ryan Moore 71-67—138 Jon Curran 69-69—138 K.J. Choi 68-70—138 David Lingmerth 68-70—138 Branden Grace 70-68—138 Paul Casey 69-69—138 Scott Hend 68-70—138 Andy Sullivan 67-71—138 Andrew Johnston 70-69—139 Steve Stricker 69-70—139 Danny Lee 69-70—139 Young-han Song 71-68—139 Tyrrell Hatton 71-68—139 Marcus Fraser 71-68—139 Brandt Snedeker 73-66—139 Lee Westwood 69-70—139 Soren Kjeldsen 70-69—139 Vaughn Taylor 68-71—139 Kevin Na 71-68—139 George Coetzee 72-67—139 Ross Fisher 66-73—139

and watched it pay off. Grillo got this afternoon of birdies going by making five of them in a seven-hole stretch on the back nine until he cooled on the front and had to settle for a 67. This is new territory for him, too. Just like Walker and Streb, he has never even contended in a major. “I’ve never been in this situation, and I’m not afraid of it,” Grillo said. “I’m going to go out and enjoy it.” By the end of the day, it was easy to overlook a familiar figure — Stenson, the British Open champion who made eagle on the 18th at the turn and polished off another 67. He was only four shots behind in his bid to match Ben Hogan as the only players to win two

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Jhonattan Vegas 68-71—139 Russell Henley 68-72—140 Marc Leishman 71-69—140 Russell Knox 70-70—140 Bubba Watson 71-69—140 Cameron Tringale 72-68—140 Kyle Reifers 70-70—140 Bradley Dredge 69-71—140 Brian Stuard 70-70—140 Daniel Berger 71-69—140 Aaron Baddeley 70-70—140 Kevin Kisner 71-69—140 James Hahn 67-73—140 Bill Haas 70-70—140 Rich Beem 69-72—141 Francesco Molinari 71-70—141 Jim Furyk 74-67—141 Thomas Pieters 71-70—141 Danny Willett 71-70—141 Padraig Harrington 71-70—141 Justin Thomas 69-72—141 Keegan Bradley 73-68—141 Phil Mickelson 71-70—141 Colt Knost 69-73—142 Ryan Palmer 71-71—142 Billy Horschel 72-70—142 Matthew Fitzpatrick 72-70—142 Jason Dufner 71-71—142 K. Aphibarnrat 70-72—142 Thongchai Jaidee 72-70—142 Justin Rose 70-72—142 Charl Schwartzel 73-69—142 Joost Luiten 72-70—142 Freddie Jacobson 71-71—142 Patton Kizzire 71-71—142 Jason Kokrak 70-72—142 Ernie Els 73-69—142 Rafa Cabrera Bello 72-70—142 Matt Jones 74-68—142 Roberto Castro 72-70—142

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Failed to make the cut Scott Piercy 72-71—143 Y.E. Yang 72-71—143 Luke Donald 72-71—143 Chris Kirk 74-69—143 Chris Wood 69-74—143 Victor Dubuisson 69-74—143 Rory McIlroy 74-69—143 Ryan Helminen 72-71—143 Smylie Kaufman 73-70—143 Harold Varner III 72-72—144 Thorbjorn Olesen 70-74—144 Brendan Steele 71-73—144 Byeong Hun An 72-72—144 Si Woo Kim 71-73—144

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straight majors at age 40. Mickelson made the cut, and that might have been the most entertaining of all. He began his round with a tee shot so far left that it sailed off the property, bounced along Shunpike Road and caromed to the left down Baltusrol Way. Wherever it finished, it was out-of-bounds, and Mickelson had to scramble for a triple bogey. He spent the rest of the day battling to get back, and he delivered on the 18th with a birdie to post a 70. “I think in the history of the PGA Championship, that’s the worst start of any player’s round. I’d have to look it up,” Mickelson said. No need to. Someone pointed out that Nicolas Colsaerts piped two over the fence and

J.B. Holmes Vijay Singh Rikard Karlberg Rod Perry Zac Blair Kevin Chappell Gary Woodland Shane Lowry Sergio Garcia Ben Polland Bryce Molder Kevin Streelman Jason Bohn Matt Dobyns Darren Clarke Charley Hoffman Rich Berberian, Jr. Anirban Lahiri Matt Kuchar Bernd Wiesberger Peter Malnati Mark Brown Kristoffer Broberg Jonas Blixt Rob Labritz David Toms Tony Finau Soomin Lee Brian Gaffney John Daly Jamie Lovemark David Muttitt Michael Block Johan Kok Fabian Gomez Jim Herman K.T. Kim Jeunghun Wang Josh Speight Greg Chalmers Nicolas Colsaerts Joe Summerhays Troy Merritt Rocco Mediate Dustin Johnson Graeme McDowell Brandon Stone Mitch Lowe Tommy Sharp Omar Uresti Shaun Micheel Brad Ott W. Worthington II James Morrison Rick Schuller Brad Lardon

75-69—144 +4 74-70—144 +4 72-72—144 +4 73-71—144 +4 73-71—144 +4 72-73—145 +5 73-72—145 +5 72-73—145 +5 71-74—145 +5 72-73—145 +5 74-71—145 +5 75-70—145 +5 71-74—145 +5 73-72—145 +5 74-71—145 +5 75-70—145 +5 72-74—146 +6 73-73—146 +6 74-72—146 +6 75-71—146 +6 73-73—146 +6 75-71—146 +6 72-74—146 +6 75-71—146 +6 71-76—147 +7 74-73—147 +7 77-70—147 +7 77-70—147 +7 74-73—147 +7 74-73—147 +7 71-76—147 +7 73-74—147 +7 72-76—148 +8 72-76—148 +8 75-73—148 +8 77-71—148 +8 77-71—148 +8 73-75—148 +8 77-71—148 +8 72-76—148 +8 72-76—148 +8 76-73—149 +9 77-72—149 +9 76-73—149 +9 77-72—149 +9 74-75—149 +9 79-71—150 +10 74-76—150 +10 77-73—150 +10 72-78—150 +10 77-74—151 +11 79-72—151 +11 76-76—152 +12 78-76—154 +14 78-76—154 +14 83-74—157 +17

made 8. “I’m having a difficult time right now managing my expectations, because I know how well I’m playing and I’m so result-oriented that I’m not playing very relaxed, free golf like I did at the British, like I did in the preparation here,” Mickelson said. A dozen players were separated by five shots going into the weekend, a group that included Martin Kaymer (69), Patrick Reed (65) and Brooks Koepka (67) at 135, and even Rickie Fowler getting into the act with a birdie-eagle finish for a 68 to get within five shots. Jordan Spieth was finally back in the mix, at least on the fringes, after a hot start that led to a 67. He was in the group six shots behind.


