Wednesday,
January 05, 2005
Group
Threatens Second Suit Over Tower
A group opposing the location
of a 911 tower at the Mary Bethune Complex in Halifax threatened
the Halifax County Board of Supervisors with a second suit
if the Board doesnt consider another location.
We thought wed have some representation on this
Board but we havent had any, Frank Carr told
the Board during the citizen comment portion of their Monday
meeting. I would ask some members of this Board to
step up and represent their constituents to the satisfaction
of everyone.
There are other avenues available to us and wed
like to ask you to look at this before we file another suit,
he added.
County Administrator Bryan Foster said yesterday that the
required permits to begin construction would be issued this
week.
Its my understanding well have the permit
in hand this week, he said. Construction will
begin right away once the permit is obtained.
Halifax County Circuit Court Judge Leslie M. Osborn dismissed
a suit on November 23 filed against the Halifax County Board
of Supervisors and the Halifax Town Council seeking to halt
the planned 180-foot communications tower at the Mary Bethune
Office Complex.
Carr, who serves on the Town of Halifax planning commission,
filed the motion seeking to stop the erection of the tower
on August 9, claiming that public hearings held by the town
on a permit request were conducted more than 21 days after
notices of the hearings were published.
The notices were published on June 10 and June 17.
Halifax held its public hearing on July 13.
Once again, the residents of Halifax have asked the
members of this Board to re-think the placement of the tower,"
Carr said. We feel we havent been considered
in the placement of the tower."
Carr said there was no mention of the tower in the notices
published advertising the construction of the 911 center.
We feel the few dollars spent to relocate the tower
will be little compared to the mistrust you will receive
if you go ahead with the placement of the tower," he
said.
Board Chairman William Fitzgerald said the lawsuit effectively
cleared the way to build the tower.
As far as I know, since the court made its decision
that the matter was handled properly, the installation of
the tower and the progress is continuing at this point,"
he said. The court got involved at your request and
has made a decision. No one on this Board wants to go against
the court."
If we have to go back to court, it will take another
six months," Carr said. The 911 center is 100
percent operational as it is right now. We need to look
at this some more.
I would ask you to consider the people youre
supposed to represent and look at moving the tower."
Since I represent the district in which the tower
is being constructed, Id like to say that I looked
into this and talked with an Alltel representative and found
it takes about 25 permits, many of them federal, to construct
a tower," Supervisor Doug Bowman said. Thats
the business reason.
The reason I have chosen not to join the resistance
is because of the greater good theory.
Ive talked to people in the know about the risks
of moving the tower from the proximity to the 911 center,"
he added. The further the tower is from the building
the higher the risk of disruption of service.
When I took the oath of office, I swore to represent
the people of the county. More people benefit from having
this tower where it is than by moving it," Bowman said.
Fitzgerald
To Chair Supervisors
Board Voted To Change Meeting Time To 6:30 P.M.
Halifax County Board of Supervisors Chairman William Fitzgerald
and Vice-Chairman James Edmunds were unanimously named to
serve in the positions for a second year during Mondays
meeting.
Supervisors, with nominations by Ronnie Vaughan and seconds
by Doug Bowman and Bryant Claiborne, unanimously supported
Fitzgerald and Edmunds.
The only significant change supervisors made during Mondays
organizational meeting was scheduling their regular monthly
meeting for 6:30 p.m. on the first Monday of the month.
The Board had been meeting at 7 p.m.
Supervisor Tom West suggested scheduling the meetings at
10 a.m. on the first Monday of the month, but Vaughan and
the Rev. Roger Ford spoke in opposition to the motion.
This is supposed to be a public meeting and it should
be accessible to the citizens of the county," Ford
said. I think a day meeting robs a person that works
and are poor and cant get here."
Vaughan said his work schedule prevented him from attending
a morning meeting, and made the motion to hold the meetings
at 6:30 p.m. With a second by Lottie Nunn, the motion unanimously
passed.
Rural Addition Funding Changes
Assistant County Administrator Jerry Lovelace told the Board
that without changes to the subdivision ordinance to meet
Virginia Department of Transportation standards, the county
will not be eligible for rural addition funds after July
1.
