Monday, January 3, 2011

Second arrest follows Myrtle Beach shooting death

Myrtle Beach Police officers on Sunday arrested a second suspect in connection with Thursday's shooting death of a 21-year-old man.

Michael Quantrell Barr, 20, is charged with accessory after the fact to a felony. He was arrested at 1:25 a.m. Sunday on Mustang Street in Myrtle Beach, police records show.

According to a warrant, Barr gave police a false statement about Kendrix Corbitt's whereabouts when 21-year-old Damian Pickett was shot and killed. Barr also said Corbitt later asked him to hide a gun, the warrant indicates.

Bail was set at $10,000 for Barr during a Sunday morning hearing in Myrtle Beach Municipal Court.

Corbitt, 18, is charged with murder and possession of a firearm during the commission of a violent act in connection with Thursday night's shooting.

A judge set bail at $10,000 on the gun possession charge Sunday. Bail on the murder charge will be set at a later date by a judge in Horry County circuit court.

Barr and Corbitt were taken to J. Reuben Long Detention Center in Conway on Sunday morning, officials said.

Barr was sentenced to one year in jail last summer after pleading guilty to a charge of assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature, according to Horry County records. The judge in the case sentenced Barr to 110 days in jail and he was released Aug. 12.

The fatal shooting was reported about 11 p.m. Thursday on Futrell Drive. Officers found Pickett's body shortly after midnight.

Pickett was shot "at least once," Horry County Deputy Coroner Darris Fowler said Friday. He would not say where Pickett was shot and did not provide any other details.

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2010 in review: Top 10 amateur stories

Peter Uihlein celebrates with caddie Alan Bratton after chipping in for eagle on the 18th hole in the championship match at the U.S. Amateur.

1.) Uihlein wins U.S. Amateur

Peter Uihlein became the dominant force in amateur golf after going undefeated in the United States’ Walker Cup victory at Merion in September 2009. He won five major amateur and college titles in the next 11 months after, then claimed the biggest title of his career at Chambers Bay.

2.) Amateurs at Pebble Beach

Scott Langley and Russell Henley impressed at the U.S. Open, tying for 16th to share low-amateur honors. Henley became a fan favorite for his crowd interaction. Langley’s good play came just weeks after his NCAA Championship victory.

3.) Matteo Manassero at the Masters

Matteo Manassero set several records this year, most notably becoming the youngest winner in European Tour history. Fittingly, he closed his amateur career in record-setting fashion. Manassero, then 16, was the youngest participant in Masters history, and became the youngest ever to make the cut when he finished 36th.

4.) David Chung’s season

Chung won the Porter Cup and Western Amateur (two of amateur golf’s biggest titles) in consecutive weeks. He ended his summer by advancing to the final of the U.S. Amateur. Despite losing to Uihlein, Chung’s amateur season was still one of the finest in recent years.

5.) Chambers Bay’s debut at U.S. Amateur

The U.S. Amateur served as a national unveiling for Chambers Bay, the unique links-style layout along the Puget Sound that will serve as site of the 2015 U.S. Open. The course received mixed reviews early in the week (in part because the USGA admittedly allowed the course to get too dry) but produced one of the most memorable Amateurs in recent history.

6.) Jin Jeong wins British Am, low am honors at British Open

Mirroring a feat accomplished in 2009 by Manassero, Jin Jeong won the British Amateur, then was low amateur at the British Open. Jeong, of South Korea, was the first Asian player to win the British Amateur when he beat Arizona State’s James Byrne in the final. Jeong went on to tie for 14th at St. Andrews.

7.) Nathan Smith wins again at Mid-Am

Smith won the U.S. Mid-Am for a record-tying third time, thanks to a dominating 7-and-5 victory over former U.S. Amateur Public Links champion Tim Hogarth. More impressively, it was the second consecutive year that Smith was both medalist and match-play champion. At just 32, Smith will have plenty of opportunities to become the first four-time Mid-Am champ.