The SUMTER ITEM

sports

Saturday, July 30, 2016

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B5

prep football

RICK CARPENTER/THE SUMTER ITEM

Crestwood punter Jordan Spurell punts during a practice drill on Friday.

RICK CARPENTER/THE SUMTER ITEM

Sumter’s Raimera Roach stretches for a high pass Friday during practice.

RICK CARPENTER/THE SUMTER ITEM

Crestwood’s Anthony Bradley (left) practices a drill with Tyler Green.

Football practices begin cain

From Page B1 “I’m going full speed, I’m just not quite at where was I was when I left. I’m just taking baby steps to get back there. It’s like starting football all over again.” Cain has been up the challenge so far in the offseason, head coach Brian Jackson said. “He’s done everything that all the other players have done and he’s worked himself back into shape,” Jackson said. “He’s lost about 25 pounds (off what was a 6-foot-2inch, 330-pound frame). He still competes and he still pushes himself.” Breaks are regularly scheduled, Jackson said, and there’s a water station near Cain if he needs it as everyone is likely keeping an extra eye on him. That will extend to the season where Jackson said Cain will be ,used somewhat sparingly in more gap-control, pass-rush situations. “I don’t think he’s going to be an every-down player,” Jackson said. “But we’ll have him in for maybe two or three plays, then take him out for two or plays and kind of ease him back in.” Regardless of where he plays or how often, Cain is simply glad his road to recovery has led back to the gridiron. “It’s surreal — it’s like a dream really,” he said. “I don’t think this has ever happened to anybody. To be in a hospital bed one day and then not long after be back on the football field running full speed? That’s unreal.”

RICK CARPENTER/THE SUMTER ITEM

Sumter’s Patrick Moses waits to pull in a pass during practice Friday. It was the first official day of practice for public schools. Private schools started a day earlier.


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COMICS

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

THE SUMTER ITEM

BIZARRO

SOUP TO NUTZ

ANDY CAPP

GARFIELD

BEETLE BAILEY

BORN LOSER

BLONDIE

ZITS

MOTHER GOOSE

DOG EAT DOUG

DILBERT

JEFF MACNELLY’S SHOE

Woman keeps retirement a secret to keep privacy DEAR ABBY — I recently retired, but I haven't told anyone. I receive widow's benefits, so I'm comfortDear Abby able finanABIGAIL cially. I like my privacy, VAN BUREN and I'm afraid things will change if I tell people about my retirement. My father is dying of cancer. My best friend says if I were her sister, she'd be mad at me. My sister lives a mile away and I don't want her dropping in on me. If she knew, she'd include me in everything she does. I

JUMBLE THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME By David L Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

feel this is my life and I want to enjoy it alone for the most part. Am I wrong? Am I hurting anyone? I was widowed 20 years ago and have had no serious relationships since. I'm independent, attractive and have joined a few dating sites, but I'm picky and have not met a man who attracts me. I'm 66, in good health and look younger. Am I being selfish? Do you have any advice for me? Loner Lady out West DEAR LONER LADY — If your sister has shouldered the responsibility of caring for your dying father by herself, thinking you are too busy working to help, then she would have every reason to be very angry. Even

if that's not the case, her feelings will be hurt when she finds out -- and she will -- that you're avoiding her. If she didn't love you, she wouldn't want to include you in her life. All you need to do is say no to her invitation if the activity isn't your cup of tea. And surely, you can find a tactful way to ask any drop-in visitor to make plans with you ahead of time instead of dropping in. You say you want to enjoy your life alone for the most part, but you have joined dating sites. In this life, people have to give in order to get. It may be the attitude you're projecting that's keeping you from meeting men on those dating sites. And yes, I think you are selfish.

SUDOKU HOW TO PLAY: Each row, column and set of 3-by-3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 through 9 without repetition.

THE DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

By Kevin Christian

ACROSS 1 Like some glass 8 Black Friday store opening event? 15 “Be right with you” 17 Serious request for help 18 Island where Dionysus discovered Ariadne 19 Burden 20 Disney’s “__ & Stitch” 21 Hebrew for “skyward” 22 __ owl 24 “At Seventeen” Grammy winner __ Ian 25 Spender of rials 27 Name 28 Suzanne Collins trilogy, with “The” 32 Rebus pronoun 35 Waste management word 36 Beats 38 Isr. neighbor 39 Loreena McKennitt genre 41 Big name in jewelry 42 Dizzy

7/30/16

13 Absolut 37 Don Quixote’s alternative, unseen love familiarly 40 Screen Actors 14 __ welcome Guild co-founder 16 Semiaquatic Lyle __ rodent 41 2000s-’10s 22 Brewer’s supply Afghan president 23 “Buffy the 43 Not at all trivial Vampire Slayer” 44 Allan-__: Robin spin-off Hood cohort 24 “I’m alone” 45 With 53-Across, 26 Big attractions Japanese roadster 27 Wild things? 46 Ready to be 28 Some game shipped enders: Abbr. 48 Tracks 29 Pike no-no 49 Where __ 30 ATM giant 50 Come clean? 31 Actress Kelly 52 Notability DOWN 32 Aurora’s 53 __ pit 1 Excel counterpart 55 Georgia, once: 2 Like Romantic 33 Either Abbr. music of two Chinese 56 Upsilon follower 3 Singer/songwriter dynasties 57 Fifth-century __ Ray Joel 34 Bailout key invader 4 Belief system Friday’s Puzzle Solved 5 Acceptances 6 Commercial suffix with wheat 7 Word from Homer 8 Mullally of “Will & Grace” 9 Blue Cash Everyday card co. 10 “What’s the __?” 11 “CSI” facility 12 How coq may be ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 7/30/16 cooked 43 Half a ‘60s pop group 46 Lesage hero Gil __ 47 Pad 51 __ I: Jewish month added in leap years 52 Watch chain 53 See 45-Down 54 Parker or Getz 58 Ancient 59 Put on again 60 Usually not the best way to marry


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2016 SAVVY SENIOR

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

6 1 0 2

THE SUMTER ITEM

SAVVY

SENIORS Covenant Place isn’t your grandma’s nursing home! Senior living is not what you may think. There are so many reasons that moving to a retirement community such as Covenant Place is better than living at home when it comes to quality of life, wellness, and socialization. From barber and beauty services to fine dining, retirement living at Covenant Place offers fun, social and wellness activities, as well as fine dining and state-of-the-art medical care. Many who call Covenant Place home have found convenient, worry-free living, happiness, and improved quality of life. Learn the benefits of choosing a continuing care retirement community. HEALTHY DINING It is very difficult to cook nutritious meals for one and even more of a challenge for families to monitor whether their loved ones are getting what they need. Covenant Place participates in the farm-to-table movement which promotes serving fresh food from local suppliers. Under the direction of a certified dietary man-

ager, the executive chef and dietician serve three meals a day that are not only nutritious, they are delicious! Covenant Place even meets the needs of those with special dietary needs or medical conditions.

offered through Rehabilitation at Covenant Place utilizing Medicare benefits. Opportunities for physical activity at Covenant Place go far beyond what family caregivers can provide at home.