Lovelace said the Board must decide on the changes to the
subdivision ordinance no later than May 2 in order to advertise
the changes for public hearing.
I cannot emphasize too strongly how critical this
issue is to both ongoing matters such as King Village Road
and to future subdivision development in the county,"
Lovelace wrote in a memo to the Board.
This is not the first time the proposed changes have been
addressed in the county, according to Lovelace.
The Board has discussed this in the past, as has the
planning commission," Lovelace said. The Land
Development Task Force held lengthy discussions on this
in 2003 in formulating the revisions to the subdivision
ordinance that became effective in January, 2004."
According to the assistant county administrator, ordinance
changes making roads meet minimum VDOT standards will increase
the cost of subdivision development in the county.
What it boils down to is our ordinance allows non-VDOT
standard roads," he said. This new ordinance
says we have to have VDOT-approved roads. This means we
cant have subdivisions as we have now and still get
rural addition funds.
This significantly increases the cost of subdivision
development if youre going to have internal streets
and could be a detriment to contractors.
This could have negative impact on affordable housing
due to significantly increased lot costs because of the
costs of the roads," Lovelace added.
The ordinance change could also lead to more sprawl, he
continued.
Due to up front construction costs, many developers
may cease to create subdivisions with internal streets and
solely plat strip subdivisions with frontage
on existing state-maintained roads," he said.
VDOT Resident Engineer Joe Barkley said that while July
1 was the deadline for implementation of the ordinance,
if the county chose to not change their ordinance, they
could still apply for the funds in the future.
You wont actually lose the funds, just the ability
to use them for rural additions," he said. You
would have to use the funds on the secondary road system."
Kings Village will fall under the ordinance, Barkley added.
If you consider the resolution at some point, it can
still be set aside to fall into the category."
Supervisors agreed to put the issue on the agenda for their
January 28 meeting.
The search for new accounting software for the county will
continue, County Administrator Bryan Foster told the Board.
The Board voted in October to proceed with the Main
Street system," Foster said. Ive reviewed
the proposal and visited a neighboring locality with some
county staff to see it and we feel this isnt the route
we need to go."
The price quoted for the Main Street software was $45,074.
While the price looks attractive, there were some
hidden costs that werent in (the quoted price),"
he added. While it can be a little more expensive
to go the other way, we think it will be cheaper in the
long run."
During their retreat, supervisors will also consider whether
to take oversight of the proposed access road at Virginia
International Raceway.
Ive talked to VDOT and the developers and VDOT
suggests the county assume oversight of the project since
were the grant recipient," Foster said.
The road will provide access to the location of the JOUSTER
and VIPER projects at the raceway.
Im not suggesting the Board take any action
at this time," he added. Well continue
to review the other issues and consider it during the retreat."
EDA Funding
On a motion from Bowman, who chairs the finance committee,
supervisors unanimously agreed to an interim appropriation
of $25,000 to the Economic Development Authority for January.
Effective January 1, the employees under the IDA budget
were assumed by the EDA," he said. We would like
for an interim appropriation of $25,000 to be approved for
the EDA."
Bowman told the Board that there is roughly $170,000 in
the IDA budget for the second half of the year.
There will be a mini-audit of the IDA and well
have a clear understanding of the funds they will need at
our next meeting," he said. This is basically
a transition period until we get in the spring budget season."
SoBo Couple Escapes Thai Killer Waves
Mitch
and Teresa Wilborn Were Vacationing at a Phuket Beach Resort
When Paradise Lost Became A Reality
BY Mitch Wilborn
SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE-VIRGINIAN
Occasionally in life there are those small, ineffable pleasures
that just sneak up on you: for example, walking down a beautiful
beach in a tropical paradise admiring the calm turquoise-colored
water on a cloudless day feeling glad to be alive. Then
there are those not-so-small, inexpressible horrors that
usually sneak up on you in your worst recurring nightmares:
e.g., a three-story wall of water tumbling toward you at
40mph and your feet frozen in place...fortunately, you usually
wake up at this point.