8.) Paul Simson’s tri-fecta

It was a feat that went unnoticed because it happened in the oft-overlooked senior realm, but it was impressive nonetheless. Simson won the U.S., British and Canadian senior amateur titles in 2010, becoming the first player to claim all three in the same year. The U.S. Senior Am was his first USGA title in nearly 50 attempts.

9.) France wins first gold at WATC

France made history in Argentina, winning its first gold medal in the World Amateur Team Championship. France faltered late, but the victory was sealed in dramatic fashion by Alexander Levy’s 50-foot birdie putt on the second-to-last hole.

10.) Byeong-Hun An advances to U.S. Amateur semifinals

Byeong-Hun An almost successfully defended his U.S. Amateur title, a feat last accomplished by Tiger Woods. He advanced to the semifinals at Chambers Bay before falling to David Chung, 1 down.?

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2011 preview: 11 storylines to watch

With 2011 upon us, here’s a list of 11 storylines I’ll have an eye on this year:

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Martin Kaymer

Kaymer, who turned 26 on Dec. 28, is No. 3 in the world. His proficiency in finding the winner’s circle – he won four times in 2010, including the PGA – means he’s a leading candidate to become World No. 1 this year. Kaymer isn’t as flashy as some of his peers, but that’s OK. In a world of increasing self-promotion, it’s nice to see a soft-spoken type like Kaymer earn recognition solely for what he accomplishes with his clubs.

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Koreans

Many predicted that Y.E. Yang’s victory at the 2009 PGA Championship would do for Korean men what Se Ri Pak’s 1998 U.S. Women’s Open victory did for her countrywomen. Two Korean men – Bio Kim and Sunghoon Kang – earned PGA Tour cards via Q-School. Kim, 20, also will be the youngest PGA Tour member next season. And they’re not even the best of the bunch. Kyung-Tae Kim, 24, is No. 30 in the Official World Golf Ranking after winning the Japan Tour Order of Merit. Seung-Yul Noh, 19, won the Asian Tour Order of Merit in 2010 (see below).

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TV broadcasts

The PGA Tour’s six-year deal with the two networks is set to expire in 2012, so ratings will be important this year. Of course, wins by Tiger Woods are the quickest way to boost ratings, but we have to start looking for other solutions. TV execs met with the PGA Tour’s Player Advisory Council in 2010 to discuss ways to liven up broadcasts. Most agree that providing microphones for caddies is one of the best, and most feasible, ways to improve broadcasts, but players seem hesitant to accept the move. Here’s hoping both sides can find a common ground.

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Rickie Fowler

Fowler lived up to the expectations in 2010, finishing 22nd on the money list and earning Rookie of the Year. The only thing missing from his resume? A victory, which would add substance to his style. Fowler was criticized heavily for laying up on the 15th hole in the final round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open. I wonder how those same talking heads would respond if he went another season without winning. Fowler’s play in the lower-profile Fall Series late in 2010 seemed to indicate he’s trending upward. He finished in the top 25 in all five starts, including three top-5s.

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58?

After all the low scores we saw in 2010 – even a high-school kid shot 57 – it’d only seem appropriate that 2011 would bring the PGA Tour’s first 58.

???

Peter Uihlein

Uihlein, the U.S. Amateur champion, is No. 1 in three separate world amateur rankings, and No. 1 in Golfweek’s college rankings. His victory at Chambers Bay earned him exemptions into the Masters, U.S. Open and British Open. It’ll be interesting to see how amateur golf’s dominant player fares on pro golf’s biggest stages.

???

Erin Hills

Once again, the U.S. Amateur will provide the first national exposure for a highly-rated venue scheduled to host a U.S. Open. Erin Hills, site of the 2017 U.S. Open, will host this year’s Amateur. Last year, it was Chambers Bay, the 2015 U.S. Open host. The on-course action at Chambers Bay was memorable – top names continued to advance through the match-play bracket, with the world’s top two players meeting in the final – but the test run also revealed flaws in the course’s design and conditioning that will need to be changed in advance of the Open.

???