SOCIALIZATION

HELP WITH ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING

Boredom, loneliness, and isolation are the biggest plagues for seniors living alone. This is linked to poor physical and mental health. At Covenant Place seniors can easily socialize with peers from their generation, not only during dining but through activities utilizing our Eight Dimensions of Wellness programming. Covenant Place inspires seniors to get involved, which leads to greater happiness and quality of life. FITNESS, WELLNESS PROGRAMS AND PHYSICAL THERAPY Covenant Place offers many fitness programs to keep residents active, including Zumba Gold and OTAGO exercise classes. Endurance and strength building exercises are

Family caregivers and hired in-home help are generally responsible for assisting seniors with bathing, dressing, eating, and other activities of daily living, which can be very expensive without the benefits of socialization. In addition, other activities of living such as housekeeping, laundry, yard work, and more, can be a tremendous burden to seniors. Covenant Place provides expert help with all of these activities to allow seniors more independence for the activities that make them happy, thus offering a better quality of life for all involved. A SAFE LIVING ENVIRONMENT

costly modifications for their loved ones to remain at home, including medical alert systems, grab-bars, and it’s especially expensive if supervised care is needed. Covenant Place is designed for accessibility and increased senior mobility, helping seniors avoid falls and providing access to medical assistance. A safe living environment is a priceless peace of mind. As a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) continuing care retirement community, Covenant Place offers the perfect lifestyle options for those who enjoy their independence with security for the future. Covenant Place provides a range of lifestyle options including Apartment Living, Assisted Living, Heartfelt Connections™ Secured Memory Care, Skilled Nursing Care, and Rehabilitative Care. To learn more about the benefits of living at Covenant Place call today at 803-4697007 to schedule your personal visit.

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10to help TIPS you LIVE LONGER 1. Stay active. Get moving! Go golfing, dancing, swimming or biking. Play tennis or do some gardening. To stay fit, do at least 150 minutes of moderate- to high-intensity physical activity per week and adopt an active lifestyle. For example, use the stairs instead of the elevator and walk or bike to get where you’re going whenever possible. 2. Watch your diet. A healthy, balanced diet improves your general well-being and is essential for controlling your weight, cholesterol levels and blood pressure. Follow the Canada Food Guide’s recommendations; eat less sugar and be moderate in your consumption of alcohol. 3. See your doctor on a regular basis. An ounce of prevention is worth more than a pound of cure, and that’s why your doctor is your best ally. Have regular checkups and go for recommended screening tests. An early diagnosis can make all the difference in the event of illness. 4. Take care of yourself. Listen to your body, and see your dentist and optometrist regularly. Exercise your brain to keep your memory active, and splurge once in a while on beauty treatments or activities that boost your morale. 5. Get enough sleep. Lack of sleep increases irritability and reduces concentration. It also increases the risk of heart disease and certain cancers. For most people a good night’s rest involves at least eight hours of sleep.

6. Relax. Learn to manage your stress. Intense stress can cause insomnia and even skin rashes. It can also aggravate conditions such as high blood pressure and Type 2 diabetes. Take time for yourself and relax. Do yoga, learn to breathe properly, get a massage or read. In other words, slow down and smell the roses. 7. Quit smoking. Smoking increases the risk of lung cancer, heart disease and stroke. The sooner you quit, the sooner your body can recover and benefit from reduced chances of a premature death. 8. Cultivate your social life. Having a full social and emotional life helps you live longer and makes it easier to enjoy life’s little pleasures. Surround yourself with people you love, and spend time with your family. Volunteer, join a club or sports team and consider adopting a pet. Avoid isolating yourself, because doing so is harmful to your health. 9. Maintain your passions. It’s important to have fun and to have a hobby that you love. Set goals and objectives for yourself, whether it’s to improve your backhand in tennis or put in another flower bed in your backyard. Working on projects helps you keep an active mind and high spirits. 10. Treat yourself. Go on a trip or change your decor. Buy some tickets for a show or go see a movie. Eat out, or invite someone in for a meal. Think about your own needs and spoil yourself a little.

The best (and worst) foods for heart health N

o one wants to hear from their doctors that they have joined the millions of people across the globe to be diagnosed with heart disease. The Heart Foundation reports that heart disease, which includes diseases of the heart and cardiovascular system and stroke, is the No. 1 cause of death in the United States, affecting both men and women and most racial/ethnic groups. Heart disease also is one of the leading causes of death in Canada, claiming more than 33,000 lives per year. Many factors contribute to the development of heart disease, including smoking, lack of exercise and stress. Diet and whether a person is overweight or obese also can have a direct link to heart health. Diet, particularly for those with diabetes and poorly controlled blood sugar levels, is a major concern. A variety of foods are considered helpful for maintaining a strong and healthy heart and cardiovascular system, while others can contribute to conditions that may eventually lead to cardiovascular disease or cardiac arrest. Moderation enables a person to sample a little of everything, but not to make any one food a habit. The following are some foods to promote heart health and some foods you might want to avoid.

Good • Tree nuts: Tree nuts contain unsaturated fats that can help lower LDL cholesterol (the bad stuff) and improve HDL (the good stuff). Nuts also are a filling source of protein and other healthy nutrients. • Whole grains: Whole grains contain complex carbohydrates for energy, as well as protein and fiber. Fiber can help scrub cholesterol from the blood, lowering bad cholesterol levels. • Fatty fish: Many cold-water, fatty fish, such as halibut, herring and salmon, contain omega-3 fatty acids, which are heart-healthy. Omega-3s also can be found in walnuts, flaxseed and some soy products. • Beans: Beans and other legumes are an excellent source of protein and can be a stand-in for meats that are high in sat-

urated fat. Beans also contain cholesterol-lowering soluble fiber and folate, which can reduce blood homocystein levels. The Bean Institute reports that consuming beans may reduce cholesterol levels by roughly six to 10 percent. • Yogurt: Researchers in Japan found yogurt may protect against gum disease. Left untreated, gum disease may elevate a person’s risk for heart disease. Yogurt contains good bacteria that can counteract bad bacteria and boost immunity. • Raisins: Raisins contain antioxidants that may help reduce inflammation. Inflammation is often linked to heart disease and other debilitating conditions. Fresh produce also is a good source of antioxidants.

