IN SPORTS: Lady Gators shoot for Lakewood’s 1st state basketball title today B1
Spring forward Don’t forget to set clocks ahead 11 12 1 one hour 10 2 at 2 a.m. 9 3 Sunday. SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 2015
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Pilgrim’s President visits Columbia Obama Local kid Pride speaks to makes splash with offers 1,100 question $50,000 BY JIM HILLEY jim@theitem.com
Company seeks identity of chicken house vandal BY HAMLET FORT hamlet@theitem.com
BY JIM HILLEY jim@theitem.com
COLUMBIA — Friday was a day Trace Adams will not soon forget. The 10-year-old Willow Drive Elementary School fourth grader said he was not expecting to have a conversation with the President of the United States when he left Sumter with his step dad, Allen Bailey, to hear President Obama speak
he decided he wanted to be president. Adams’ stepdad, Allen Bailey, SEE OBAMA, PAGE A7 chairman of the Sumter County Democratic Party, is to his right.
Pilgrim’s Pride Corp. is offering a substantial reward for information leading to the “arrest and conviction” of the individual sought by Clarendon County deputies for vandalism that has so far led to the deaths of 300,000 locally farmed chickens that have been killed so far in Sumter and Clarendon counties. The company is offering $50,000 for information, according to a news release. The affected farms are “family farms” contracted to raise chickens on behalf of Pilgrim’s Pride, a leading poultry producer whose Sumter location partners with more than 90 local farmers. “These heinous acts resulted in a cruel death for several thousand chickens that were under the care of dedicated family farmers,” said Randy Stroud, the live operations manager for Pilgrim’s Pride. “These are not factory farms — they are family farms operated by good men and women who work hard each day to provide humane care and safe living conditions for their birds.” The company said they will deliver new flocks of birds to the vandalized farms to make up for the losses. Pilgrim’s Pride thanked Clarendon County Sheriff’s Office for its work, and urged anyone who has information to come forward. The reward announcement comes on the heels of another reward offer from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. PETA, an animal rights group that normally would be fighting against animal farms has offered a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the suspects. Bill Lovette, president and CEO of Pilgrim’s Pride, said the farms are the “backbone” of the American economy and that such a crime affects American families. “An attack against the family farm should not and cannot be tolerated and we hope this reward will help bring the perpetrators to swift justice,” Lovette said. “Anyone with information about these incidents or as to the identity or whereabouts of the perpetrators is urged to contact the Clarendon County Sheriff’s Office at (803) 435 – 4414,” said the release. “Please contact law enforcement directly if you come in contact with a suspect. Do not take independent action to apprehend.”
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COLUMBIA — President Obama is well known as a great speaker in small venues, and his appearance in the gymnasium at Benedict College in Columbia on Friday was no exception. The supportive, enthusiastic crowd of 1,100, containing large contingents of Benedict RICK CARPENTER/THE SUMTER ITEM students and faculty as well as many leaders of Ten-year-old Trace Adams asks President Obama how old he was when
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CHAMPIONSHIP WEEKEND
Sumter earns 4A hoops title in 61-55 win
KEITH GEDAMKE / THE SUMTER ITEM
Sumter celebrates its first state basketball title since 1985. The Gamecocks posted a big early lead and held on for dear life for a 61-55 win over Hillcrest in Friday’s 4A championship game at the Colonial Life Arena in Columbia. The title is Sumter’s first since 1985. The crown is the first for 2nd-year head coach Jo Jo English.
Daimler to build S.C. plant, create 1,300 jobs BY BRUCE SMITH The Associated Press NORTH CHARLESTON — MercedesBenz Vans will build a new assembly plant for its Sprinter vans in South Carolina, investing a half-billion dollars and creating 1,300 jobs, the company announced Friday. The company said the plant will allow vans to be more economically produced for the growing domestic market. It will manufacture them under the Mercedes-Benz and Freightliner nameplates. Last year the company, a division of Daimler AG, sold almost 26,000 Sprinters in the United States, second only to
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sales in Germany. “Given the future growth in the North American market, it simply does not make sense to supply customers with imported vehicles,” Volker Mornhinwig, the head of MercedesBenz Vans, said at a news conference at the existing Daimler assembly plant. The announcement brings another major assembly plant to the South where the footprint of the auto industry continues to grow. The company’s existing South Carolina operation reassembles Sprinter vans that are made in Germany, disassembled and then shipped to North Charleston. The process is used be-
DEATHS, A7 Earlene M. McLeod Louis Fulton Jr. Talmuch A. Burgess George Wells Jr.
Edward Hicks Vera M. Watson Glenn A. Snow Mary C. McCall
cause of high duties on importing finished vehicles. Construction of the new plant begins next year on a 200-acre site adjacent to the existing facility. Mornhinwig would not say when production would begin or how many vans the plant would produce. About 80 percent of Sprinter vans are sold to commercial businesses. While 140 workers are employed at the existing plant, that number will increase by 60 later this year when the company begins selling its new midsized Metris domestically. The vans will be assembled in Spain, disassembled and sent to South Carolina for reassembly.
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SUNNY AND WARMER
2 SECTIONS, 16 PAGES VOL. 120, NO. 120
Beautiful day in store with plenty of sunshine and warmth, clear and chilly tonight. Slight chance of rain. HIGH 61, LOW 37
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