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Saturday
Oct192013

United Way Seeks Help in Weekend Student Food Program

In Anderson County, 788 elementary students are receiving a bag of food on Fridays to help them through the weekend.  The Weekend BackPak SnackPak Program started by United Way of Anderson County during the 2012-13 school year continues to help feed elementary school children who have little to no food to eat on the weekends when school is out.

"The students participating really look forward to getting their Friday packets of food And I really enjoy giving it to them...it makes my weekend!” stated one teacher in District 4.  

During the 2012-13 Campaign season, the organization raised $117,584 for Backpak program, including $30K Wal-Mart Foundation grant. To maintain the current numbers of 788 on the program for the full school year they need to raise an additional $83,192.  However, they anticipate expanding to 850 children before the end of the school year.  Schools are already requesting an increase in the number of students they serve.  Therefore, they have set a goal to raise $100,000 by the end of this year to adequately fund the 2013-14 school year.

If you would like to donate to Weekend BackPak SnackPak program, you can visit www.unitedwayofanderson.org and click on GIVE or you can contact Kurt Stutler at 864-226-3438. All funds raised for the Weekend BackPak SnackPak program go directly to the program with no administration fees to United Way. 

Saturday
Oct192013

JP Morgan Chase Deals with DOJ to Avoid Criminal Charges

JP Morgan Chase, the largest U.S. bank, has reached a tentative $13 billion deal with the Justice Department in a settlement of a wide-range of issues related to the sale of bad mortgages, according to several media reports.

Reports by the Associated Press, TheWall Street Journal and Bloomberg News, cited unnamed sources with knowledge of the negotiations, indicating that the record-size deal, if finalized, would not release the bank from potential criminal liability.

The Journal quoted "a person familiar with the decision" Saturday as saying the settlement would cover outstanding investigations of the bank's residential mortgage-backed securities business.

Bloomberg.com carries a similar report, also quoting a person familiar with the settlement negotiations, and calls the deal a "tentative resolution of all civil mortgage-bond related matters.

Bloomberg notes, however, that the tentative pact does not include a release of potential criminal liability. The report quotes the unidentified source as saying the proposed accord will probably require the bank to cooperate in criminal investigations of individuals tied to wrongdoing associated with the bank's mortgage practices.

A breakthrough in long-running talks came Friday night, after U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon spoke by phone and the bank agreed to leave criminal liability out of the deal, a source familiar with the talks tells Reuters.

Bloomberg reports that the deal would include a tentative $4 billion settlement with the Federal Housing Finance Agency over the bank's sale of mortgage-backed securities.

The tentative agreement would include $9 billion in fines and $4 billion in relief for struggling homeowners, The New York Times reported, citing people briefed on the talks.

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's office, which is involved in the settlement negotiations, declined to comment Saturday.

Saturday
Oct192013

Calhoun Elementary Event Marks 40th Anniversary Friday

Calhoun Academy of the Arts will be celebrating “Calhoun’s 40 Year Roundup” on Friday from 4:00-8:00.

Food and activities will include BBQ plates for adults, hot dog plates for children, a local Bluegrass Band  “The Drovers Old Time Medicine Show,” a school wide art show, line dancing taught by the fifth grade students, a school-wide open house, and a PTO silent auction. Tickets for the BBQ plates are $8.00 and the hot dog plates are $4.00. Tickets need to be purchased ahead of time by contacting the school at 864-260-5090, sending your order with a Calhoun Academy student, or going to the school at 1520 E. Calhoun St. between 7:30-3:00, Monday through Friday.

Friday
Oct182013

After Losing Shutdown Fight, GOP Fighting Each Other

After suffering a humiliating loss over the government shutdown, Republican politicians have now turned their sights on each other as they argue about who is at fault.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) helped lead the effort to defund the Affordable Care Act, or "Obamacare," which led to the government shutdown. In a Wednesday interview, he said the Republican's failure was the fault of the "Washington establishment" and his fellow Republican senators.

"I would point out that had Senate Republicans united and supported House Republicans, the outcome of this I believe would've been very, very different," he said.

Fellow Tea Party Republican Sarah Palin implied on her Facebook page that she would back primary challenges to some of the Republicans who voted for the bill that ended the shutdown.

"Friends," she wrote, "do not be discouraged by the shenanigans of D.C.'s permanent political class today. Be energized. We're going to shake things up in 2014. Rest well tonight, for soon we must focus on important House and Senate races. Let's start with Kentucky – which happens to be awfully close to South Carolina, Tennessee, and Mississippi – from sea to shining sea we will not give up."