Poor

• Fried foods: Many fried foods have little nutritional value, as they tend to be high in saturated and trans fats. French fries are particularly bad because they are carbohydrates fried and then doused in salt. • Sausage: Processed meats have frequently earned a bad reputation among cardiologists, but sausage can be a big offender, due in large part to its high saturated fat content. • Red meats: Enjoying a steak is probably not as bad as eating a deep-fried brownie, but it’s best to limit red meat consumption to about 10 percent or less of your diet. Red meats can have a considerable amount of cholesterol, saturated fat and calories. • Added sugars: Sugar can increase

blood pressure and triglyceride levels. Sugar often hides out in foods that you would not associate with the sweetener. Plus, many people unwittingly consume too much sugar simply through sugar-sweetened beverages and readyto-eat cereals. • Salty foods: Leave the salt shaker in the spice cabinet and opt for herbs for flavoring, advises the American Heart Association. High-sodium diets often are to blame for hypertension, a major risk factor for heart disease. • Dairy: Artery-clogging saturated fat also can be found in dairy products, particularly the full-fat versions. Butter, sour cream and milk can be problematic when people overindulge. Opt for low-fat dairy when possible.


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Cut the costs of your prescriptions ication options with your physician. Brand-name drugs are typically more expensive than generic alternatives, so speak with your physician about generic drugs or less costly brandname drugs that may treat your condition as well as expensive brandname drugs do.

tions due to the costs of those medications, but it still serves to highlight a need many people have to cut the costs of their medicine.

The costs of filling prescriptions is simply too big to bear for many people, even now that the Affordable Care Act has greatly reduced the amount of people who are uninsured. A survey from the Commonwealth Fund found that 35 million people in America failed to fill a prescription in 2014 because of the cost of the medication. That figure represents an improvement from 2010, when 48 million people did not fill their prescrip-

Though people who cannot afford to fill their prescriptions often feel helpless, there are a handful of ways they can cut the costs of their medications and start feeling better. Discuss changes with your physician. Perhaps the simplest way to cut prescription costs is to discuss med-

Consider Patient Assistance Programs. Sometimes referred to as “Pharmaceutical Assistance Programs,” Patient Assistance Programs, or PAPs, can greatly reduce the burden of prescription drug costs. Sponsored by pharmaceutical companies, PAPs distribute billions of dollars to patients who otherwise could not afford their medications. Eligibility criteria varies depending on the program, but men and women struggling to pay for their prescriptions can speak with their physicians about PAPs.

Today’s young professionals hear about the importance of saving for retirement seemingly from the moment they are hired. In addition to discussions with human resources personnel about employer-sponsored retirement plans, young professionals are learning about the importance of saving for retirement thanks to the abundance of financial-planning advertisements on television, the radio and the Internet. Older workers may not have been so lucky, and many may find themselves trying to play catch up as retirement age draws closer. While it’s important to begin saving for retirement as early as possible, late bloomers whose retirement dates are nearing can still take steps to secure their financial futures.

Retirement saving for late bloomers

Pay down debts. Eliminating debt is good for men and women of all ages, but especially so for those nearing retirement. Substantial debt may delay your retirement and can greatly reduce your quality of life during retirement. If you still have substantial debt, eliminate that debt before you start saving additional money for retirement. Once your debt slate has been wiped clean, you can then increase your retirement contributions. Eliminate unnecessary expenses. If your retirement savings are low (many financial advisors now advise men and women that they will need

Consult your member organizations. If you are a member of the AAA automotive group or the American Association of Retired Persons, you might be eligible for medication discount cards free of charge. These cards provide discounts on your medications, but some come with expensive fees upfront. Look for no-fee cards, such as those offered to AAA and AARP members or others offered by nonprofit organizations, before considering options offered by pharmaceutical companies or other for-profit businesses. Contact charitable organizations. Some charitable organizations, such as the National Organization for Rare Disorders and maybe even some local nonprofits, offer prescription assistance to people in need. Visit NORD online at www.rarediseases.org.

at least 60 percent of their pre-retirement income each year they are retired), start cutting back on unnecessary expenses and reallocate that money toward retirement saving. Cutting out luxury items, such as vacations to exotic locales or country club memberships, is one way to save money. But don’t overlook the simpler ways to save, such as canceling your cable subscription or dining at home more often. Downsize your home. Many empty nesters downsize their homes as retirement nears, and doing so can help you save a substantial amount of money. If the kids no longer live at home or if you simply have more space than you will need after retirement, downsize to a smaller, less expensive home. Monitor the real estate market before you decide to downsize so you can be sure to get the best deal on your current home. Downsizing saves on monthly utility bills, property taxes and a host of additional expenses. Downsizing also means less maintenance, which gives you more time to pursue your hobbies upon retiring. Take on some additional work. While you may have long felt you would slowly wind down in the years immediately preceding retirement, taking on some additional work outside of your current job is a great way to save more for retirement and perhaps even lay the foundation for a post-retirement career. Workers over the age of 50 can be invaluable resources to startups or other businesses looking for executives who have been there, done that. Look for parttime jobs that seek such experience. Even if the initial jobs don’t bowl you over financially, part-time consultant work in retirement can make up for lost retirement savings and may even make your retirement years more fulfilling. Men and women on the verge of retirement can take many steps to grow their retirement savings and make their golden years that much more enjoyable.

Healthy habits to combat stress

Stress has an immediate and potentially longterm effect on the human body. Though it’s a natural response to both good and bad experiences, stress, when chronic, can produce a host of negative consequences that greatly diminish one’s quality of life. Combatting stress can sometimes be difficult, as the causes of stress are never too far away for many adults. In its 2015 “Stress in AmericaTM: Paying With Our Health” survey, the American Psychological Association found that money is the top cause of stress for Americans. The survey was conducted on behalf of the APA by Harris Poll, which asked more than 3,000 participants about their issues with stress. Sixty-four percent said money was a somewhat or very significant source of stress, and that number was even higher for parents (77 percent). Survey respondents also noted that work is a significant source of stress. Few adults can imagine a life that does not include

financial- or work-related stress. But there are ways to combat stress that can benefit people’s long-term health and improve their present-day quality of life. Develop a support network. Speaking about problems with trusted friends and family members can be an effective way to combat stress. The APA study found that participants who reported having an emotional support network reported lower stress levels than those who had no such networks to rely on. Try to overcome any reticence you might have about speaking about your stress to a close friend or trusted relative on those days when stress seems overwhelming. Get more exercise. Routine exercise is another healthy way to combat stress. According to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, studies have shown that exercise can reduce fatigue, improve alertness and concentration and enhance overall cognitive function. Those are considerable benefits to people deal-

ing with elevated levels of stress, which can contribute to both physical and mental fatigue and negatively impact one’s ability to concentrate. Studies also have shown that regular exercise can decrease tension, which tends to increase as stress levels rise, and elevate and help to stabilize mood, which often decreases as stress levels increase.