Graeme McDowell

Entering 2010, McDowell had won four European Tour titles in eight seasons as a pro, had just one top-10 in a major and was No. 39 in the world. Even McDowell would’ve had a hard time imagining the year he’d have: three victories, including the U.S. Open, clinching the Ryder Cup, then defeating Tiger Woods in the Chevron World Challenge.

“It’s going to be tough to replicate what I did this year in 2011,” McDowell said. I’m interested to see how he does.

???

Seung-Yul Noh

Noh, 19, isn’t mentioned enough in the conversation of good young players. In 2010, Noh became the youngest player to win the Asian Tour’s Order of Merit, and he was that tour’s player of the year. He finished 34th in the Race to Dubai after winning the Malaysian Open. He also had solid finishes in two majors, finishing 40th in the U.S. Open and 28th at the PGA. He deserves to be mentioned in the same sentence as Rory, Ryo and Rickie.

???

Tom Lewis

This 19-year-old English amateur will be Uihlein’s foil at the Walker Cup. He also proved late in 2010 that he’s one to keep an eye on. He finished 12th in the Australian Open, and lost a playoff in the New South Wales Open, another pro event Down Under. Lewis, the son of a former touring professional, has a simple swing that’s turned him into a dangerous long-iron player.

???

Tiger Woods

What list would be complete without his presence? All eyes are on Woods, no matter what he does.

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Career amateur Billy Joe Patton dies at 88

Bobby Jones (right) presents the silver cup trophy to Billy Joe Patton, the low amateur in the 1954 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Patton, who died Jan. 1 at age 88, finished one stroke out of a playoff between Ben Hogan (second from left) and champion Sam Snead (background).

?MORGANTON, N.C. – Billy Joe Patton, a fast-swinging, gregarious career amateur who nearly won the 1954 Masters, died Jan. 1.

He was 88. No cause of death was listed, according to a news obituary in The News Herald of Morganton.

William Joseph Patton, a lumber broker in his native Morganton, was one of the most accomplished amateurs of the post-World War II era. He won three Carolinas Amateurs, three North & South Amateurs and two Southern Amateurs - the last at age 43 - among his many championships and played on five Walker Cup teams. In 1982, the USGA honored the long-hitting Patton with the Bob Jones Award for sportsmanship.

The Billy Joe Patton Trophy goes to the winner of the North Carolina Amateur, which Patton won in 1964.

Yet, for all of Patton’s accomplishments on the course, his claim to fame might be for a tournament that he failed to win: that ‘54 Masters, one of his 13 consecutive trips to Augusta National.

In the final round, he made a hole-in-one at the par-3 sixth hole to surge into contention before dumping his second shot into Rae’s Creek at No. 13 en route to a double bogey. He would fall one shot short of a playoff between Ben Hogan and eventual champion Sam Snead.?

Patton didn’t let his brush with a green jacket bother him. He was quoted at the time as saying to the gallery, “This is no funeral. Let’s smile again.’’

Patton, a Wake Forest graduate and Navy veteran of World War II, was a widower. He is survived by three children, five grandchildren and a great-grandchild.

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Conway Notebook | Business booming for ornament's creators

CONWAY -- Today is Whew Day.

It's over, another season of glut, of rushing, of partying, of eating, of visiting, of shopping, of cooking ... and of eating.

Today we can look at the long stretch of routine ahead and think boring's not so bad.

Barbara and Eddie Streeter of Conway Glass, though, won't get to Whew Day for another month.

They'll be busy blowing replicas of the Christmas ornament they created for a White House Christmas tree this year to fill all the orders they've gotten.

Barbara Streeter said they've gotten 50 orders for the full-size 6-inch ornament like the one on the tree in the West Wing and hundreds of orders for a smaller version.

She said it's probably going to be the end of January before all the orders are filled.

"We've delayed our [glass-blowing] classes until February to get caught up on all the orders," she said.

Finding friends

for the Waccamaw

The city of Conway is debuting a program today to encourage businesses to help keep the River City's river a place where people want to be.