While some Republicans believe that Cruz's goal failed because the shutdown should have lasted longer, until the Democrats caved, others argued Cruz's goal was doomed to fail from the start.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), one of those Palin implied she would like to target, suggested that Cruz overreached in attempting to defund the ACA, and his actions have not been beneficial for the country as a whole.

When asked Tuesday by a reporter about Cruz, Graham answered: "I would just say to any member of the Congress now, what is your oath? What is your reason for being here? Are you going to stop our ability to reopen the government forever and to honor our obligations come the 17th? I can understand fighting for your cause, but there comes a point when you have an obligation to your country as the whole."

Graham also recalled the lessons he learned as a member of the U.S. House during the previous government shutdown: "It's not like I haven't been in a position where I was really fired up to change things. I understand that. But at the end of the day, I've learned something since 1995. Fight for your cause – but understand the American people are intrinsically fair minded, and they see in our approach an overreach."

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell similarly recalled 1995 and argued that shutting down the government is not a winning strategy for Republicans.

"There's no education in the second kick of a mule," he quipped, in an interview with The Hill. "The first kick of a mule was when we shut the government down in the mid 1990's and the second kick was over the last 16 days. ... There will not be [another] government shutdown. I think we have fully now acquainted our new members with what a losing strategy that is."

Louisiana Governor and possible 2016 presidential contender Bobby Jindal (R), meanwhile, has announced an effort, called "America Next," to recover his party's image. Jindal famously called his party the "stupid party" after the 2012 elections. While he has avoided similar belligerent rhetoric during the shutdown, Jindal has offered some critiques of Republican strategies.

Republicans need to stop simply opposing Obama's agenda without offering an alternative agenda, he complained in a Wednesday interview with Politico.

"Saying 'no' is not enough," he said. "We've got to get beyond the bumper-sticker slogans. We've got to get beyond the 30-second attack ads. ... There's a void, and there's an opportunity to offer specific conservative ideas on the most important issues of the day."

Friday
Oct182013

Anderson TD Club Announces Week 8 Winners

Coach: Doug Shaw, Jr., Palmetto High School

Defensive:  Chandler Creswell, Crescent High School

Offensive:  Bailey Rogers, Wren High School

Co-Linemen: Alex Haynes, Pendleton High School

Jack Wardlaw, Palmetto High School

Friday
Oct182013

Chandler Named S.C. Training Officer of the Year

The South Carolina Training Officers Association has named Sgt. John Chandler of the Anderson County Sheriff’s Office South Carolina Training Officer of the Year.

Sgt. Chandler has worked with the Sheriff’s Office for 16 years and served as an adjunct training
instructor for many years prior to being promoted to Training Sergeant in October 2012. Before his promotion, while still engaged in his regular duties, Sgt. Chandler assisted as Firearms Instructor, Patrol Rifle Instructor and Taser Instructor.   He was previously awarded the Medal of Valor from the Belton Police Department and he received the Medal of Valor again from the Sheriff’s Office in December 2011.  He serves his fellow officers as a member of the peer group that helps officers cope with their experiences, if they have been in an officer-involved shooting; and, he serves his community by volunteering as the Sheriff’s Office
representative on the Anderson County Drug Court.  

Sgt. Chandler is committed to making officers better and safer by teaching new techniques to other departments, teaching new Reserve officer classes, and extending instruction to the Sheriff’s Explorer Post. He commits his talents and sacrifices his personal time to make sure that all officers have the best possible training.

Friday
Oct182013

B25 Bomber to Visit Anderson

If you see a World War II-era B25 Bomber flying over Anderson, wave.

The B25 Mitchell bomber is scheduled to stop in Anderson Friday, and depart Saturday morning. Exact arrival and departure times are unknown. The aircraft will be parked on the ramp near the terminal building at the Anderson County Airport.

The North American B-25H Mitchell is one of the most well-known bombers from World War II. Made famous in the Doolittle Raid on Japan; the first retaliatory strike after the U.S. entered WWII, the B-25 became a symbol of American airpower during the war.

Today, the B-25 is a beloved warbird, with only approximately 25 preserved in flying condition. The B-25H "Barbie III" owned and operated by History Flight, Inc. is the last H-model B-25 flying in the world and is the only one equipped with the unique 75mm cannon in the nose for ground attack purposes.

For more information on the plane, visit here.

Friday
Oct182013

Obama Says Shutdown Wreaked Havoc on Economy

In a speech that showed both frustration and hope for the future, President Barack Obama addressed the American people Thursday morning after Congress reached a short-term compromise late Wednesday night to end the federal government shutdown, reopening the government until Jan. 15 and suspending the debt ceiling through Feb. 7.