Don’t lean on alcohol after stressful days. Many people respond to stressful days by consuming alcohol. While alcohol helps some people forget a stressful day, it also produces psychological and physiological side effects that can compound the effects of the very stress drinkers are looking to relieve. People who drink to alleviate stress may only be doing more harm with each drink, so find a way to cope with stress that has a more positive impact on both your body and mind than that produced by alcohol. Breathe deeply. The American Institute of Stress notes that focused breathing

is a relaxation response that stimulates the nervous system and promotes a sense of calmness. Deep breathing can combat stress, lower blood pressure and draw your attention away from those things that are causing your

stress. Visit www.stress.org to learn about deep breathing exercises. Stress if a fact of life for many people. But while stress may be inevitable, it can be overcome.

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Interesting ways to enjoy travel

over 50 are charting their own vacation courses with bucket list-style vacations that may be off the beaten path. Travelers who have always aspired to climb a mountain or see a rain forest may be inclined to realize these goals as they get older. Nontraditional tours can include living like indigenous peoples or following the footsteps of early explorers.

Research indicates that traveling is at the top of the list of interests motivating today’s men and women over the age of 50. Seniors are perhaps the most likely demographic to indulge their love of traveling. Retirement leaves lots of time for recreation, and many choose to spend that time on the road. Travel also can be improve adult longevity, says geriatricians at the University of Arkansas.

All-inclusive tours: All-inclusive packages remain a popular option for travelers of all ages. These vacation packages charge one price for accommodations, entertainment, sightseeing, food, and many other amenities. All-inclusive vacations remove some of the headaches associated with organizing various components of travel so that a person can focus on relaxation and having fun.

Those in the travel industry understand that men and women over 50 comprise a large percentage of their customers and have catered many travel packages toward this influential demographic. The following is a look at some of the more popular travel opportunities for men and women over 50. Genealogical tourism: This is one of the fastest-growing markets in vacation travel. Genealogical tourism involves individuals traveling to areas of historical significance for their families, such as churches where past relatives may have married and villages where grandparents or cousins once resided or were employed. This can create a tangible link to one’s past and open up more opportunities to learn the varied genealogical history that has shaped a family, and even one’s personal identity.

Extended vacations: Seniors may have the capacity to devote more time to travel and not be caged in by strict time constraints. That makes them eligible for extended vacations. These can include longterm rentals in tropical locales, several-week sightseeing cruises or guided tours overseas that touch on several different countries or cities during the trip. Off the beaten path: Adventurous travelers may not be content to stick to the resort lifestyle or standard vacation options. Active men and women

Singles meets: Single vacationers over 50 may want to meet other men or women in their age bracket in the hopes of finding romance. These vacations double as relationship mixers and give men and women the opportunity to mingle with others in similar situations without the pressure of traditional dating. Travel is a way to see the world, meet new people and experience various cultures. Seniors increasingly embrace travel because they have both the time and the means to take vacations.

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Welcoming New Patients For Exceptional Cardiac Care Heart conditions caused by high blood pressure and cholesterol, obesity, diabetes, atrial fibrillation (A-Fib) and family history are on the rise. That’s why choosing the right cardiologist is more important than ever. The McLeod Cardiology Associates team in Sumter includes Cardiologists Dr. Dennis Lang and Dr. Ryan Garbalosa, and Electrophysiologist, Dr. Prabal Guha. These highly-skilled physicians provide the highest quality adult cardiovascular care utilizing the latest techniques. McLeod Cardiology Associates is part of McLeod Health which is recognized in the Top 5% Nationally for Heart and Vascular Services. McLeod Cardiology Associates welcomes new patients. To make an appointment, call 803-883-5171. Physician and self-referrals are welcome.

McLeod Cardiology Associates, formerly Pee Dee Cardiology, has been providing cardiac services for nearly 30 years. Our team of highly-skilled and experienced cardiologists, interventional cardiologists and electrophysiologists continue to provide our patients with expertise in the diagnosis, management, and prevention of cardiovascular conditions. With practices throughout the region, the best in cardiac care is easily accessible. McLeod Cardiology Associates is accepting new patients. To make an appointment, call 1-800-299-5689. Physician and self-referrals are welcome.

Dr. Dennis Lang, Cardiologist

Dr. Ryan Garbalosa, Cardiologist

Dr. Prabal Guha, Electrophysiologist First Row: Dr. James Lee, Dr. Nathan Almeida, Dr. Gavin Leask, Dr. Ryan Garbalosa, Dr. Alan Blaker, Dr. John Patton, Dr. Thomas Stoughton, Dr. Nicolette Naso, Dr. Amit Pande Cardiologist Second Row: Dr. Dennis Lang, Dr. Prabal Guha, Dr. Evans Holland, Dr. Brian Wall, Dr. Anil Om, Dr. Rajesh Malik, Dr Fred Krainin

McLeod Cardiology Associates 101 JohnsCardiology Street, Florence, SC Associates 843-667-1891 McLeod 3485 Mitchell Street, Loris, SC 843-756-7029 115 North Sumter Street, Suite 410, Sumter, 803-883-5171 3980 Highway 9 E., Suite 220, Little River, SCSC 843-390-0877 115 North Sumter Street, Suite 410, Sumter, SC 803-883-5171

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Did you know? Osteoporosis is a disease of the bones that occurs when a person loses too much bone, produces too little bone or both. Though the disease is most often associated with women over 50, anyone can suffer from osteoporosis, which weakens bones and can make them more susceptible to breaks. Exercise is a great way for men and women to build and maintain strong bones in an attempt to prevent the onset of osteoporosis. According to the National Osteoporosis Foundation, weight-bearing exercises can help build and maintain bone density. But the NOF notes that men and women who have suffered broken bones due to osteoporosis or those at risk of such breaks may need to avoid high-impact weightbearing exercises, which include dancing, hiking, jogging, and jumping rope, among others. For those whose physicians who suggest they avoid highimpact weight-bearing exercises, low-impact weight-bearing exercises can help them strengthen their bones. Such exercises may involve lowimpact aerobics and using cardiovascular machines, such as elliptical trainers, stair-step machines and treadmills. Additional exercises that can benefit men and women looking to prevent or combat osteoporosis can be found at www.nof.org.


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How to determine if downsizing is right for you

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As men and women retire or approach retirement age, many opt to downsize their homes. Such a decision can save older adults substantial amounts of money while also liberating them from the hassle of maintaining large homes they no longer need.