Called the River-Friendly Program, the effort establishes a checklist of things businesses can do to help keep the Waccamaw as pristine as possible. Businesses will self-grade themselves on how they meet the checklist for water quality, waste reduction and recycling and energy resource-efficiency.

Included are things such as keeping dumpster lids closed and inspecting them for leaks and spills, marking all drains that empty into stormwater systems, avoiding cover sheets on fax transmissions and using ground cover or mulch around plants to control evaporation.

The city will give window stickers to businesses that can check enough boxes to qualify as a River City Business. In addition, they will be formally recognized and listed as a group on the city's public access television channel.

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Volunteer helps shape policy on Myrtle Beach's aesthetics

It all started more than a decade ago when Don Shanks noticed land near his Northwoods house in Myrtle Beach had been clear-cut to make way for a new restaurant.

Outraged, the retired teacher and school administrator from New Jersey went to City Hall aiming to keep the clear-cutting from happening again.

"I'm proactive when I see something that may be affecting people," Shanks said, sitting in the Northwoods house he's called home for 22 years. "I get involved."

He ended up on a committee that worked for more than three years to come up with tree protection regulations in Myrtle Beach, which sparked a two-decade "second career" of serving on Myrtle Beach boards that reached a pinnacle recently when he won a statewide planning award.

Shanks, who always wears shorts even if it's 20 degrees, was the first Myrtle Beach resident to bring home the South Carolina Chapter of the American Planning Association's Planning Advocate Award, given annually to one S.C. non-professional planner who has made an outstanding contribution to the advancement of quality planning.

"You just do what you have to do," said Shanks, who is chairman of Myrtle Beach's Planning Commission. "You don't give any second thought about any kind of honors or anything else."

Since getting involved with city committees in the mid-1990s, Shanks' volunteer work has helped shape policies for tree protection and landscaping, long-term planning, burying of overhead utility lines along 12 major roads, improving beach accesses and protecting neighborhoods - the interest that led him to City Hall all those years ago.

For seven years, he served on the city's Board of Zoning Appeals, which rules on appeals of administrative decisions about variances and special exceptions to city building rules. In the early 1990s, he served on an Horry County committee that developed a master plan to build parks and preserve open space.

Residents can credit Shanks with pushing for smaller signs along major roads such as Kings Highway to give them a neater appearance, preserving natural resources and improving quality of life, said Jack Walker, Myrtle Beach's planning director. Tourists can thank him for pushing for more greenery around hotels while accommodating the needs of an urban resort, he said.

"He's an advocate for a beautiful resort," Walker said.

Cities rely on volunteers to serve on planning commissions and give input on planning subjects, but it's hard to find residents such as Shanks who are dedicated to those tasks, Skip Grkovic, an official with the South Carolina planning association, said in prepared remarks when presenting Shanks the award.

"We all know how difficult it is to develop and maintain the active involvement and quality input of volunteers," Grkovic said then. "Myrtle Beach is fortunate."

Shanks stumbled into what he calls his "second career" of serving on Myrtle Beach boards after retiring here two decades ago, though this job comes with no paycheck but requires lots of reading and reviewing documents before the commission's monthly meetings. He's quick to credit city staff and fellow commission members with accomplishing the goals and admits it's a give and take to come up with the best solution.

"It's really not 'I', it's 'we,'" he said.

Shanks spends at least five or six hours a week on Planning Commission work, and that can swell to as many as 30 hours a week during busy times, Walker said. He has a diverse background that helps him rule on a variety of planning requests and issues, he said.

"He represents the epitome of what we'd like to see from our citizens," Walker said.

But Shanks also thinks about his Planning Commission role as he's driving around town, noticing that there's a lot of vacant commercial buildings along Kings Highway and making a mental note to brainstorm ways to lure action to those spots. That idea is being incorporated into updates to the city's comprehensive plan.

"I know he thinks about it all the time," Walker said.

Shanks turned to public service after working as a teacher, principal and superintendent, most of the years in New Jersey. He still hears from former students, whether because he has run into them in traffic in New Jersey or pulls a Christmas card from them out of the mailbox each year - small gestures that bring big smiles to Shanks' face.