In Phuket on Mai Kao Beach the day after Christmas you got
both experiences juxtaposed that morning, and the latter
wasnt a night terror that you could will yourself
to wake up from. Until now most of my fears have been either
garden-variety phobias-fear of small spaces, fear of heights,
etc., or fairly rational fears about entering the food chain-swimming
at the great barrier reef in Australia after a great white
shark attack the previous week or hiking in California where
mountain lion warnings had been posted.
The following is an account of how I acquired my latest
neurotic baggage: cymophobia.
The Trip
I left from Raleigh-Durham airport in mid-December to spend
Christmas with my wife, Teresa, in Singapore. The weather
had just turned cold in Virginia so I was really looking
forward to some time near the equator where the days are
all 85 to 90 degrees year round.
The 9:35 a.m. flight was delayed because of some maintenance
issues; then when we did finally try to leave, the pilot
aborted takeoff because of a hydraulic failure warning light
a few moments before lift-off and we were taken off the
plane while they attempted to repair problem. We boarded
plane again with same results. The lady behind me immediately
called someone on her cell phone and asked them to pray
for her. While I didnt think divine intervention was
necessary at this point, I knew it was going to be a very
long day.
It was afternoon by this time and I obviously was not going
to make the 1p.m. flight to Tokyo. I eventually ended up
in a very cold and snowy Chicago later that night which
made the warmth of the tropics even more appealing. The
next day was uneventful. United was able to re-book me on
the noon flight but because of strong winter headwinds,
we took the northern route over Alaska which added to our
time to Tokyo. I walked off one plane and onto another because
of the late arrival; some twenty-four hours later I landed
at Changi airport in Singapore where it was still 82 degrees
at midnight.
Teresa and I had talked briefly about going somewhere during
Christmas vacation but it looked like it wasnt going
to happen because this is the peak time for Asian holiday
travel and everything gets booked months in advance. We
had a Marriott timeshare that would expire at the end of
the year unless we used it somewhere and since they have
only one timeshare resort in Asia, I had just resigned myself
to losing the week: their Thai resort was full and I just
did not want to get back on a plane for an extended trip
anywhere else.
I connected to the Internet after landing; being jet-lagged
would keep me up all night anyway. I found that the JW Marriott
in Phuket, Thailand was available for the week before Christmas...evidently
someone had cancelled their week a few seconds before I
logged onto the exchange site. I quickly reserved the week
and with a couple of hours of scrambling to arrange the
1-hour flight on Thai Air, I was done.
The Resort
A few days later we arrived in paradise. The JW Marriott
Phuket Resort is a 3-year-old 265-room showplace hotel and
spa located on the north end of Phuket Island away from
the main tourist area of Patong Beach. Because this area
is a protected sea turtle sanctuary, Royal Garden Resorts,
the owners of the Marriott had to develop the site without
changing any aspects of the shoreline which included a 20
ft. elevation increase between the water and the hotel grounds.
In addition to being very steep, the beach is not very wide
so you can imagine that there were some interesting discussions
between the developers and the building permit office concerning
the amount of money being spent, the number of jobs the
hotel would provide, and the taxes and tourist dollars the
project would bring in on one hand versus the endangered
turtles and their steep tourist-unfriendly beach on the
other (the turtles evidently thought that the beach was
just fine for laying their eggs).
In the US we have these legal confrontations from time to
time regarding northern spotted owls, snail-darters or other
rare critters than pit groups against each other depending
on political affiliation, constitutional interpretations,
environmental positions or whatever. These disagreements
are usually localized and rather esoteric; thus, the outcomes
have little significance on most people lives.
However, in the case of the Thai leatherback turtles, the
500 human beings at the Marriott Phuket Resort on the day
after Christmas should be eternally thankful that the turtle
won this time. Usually in poorer countries when there is
this much money involved, beaches, mangrove forests, coral
reefs, and wildlife habitats lose every time.
While no one could have presaged the 9.0-magnitude earthquake,
this 20-ft. rise was the primary reason that there were
no fatalities and only a few injuries at the Marriott. Not
too far away, some developers had bulldozed the beach flat
when they built in order to make their hotels more appealing.