Downsizing to smaller homes or apartments is a significant step, one that homeowners should give ample consideration before making their final decisions. The following are a handful of tips to help homeowners determine if downsizing to smaller homes is the right move. Get a grip on the real estate market. Downsizing is not solely about money, but it’s important that homeowners consider the real estate market before putting their homes up for sale. Speak with a local realtor or your financial advisor about the current state of your real estate market. Downsizing can help homeowners save money on utilities, taxes and mortgage payments, but those savings may be negated if you sell your house in a buyer’s market instead of a seller’s market. If you think the current market won’t get you the price you are hoping for, delay your downsize until the market rebounds. Take inventory of what’s in your house. Empty nesters often find that their homes are still filled with their children’s possessions, even long after those children have entered adulthood and left home. If the storage in your home is dominated by items that belong to your children and not you, then downsizing might be right for you. Tell your children you are thinking of downsizing and invite them over to pick through any items still in your home. Once they have done so and taken what they want, you can host a yard sale, ultimately donating or discarding what you cannot sell. Once all of the items are gone, you may realize that moving into a smaller place is the financially prudent decision. Examine your own items as well. Your children’s items are likely not the only items taking up space in your home. Take inventory of your own possessions as well, making note of items you can live without and those you want to keep. If the list of items you can live without is extensive, then you probably won’t have a problem moving into a smaller home. If you aren’t quite ready to say goodbye

to many of your possessions, then you might benefit from staying put for a little while longer. Consider your retirement lifestyle. If you have already retired or on the verge of retirement and plan to spend lots of time traveling, then downsizing to a smaller home may free up money you can spend on trips. And if you really do see yourself as a silver-haired jetsetter, then you likely won’t miss your current home because you won’t be home frequently enough to enjoy it. If travel is not high on your retirement to-do list but you have a hobby, such as crafting, restoring classic cars or woodworking, that you hope to turn into a second profession, then you might benefit from staying put and converting your existing space into a workshop. Many retirees downsize their homes, but this decision requires careful consideration of a variety of factors.

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The decision to move yourself or a family member to an assisted living facility can be difficult. When men and women begin to experience difficulty with everyday activities, such as bathing, dressing or getting around, families may need to explore assisted living facilities. Millions of people in North America reside in assisted living facilities. The majority of residents in senior living are those who may need assistance with one or two daily activities, but who are otherwise mobile and self-sufficient. Families faced with moving relatives into assisted living facilities can consider the following pointers to find facilities their loved ones will enjoy. Consider the arrangements and services offered. Some facilities offer single rooms, while others provide apartment-style living. Most assisted living facilities provide a variety of services, such as housekeeping, laundry, exercise and wellness classes, and social activities, for their residents. Investigate the offerings at each home you visit, looking for a facility that best suits your loved one’s needs. Inquire about staff and their schedules. It is important to know how many staff members a facility has and how many people are working at any given time. Do staffing schedules differ at night? If a resident has a particular rapport with one staff member, can he or she be requested? Look for a facil-

ity that is well-staffed and adept at dealing with elderly men and women. Learn about individual service plans. Many assisted living facilities create individual service plans, or ISPs, for their residents to ensure individualized care is given. These plans are important for the safety and comfort of residents and also can help maximize a person’s independence. Some communities offer memory care programs for those with Alzheimer’s disease or other cognitive disorders. Consider the security in place. A good assisted living facility has a 24-hour support system in place and immediate access to care. Rooms may be equipped with emergency phones that can be accessed day or night. Many homes have check-in desks so that residents are accounted for when going on outings and for announcing guests.

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Check on licensing. In the United States, each state has its own licensing requirements for assisted living facilities. Confirm a facility is licensed and that it meets the expectations of the local regulatory agency. In addition, check with the Better Business Bureau to see if any complaints have been filed against the home. Assisted living facilities can meet the needs of people who cannot live independently but do not require the aroundthe-clock care of a nursing home.

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Caring for grandchildren

n the not-so-distant past, it was quite common for various generations of a single family to live under one roof and for many different members of the family to play a role in raising the children.

I

ness to excitement about a fresh face around the house. Raising grandkids can be overwhelming for elderly men and women, but the following are a few tips that can make the process easier.

But that dynamic slowly changed as families spread out geographically. However, when the economy faltered and parents of young children realized they needed help, many returned to the old way of doing things. Grandparents stepped up to look after their grandkids, and adults moved back home with their aging parents. Some seniors needed to move in with their children to make ends meet.

Explore your feelings. When you acknowledge your feelings, you are on the right path to making things work and recognizing possible obstacles.

A study of data from the Rand Corporation found that, of the four million children living with their grandparents in the United States, 2.5 million live in three-generation households. Nearly 1.5 million live in split-generation households or ones in which grandparents are raising their grandchildren. The proportion of all grandchildren living in three-generation households, 3.6 percent, has been steady in recent years. Research suggests that split-generation households are usually formed when parents are no longer able to take care of their children because of physical or mental illness, substance abuse, or economic problems. Three-generation households, on the other hand, are generally formed because of problems parents encounter living independently, such as through separation or divorce or due to unemployment or economic need. Caring for their grandchildren can elicit many feelings in grandparents, from nervous-

Expect mixed feelings from others. Grandchildren and your own children also may be apprehensive about this new living situation. Encourage everyone to share their thoughts and come to a consensus on how things will be done. Expect it to take some time to establish a schedule, and don’t be discouraged by any initial behavioral problems. Take care of yourself. Grandchildren, particularly young ones, can have a lot of energy and may require constant attention. Caring for such lively youngsters can be taxing on grandparents, who must make their own health and nutrition a priority. Give yourself some time for recreation and rest. Have grandchildren help out where they can. Don’t feel you have to spend every moment entertaining them. Ask for help when needed. Reach out to friends or community members if you are feeling overwhelmed. There are a number of resources available to you, and many organizations, including AARP, have their own tips for assisting three-generation households. Multi-generational households are common once again. Families who work together can make the most of such living arrangements.

Senior dating tips and trends The first Baby Boomers will be turning 70 in 2016, and this generation remains one of the most influential in the country and around the world. Scores of products and services are now marketed to seniors, many of whom remain as active and socially aware as they were in their youth. One aspect of senior marketing that is booming is dating and relationship products. Singles age 50 and older are increasingly relying on online dating sites and other methods to find love and companionship. Dating is no longer kids’ play, and those who have been away from dating for some time may have to get reacquainted with the process in the modern age.