Shanks' term as chairman of the city's Planning Commission expires in 2012. He hasn't decided whether he'll continue to serve, switch to another city committee or return to his real passion of teaching kids to read. He's worked nearly as hard on the city boards as he did as an educator.

"Retirement to me was a change in career," Shanks said.

He and his wife of 50 years, Susan, wanted to retire in different spots: He wanted to make Cape Cod home, she preferred Florida.

"So this was a compromise," he said, adding that the couple was happy with the choice. "It's not the golf. It's not the beach. It's not the shopping. It's the people."

But there's one statement the pair made when moving here that neither has lived up to.

"We said we are not going to get involved," Shanks said, "but we got involved."

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Friday, December 24, 2010

For some Myrtle Beach area churches, social media saves

In the right hands, Facebook can save lives.

One Friday night in the spring, an underage student and member of a Grand Strand church posted on the social network that he was contemplating suicide. By Saturday morning, ministers and members of the First Presbyterian Church of Myrtle Beach were calling and messaging the student to make sure he was all right, said Chris Denny, an associate pastor at the church located at 1300 N. Kings Highway in Myrtle Beach.

"Some of the adults that were in his life were able to follow up via Facebook and also via phone to say, 'Hey, what's going on? Are there ways we can help?'" Denny said.

Businesses were quick to start using social media like Facebook and Twitter, but many churches are just beginning to tap into social media to interact with their members and communities, said Kevin Ring, a consultant who researches how churches use social networking

Ring's company, Michigan-based Unconventional Method, surveyed about 250 church ministers and members across the U.S. and found that churches face different challenges than businesses in using social media, he said.

"Really they are limited in terms of their resources, and particularly time and money, figuring out what they can spend using these tools," he said. "Secondly, what they are trying to accomplish is not as clear cut as a businesses goals might be."

Most churches have established a foothold in social media since 2009 by starting a page or a profile, but did not have a clear goal in mind of what they were trying accomplish, Ring said. That process is just beginning.

Denny has his own Facebook profile and the church also has pages for its youth and children's ministries that are testing the waters, he said. They plan to launch a young adult page soon, he said.

"We're looking at how can we expand that communication tool," Denny said. "Long term, I even imagine it may overtake the use of a printed newsletter but I don't think we're quite there yet."

First United Methodist Church of Myrtle Beach, 901 N. Kings Highway, has about 900 active members who attend services and about 275 people are fans of their page on Facebook, associate pastor Jonathan Tompkins said. Staff update the page daily with quotes from the Bible, suggested readings, event announcements and photos. Group members can "like" something the church has put up on the page.

Tompkins had used Facebook before he became a minister and decided he would stay on once he took up a position at a church, he said. He accepts all friend requests from members of his congregation, he said.

Being in such a public position means he has to be careful when using Facebook, Tompkins said. He usually will stay out of it if people post rants on politics or other controversial subjects, he said.

"When I went into the ministry I told myself I would have a presence on Facebook, and I would be open about things," he said. "But also I can't just express every single little thought that pops in my head."

First Presbyterian's youth ministry page has about 450 fans and is a much faster way of communicating than more conventional means, said Todd Harms, director of youth and mission and First Presbyterian.

"We do various odd jobs for our church membership, and I can spend my whole afternoon texting or I could just get on Facebook and send out a message," Harms said.

He has a Twitter account as well that's linked to Facebook so the same information goes to both pages, he said.

Harms and Ring said that while most people think youth are the first to adopt social media, there may be more opportunities to interact with adults online. The largest demographic of consistent Facebook users is middle-age women, Ring said.

Many users don't think to post about their churches, so ministers and church staff should tell them what they're trying to accomplish and encourage them to start conversations on the church's pages, he said.

As use of social media continues to grow, expect to see more churches integrating social media into their websites or even establishing their own private social networks for their members, Ring said.

"Some of the sensitive issues that churches deal with can be aired online," Ring said. "Churches have both an opportunity and the obligation to not just approach the web and the social media in the same way that they see businesses and popular websites doing."

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