The president said in his address that the past weeks of federal shutdown have wreaked havoc on America's economy and the trust of the American people in their government. Obama sternly said that the federal shutdown has done more to undermine the economy than anything else in the past three years.

Obama added that the shutdown has "inflicted completely unnecessary damage" on the U.S. economy and American people, as well as "encouraged our enemies, emboldened our competitors, and depressed our friends who look to us for steady leadership."

The president added that the most significant loss in this dysfunctional Washington process was losing the trust of the American people. "To all my friends in Congress: understand that how business is done in this town has to change because we have a lot of work to do on behalf of the American people and that includes regaining their trust," the president said.

"It's no surprise that the American people are completely fed up with Washington," he added.

The Commander-in-Chief then changed his tone midway through his 20-minute address to a more hopeful outlook on the future, saying, "The good news is we'll bounce back from this."

Friday
Oct182013

AU Playhouse to Present "Into the Woods"

The Anderson Universtiy Playhouse of The South Carolina School of the Arts will present "Into the Woods," Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, Book by James Lapine, at the Henderson Stage of the Rainey Fine Arts Center October 23-26.  One of Sondheim’s most popular musicals, "Into the Woods" won three Tony Awards and four Drama Desk awards when originally produced on Broadway in 1987.  It has recently been revived in several acclaimed productions and will be made into a movie starring Meryl Streep and Johnny Depp in 2014.

The Anderson production is directed by Robert Homer-Drummond, Associate Professor of Theatre at the South Carolina School of the Arts.  Musical Direction is by Associate Professor of Music, Howard Kim.  Choreography is by Instructor of Dance, Terrie Poore.  Lighting is by Associate Professor of Theatre, Cara Wood.  Scenery was designed and developed by Cara Wood and AU Student, Jenni Baldwin. Elizabeth Nelson is the costume designer.  Vocal Coaching is by Associate Professor of Music, Tommy Watson and Adjunct Instructor of Music, Rebecca Yates.  The Scene Shop Foreman is Dalton Cole.  Rehearsal Accompanist is Gloria Wright.

For tickets call 864-231-2080.

Friday
Oct182013

Graphic Design Leader to Visit AU

One of the world’s leading figures in the world of graphic design and visual branding will open an exhibit at Anderson University’s Vandiver Gallery on October 20 and visit campus to discuss her work on November 13 in a public lecture in the Daniel Recital Hall at 7 pm followed by a reception in the Vandiver Gallery. Her exhibit will run through Dec. 13. In addition, she will work as a guest artist on campus working with upper-level art and design students. She will be conducting a two-day Visual Storytelling workshop for them on November 13-14, giving AU art students a rare opportunity to work with one of the industry’s leading artists. 

Debbie Millman draws no distinction between life and work, career and calling. Her visual essays have been exhibited at the Chicago Design Museum and have graced the pages of Print Magazine. Since 2005, her radio show Design Matters has been a beacon of creative culture through conversations with luminaries like Malcolm Gladwell, Milton Glaser, Lawrence Weiner, Neville Brody, Maira Kalman, and dozens more. In 2011, the show received the prestigious Cooper Hewitt National Design Award. 

A native New Yorker, Millman is the author of five books including, Look Both Ways, Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits and How to Think Like a Great Graphic Designer, and serves as President Emeritus of the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA). She co-founded and chairs the Masters in Branding program at the School of Visual Arts, and has worked with some of the world’s most prominent brands as President of the design division at Sterling Brands. Millman has been pushing the limits of the possible in branding, design, and the communication arts for nearly two decades.

Thursday
Oct172013

President Signs Bill to Raise Debt, Re-open Government

After shutting down the U.S. government for 16 days and driving the nation toward the brink of default, a chastened Congress voted late Wednesday to reopen federal agencies, call hundreds of thousands of civil servants back to work and raise the $16.7 trillion debt limit.

An agreement struck by Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) ended a stalemate created last month, when hard-line conservatives pushed GOP leaders to use the threat of shutdown to block a landmark expansion of federally funded health coverage.

Obama signs bill to raise the debt ceiling and reopen the government; federal employees should expect to work Thursday.

That campaign succeeded mainly in undermining popular support for the Republican Party, however. By late Wednesday, dozens of anxious GOP lawmakers were ready to give President Obama almost exactly what he requested months ago: a bill to fund the government and increase the Treasury Department’s borrowing power with no strings attached.