Consider online dating Data from Pew Research found one in two divorced or widowed seniors had remarried in 2013, and that trend figures to continue. Many seniors are using online dating sites to find their new matches. While websites geared to dating make it easier to get in touch with fellow singles, the relative anonymity of the process can make it challenging to separate the truth from some self-promoting hype on dating profiles. Begin by relying on dating sites that have been tested and recommended. One to try is the AARP dating site partnered with How About We. In addition to its simplicity and small financial commitment, the site caters to the over-50 crowd and is backed by the AARP name. It’s good for those looking for

an activity partner as well as casual dating. Popular sites Match.com and eHarmony.com also boast high percentages of users age 50 and up. Even after thorough consideration and conversation, online daters should exercise caution when meeting someone online and then in person. Profiles aren’t always what they seem, and it’s easier to fudge the facts when initiating contact over the Internet. Keep an open mind It’s easy to be preoccupied with the rigors of being an older adult and the responsibilities that still may rest on your shoulders. Part of the fun of dating when you were young likely had to do with throwing caution to the wind. But some of those same carefree aspects remain true whether you’re dating at 17 or at 57. Laughter, fun, spontaneity, and the chance for some adventure are still the keys to making memorable dates. Sometimes it’s who you know The old adage of it’s “who you know” and not “what you know” is applicable to dating. If you are ready to jump into the dating world again, ask your close friends or family members if they know anyone who might be in a similar situation. Taking another stab at dating later in life can be both exciting and nerve-wracking, but no matter how long it’s been since your last first date, some aspects of dating are the same as ever. Just remember to have fun and don’t be afraid to try new things.

Alzheimer’s researchers hopeful A

lzheimer’s disease has no cure, and its progression cannot be radically slowed. The Alzheimer’s Association reports that every 67 seconds someone in the United States develops Alzheimer’s, and around 5 million people in the country currently have the disease. While there is no cure for Alzheimer’s disease, researchers are continuing to work on both drug and non-drug treatments to combat both cognitive and behavioral symptoms. According to information from the 2015 Alzheimer’s Association International Conference, there is reason for optimism regarding Alzheimer’s treatments. Researchers now have a better understanding of how the brain changes with Alzheimer’s and can fine tune medications to react with certain areas of the brain respon-

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sible for certain symptoms. For example, drug companies Eli Lilly and Biogen have been testing drugs that block beta amyloid, a protein that can cause toxic brain plaques in people, which are often associated with progressive brain disease. Another abnormality associated with Alzheimer’s is caused when a protein called tau twists into microscopic tangles, says the Mayo Clinic. Tangles collapse vital brain cell transport systems. Researchers are looking into medicines that may prevent tau from forming tangles. In addition, researchers continue to look at anti-inflammatory drugs to help delay the progress of Alzheimer’s disease, as well as how other conditions and diseases, including high blood pressure or diabetes, may impact the risk of developing Alzheimer’s.

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2016 SAVVY SENIOR

THE SUMTER ITEM

Common cause of poor vision V

ision loss is a common condition, as the World Health Organization notes that more than 285 million people across the globe suffer some type of visual impairment. Many people can effectively counter their vision problems with prescription lenses, but others may have a more significant issue, such as low vision.

The Kellogg Eye Center defines low vision as a reduced level of vision that cannot be fully corrected with conventional glasses. Those with low vision have some useful sight and are not considered completely blind. However, low vision can interfere with performance of daily activities, and some people with this condition are classified as “legally blind.” Symptoms of low vision include difficulty recognizing objects at a distance or problems with differentiating colors. Yet, not everyone dealing with these symptoms has low vision. Specialized testing can determine if a person has low vision or another condition. Many conditions can impact sight and contribute to vision loss. Here’s a look at some of the more common ones. Glaucoma: A person with glaucoma may gradually lose peripheral vision. Early symptoms, such as a subtle loss of contrast, may be unnoticeable. Eventually, glaucoma may cause tunnel vision, which occurs when a person can only see through a small window. Macular degeneration: Macular degeneration is the leading cause of vision loss, affecting more than 10 million people in the United States alone, according to the American Macular Degeneration Foundation.

The AMDF offers that macular degeneration is caused by the deterioration of the retina’s central portion, known as the macula. The macula is responsible for focusing central vision in the eye, and it contributes to one’s ability to read, drive a car, recognize faces or colors and see objects in fine detail.

Retinal detachment: An increase of floaters or sudden flashes of light in vision may be indicative of retinal detachment or a tear in the retina. When caught promptly, a detached retina may be repaired. However, if left untreated and the detachment reaches the macula in the center of the retina, vision loss may be irreparable. The National Eye Institute says those with extreme nearsightedness, those who have had cataract surgery or those with a family history of retinal detachment are at a high risk. Diabetic retinopathy: Blurring or patchy vision loss can be a side effect of high blood glucose levels. Not all people with diabetes will develop vision problems, but it is common enough to warrant attention. Cataracts: According to The Mayo Clinic, a cataract is a clouding of the normally clear lens of the eye. Cataracts develop when aging or injury changes the tissue that makes up the eyes’ lenses. Clouded vision can make it more difficult to read or drive. Over time, cataracts may obscure vision so much that they require surgical repair. Routine eye examinations can bring potential vision disturbances to light and facilitate faster treatment. Eye doctors also can make suggestions about lifestyle changes, including the use optical devices to improve sight.

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

Eating the right foods is one way to age well. According to Ralph Felder, M.D., Ph.D., coauthor of “The Bonus Years Diet,” reversing the aging process internally is more difficult than outward cosmetic changes. But the right foods can go a long way toward increasing both life expectancy and quality of life. Those who want to employ diet to increase their life expectancy may want to start adding more of the following foods to their breakfast, lunch and dinner plates. Broccoli, grapes and salad: According to Health magazine, researchers have found that compounds in these three foods boast extra life-extending benefits. Berries: In addition to their abundance of antioxidants, berries have other benefits. A 2012 study from Harvard University found that at least one serving of blueberries or two servings of strawberries each week may reduce the risk of cognitive decline in older adults. Fruits and vegetables: Produce is good for the body because it’s low in calories and high in fiber, vitamins and other nutrients. Numerous studies have indicated that diets plentiful in fruits and vegetables help

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Anemia and aging

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ging is accompanied by a number of physical changes. Some of these changes, such as vision impairment or loss of hearing, are anticipated, while others may arrive unexpectedly. One condition many adults unexpectedly encounter is anemia. While anemia is common in older adults and its prevalence increases with age, it is not a condition that is widely considered part of the aging process. Anemia is often a symptom of a hidden problem that needs to be addressed promptly. Anemia is one of the most common blood disorders, affecting more than three million Americans, says the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. The American Society of Hematology notes that anemia is characterized by insufficient levels of red blood cells in the blood. Anemia also occurs when red blood cells, which are responsible for carrying oxygen to the various organs and tissues throughout the body, are not functioning properly.

Very often the signs of anemia are overlooked or go unnoticed until a blood test determines low hemoglobin (Hb) or hematocrit (HCT) concentrations. Some people discover they have anemia as they attempt to donate blood, at which time their red blood cell count is found to be inadequate. When the body lacks oxygen, any number of the following symptoms may

Eating right can improve quality of life Legend states that on April 2, 1513, Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León was the first European to discover modern-day Florida when he traveled on a quest for the mythical “Fountain of Youth.” While modern science has proven that there is no mystical fountain or body of water that can reverse or slow down the aging process, there are many steps people can take to age well and prolong their lives.

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be experienced: • weakness

• dizziness • extreme fatigue • shortness of breath • fast or irregular heartbeat • pale or yellow skin • cold hands or feet Frequently, existing disorders or conditions, such as congestive heart failure, are made worse by anemia. But unless doctors specifically consider anemia as a possible cause of symptoms, its presence can go undiagnosed. The American Academy of Family Physicians says the most common causes of anemia among older men and women include chronic diseases and iron deficiency. Vitamin B12 deficiency, folate deficiency, gastrointestinal bleeding, and myelodysplastic syndrome are other causes of anemia. The main way to treat anemia is to discover its source and reverse the outcomes. For instance, a gastrointestinal bleed may need to be repaired. If iron deficiency is the source of the anemia, iron supplements may be prescribed. Many methods to correct anemia involve trial and error and experimentation, especially when the source of the anemia is unknown. Anemia is a condition that can affect aging adults but does not need to be accepted as a natural consequence of aging. Correct diagnosis and treatment can mitigate symptoms.

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people maintain a healthy weight and protect against cardiovascular disease. Whole grains: Whole grains pack a lot of nutrition into a low-calorie food. Whole grains help protect against type 2 diabetes, and researchers at the University of Texas Health Sciences Center found study participants whose diets included plenty of whole grains and fruit cut their heart disease risk by almost half compared to those whose diets favored meat and fatty foods. Red wine: A glass a day for women and no more than two glasses daily for men can be beneficial. Moderate consumption of red wine has been shown to slow age-related declines in cardiovascular function, according to the American Heart Association. Fiber: Increase your fiber intake for a longer life. Research from The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition finds that the more fiber you include in your diet, the lower your risk of coronary heart disease. The daily recommendation is 25 to 35 grams. While there may be no such thing as the fountain of youth, a healthy diet can help men and women prolong their lives.

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SATURDAY, JULY 30, 2016

2016 SAVVY SENIOR

THE SUMTER ITEM

Exercise and arthritis

10 for senior care safety strategies

Have you done everything you can to make sure you and your home are safe and sound? Use the following checklist to see if there’s more you can do.

01 02 03 04 05

Don’t leave your home looking unoccupied. Don’t announce trips away from home on social media. Arrange to have newspaper deliveries stopped while you’re away, and have someone pick up the mail and mow the lawn (or shovel the snow).

Prevent falls. Make sure all your rooms and stairways are well lit and that things aren’t left lying around on the floor. Remove area rugs and use assistive devices (a cane and grab bars in the bathroom).

A

cross the country, more than 50 million people are living with doctor-diagnosed arthritis. So says the Arthritis Foundation, which projects that figure will rise to 67 million by the year 2030.

Simply put, arthritis is Manage your medications appropriately. Clean out your medicine cabinet regularly. Never a signifi cant problem, one take more than the prescribed dose of a medication, and don’t take any over-the-counter drugs or natural products before talking to your doctor or pharmacist. When having a prescription filled, that can not only affect a person’s quality of life, but ask about possible side effects. Use a pill organizer to stay on track with doses. also his or her pocketbook, as the Arthritis Foundation notes that woking-age men and women (those between Think “fire safety.” Install a smoke detector on each floor the ages of 18 and 64) who and near all the bedrooms. Don’t leave a hot stove unattended. contend with arthritis are Don’t smoke in bed, and avoid using candles. less likely to be employed than people of the same age who do not have arthritis. Arthritis is not only bad Be prudent when driving. Lock car doors even when you’re for employees, but also for in the car. Park in well-lit parking lots, and take out your keys employers, as it accounts for in advance so you can get into the house or car quickly. $156 billion annually in lost Avoid driving for long periods of time or when visibility is poor. wages and medical expenses.

06

Prevent fraud. Check that the person calling you on the phone is who they claim to be before sending them money. Don’t sign a contract without having it checked by a lawyer. Never lend your credit card or give out personal information (address, date of birth, SIN, credit card number, etc.) over the Internet or phone, unless it was you who initiated the call to a confirmed number at your financial institution.

07

Protect your property and your assets. Sign a proxy giving a person you trust the power to make decisions on your behalf regarding your assets and your healthcare when necessary. Have a will drawn up, and don’t keep large sums of cash in your home.

08

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Secure your home. Have an alarm system and good locks installed, and always lock your doors. Install a peephole so you can see your visitors without being seen before opening the door.

09

Be prepared for emergencies such as a fall or an illness. Keep a list of emergency numbers in a conspicuous place. Make a list of people to contact in case you need help, especially people who are close by or are readily available. Find out about emergency response systems such as wearable alert buttons.

10

Use all necessary assistive devices. Look into getting a walker, a large-keypad phone, a doorbell indicator light, and a cell phone that you can keep with you at all times. Use a calendar and checklists to help you remember important things and appointments.

Exercise may be the last thing on many arthritis sufferers’ minds, but exercise can play a vital role in reducing the often painful symptoms associated with arthritis. Among its other benefits, exercise can strengthen the muscles around arthritic joints and help men and women maintain bone strength. In addition, the Mayo Clinic notes that lack of exercise can make joints feel more painful and stiff, as a sedentary lifestyle will ultimately contribute to putting more stress on joints. Upon being diagnosed with arthritis, patients should speak with their physicians about the best way to use exercise to combat and relieve their symptoms. Some patients may require physical therapy, while others might be able to work with their physicians to develop an exercise regimen that can help reduce the severity of their symptoms and any pain that accompanies those symptoms. The following are some types of exercises that

figure to play a strong role in managing arthritis and improving quality of life. Aerobic exercises: Lowimpact aerobic exercises, such as walking and swimming, can help arthritis sufferers alleviate their symptoms and improve their overall health. Arthritis sufferers who have not exercised in awhile because of their pain may have gained weight as a result, and aerobic exercise is a great way to shed extra pounds. Losing excess weight is a great way to make physical activity less taxing on your joints as well. Range-of-motion: Range-ofmotion exercises are typically simple and don’t take much time, but when done correctly, such exercises can be very effective at relieving the stiffness associated with arthritis. A physician or physical therapist might advise you to do range-of-motion exercises each day, and you may even need to do them a few times each day. Adhere to this advice, continuing to perform the exercises as long as your doctor or physical therapists deems them necessary. Strength training: As previously noted, arthritis sufferers may feel as though lifting weights will only exacerbate their existing symptoms. But strength training will strengthen the muscles around the joints, providing more support for those joints and ultimately reducing symptoms of pain. Speak with your physician or physical therapist about appropriate strength-training activities and the importance of rest. If you experience any pain during strength-training sessions, stop immediately and report the pain to your physician. More information about managing arthritis can be found at www.arthritis.org.


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