“We’ve been locked in a fight over here, trying to bring government down to size, trying to do our best to stop Obamacare,” House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) told a Cincinnati radio station. “We fought the good fight. We just didn’t win.”

The Senate overwhelmingly ratified the deal Wednesday evening, 81 to 18, with more than half of Senate Republicans voting yes.

A few hours later, the House followed suit, approving the measure 285 to 144. Eighty-seven Republicans joined a united Democratic caucus in approving the measure, allowing Congress to meet a critical Treasury Department deadline with one day to spare.

Obama signed the measure into law shortly after midnight,, reopening parks and monuments across the nation, restoring government services and putting furloughed federal employees back on the job, many of them in the Washington region.

“Employees should expect to return to work in the morning,” Sylvia Mathews Burwell, the White House budget director, said in a statement.

The measure also guarantees those workers back pay for time spent at home, aid flood-ravaged Colorado and provide extra cash for fighting wildfires out West. And it grants the District government, which relies on Congress to approve its budget, authority to manage its own affairs through the 2014 fiscal year.

Enforcement of the debt limit is suspended until Feb. 7, setting up another confrontation over the national debt sometime in March, independent analysts estimated. Meanwhile, federal agencies are funded through Jan. 15, when they might shut down again unless lawmakers resolve a continuing dispute over deep automatic spending cuts known as the sequester.

Full Story Here

Thursday
Oct172013

Study: Oreos, Fatty Treats Addicting as Cocaine

Sugary, fatty treats can activate the brain in a similar manner as cocaine does in lab rats, according to a report to be published officially at the upcoming Society for Neuroscience conference in San Diego, California, U.S..

The rats' brains had higher cellular activity in the "pleasure center" of their brains after eating Oreo cookies, similar to being injected with cocaine or morphine, according to Joseph Schroeder, an assistant professor of psychology and director of the Behavioral Neuroscience Center at Connecticut College.

To examine how "addictive" high-fat, high-sugar foods could be, researchers, from the Behavioral Neuroscience Center at Connecticut College, put the rats into a habitat with two rooms. In one room, they were given Oreo cookies and in the other room, rice crackers.

The experiment was then repeated with other groups of rats being offered injections of cocaine or morphine in one room and saline in the other room.

Through observing the rats’ preference for the Oreo versus rice cake as well as cocaine versus saline, researchers found that the rats had an "equivalent preference" for a room when it contained Oreo cookies as when they were given injections of morphine and cocaine.

"Perhaps the reason why we have the current obesity epidemic is that high fat and high sugar can be just as addictive as cocaine," Schroder said.

A spokeswoman for Mondelez International, which owns Nabisco, the maker of the Oreo cookie, cautioned people against associating Oreo with the findings since the cookies were used as "sweet variable" in lab by scientists.

Schroeder explained then that Oreo cookies weren't specifically singled out for triggering a snack attack, and they were just a handy device to get enough fat and sugar in the rat's habitat.

Thursday
Oct172013

44th Annual Dove Awards Announces Winners

The 44th Annual Dove Awards to celebrate and reward the biggest artists in Christian music were held last night and the big winners were TobyMac, Matt Redman, and Jason Crabbe.

The show, hosted by Kirk Franklin and Amy Grant, will be broadcast on the Up network, October 21 at 8:00 p.m. EDT.

The big award of the night, Artist of the Year, was won by TobyMac. He also won, Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year, Recorded Music Packaging of the Year, and Short Form Video of the Year. These were for his album, Eye on It.

"It feels weird to be called artist of the year when I know it takes a family and I always want to acknowledge that. I said in one of my songs a long time ago, I'm just a little man trying to fit in God's plan. I still feel like that," TobyMac in a press release.

Matt Redman won several awards for his 10,000 Reasons (Bless the Lord) album. He won Song of the Year, Songwriter of the Year, Contemporary Christian Performance of the Year, Pop/Contemporary Song of the Year, Praise & Worship Song of the Year, and won a contribution award, Special Event Album of the Year, for his role in Passion: Let the Future Begin.

Jason Crabbe won Southern Gospel Song of the Year for "What the Blood is For," Inspirational Song of the Year for "Satisfied," and Southern Gospel Performance of the Year.

Other big winners include for King & Country (New Artist of the Year), Lecrae for his album Gravity (Rap/Hip-Hop Album of the Year), Tasha Cobbs for song, "Break Every Chain" (Gospel Performance), and Chris Tomlin for Burning Lights (Praise & Worship Album).

Mandisa won the Uplift Someone award "for her music, message and humanitarian heart, all of which (individually and collectively) have inspired others," said Amy Grant at the show.

Full list of winners can be found here.