The week in Phuket turned out to be very simple; no elephant
rides, snorkeling trips, jungle treks or boat trips to James
Bond Island. The formula for simplicity was as follows:
eat, sit under an umbrella, read, nap, eat, sit under an
umbrella, go for a swim if it gets too hot, eat... repeat
as necessary. We stayed inside the resort grounds most of
the time but did venture off the property once early in
the week to follow a friendly group of dogs as they walked
down the beach. They led us to Lindas Restaurant.
The Animals
We eventually ate at Lindas several times, a little
oceanfront thatched-hut restaurant which is contiguous to
the Marriott property on the north. Although their English
is not very good-a lot better than my Thai, however-from
what I could understand, Linda, her husband, and their 5
dogs run the place.
There is nothing pretentious about this eatery: just good
food. The thatched structure is open air with most of the
chairs and tables just out in the sand. The furniture is
all handmade bamboo. I dont mean the kind you can
buy in fancy catalogs: I mean the kind you build with some
backyard bamboo, a Sears Craftsman handsaw and a lot of
16-penny nails.
The mixed-breed dogs keep you company while you eat...they
seem to each have their own mound of sand they stoically
sit on in a king-of-the-mountain pose, coming by your table
for a rub every now and then, but never to beg. We did not
hear them bark once at any time during the week. On the
night before the earthquake, they started barking as soon
as it turned dark and did not stop until 8 a.m. almost the
exact time the earthquake struck off Sumatra, Indonesia
about 600 miles away from Phuket.
Western science takes a skeptical view of the predictive
abilities of animals; they file these anecdotal accounts
away in the same cabinet that contains Elvis, Bigfoot, and
the Loch Ness Monster sightings.
Rupert Sheldrake, a retired Cambridge University Don, is
one the leading proponents of the psychic powers
of animals. He said that there were many independent reports
of erratic animal behavior from around the world before
earthquakes. He called the prevailing view narrow-minded,
and, ahem, dogmatic.
James Berkland, a retired USGS geologist who correlates
earthquakes with lost pet ads in daily newspapers states
that the number of lost pets goes up significantly before
an earthquake. Many pet owners would agree that their animals
are tuned in to stimuli that are not accessible to their
owners.
Fishermen through the Indian Ocean region reported that
on the day before the earthquake, their catches were up
to 20 times greater than normal. After the earthquake reports
came in from Sri Lanka where the tsunami floodwaters inundated
the Yala Wildlife Reserve which is home to hundreds of wild
elephants and not one elephant was killed...they couldnt
find so much as a dead rabbit. Whether animals have a sixth
sense or are as dull as that unnamed cousin of yours is
open to interpretation. But dont tell that to Lindas
dogs. By the way, they are all fine, Linda, her husband,
and the dogs.
The Tsunamis
Six days, six books, a bottle of Coppertone, a lot of Thai
food and a few umbrella drinks later, it was time to leave
paradise. That Sunday morning started like every other day
we had been there; warm, humid, no clouds and a gentle breeze
just barely stirring the palms. We had a 1 p.m. flight so
we planned to leave the hotel around 10:30 a.m. That gave
me time to go to the gym around 8:30 a.m. while Teresa read
by the pool, which is about 200 feet back from the beach.
After finishing my workout, I went to the pool until we
left for the room to pack. After about 15 minutes I left
Teresa to finish the packing while I went to the lobby to
check out. We were staying on the 4th floor of the north
villas so it was a 10- minute walk via the beach walkway
to the front desk. I walked out for one last look at the
ocean and started back toward the lobby.
I had just walked up the first flight of stairs which was
about 100feet from the pool when I heard a large roaring
noise and the sound of breaking furniture as all of the
wooden lounge chairs were smashed against the raised concrete
planters along the pool or thrown into the pool as the first
30-ft. wave hit.
There was some screaming from the injured but surprisingly
little; mostly you could hear the staff yelling in Thai.
A newly constructed thatched-roof boat rental building was
demolished...its roof beams snapped in two and the block
foundation completely destroyed. You could see the water
receding very rapidly sweeping the chairs and lounges back
toward the ocean. Then the second tsunami hit with more
power than the first.
Fortunately, the few people who had been out by the pool
were not swept into any of the concrete structures nor hit
directly by objects picked up by the waves. A third wave
struck but with less fury than the first two. Then it was
all over. There was just a slight breeze, still no clouds
in the sky, and an eerie quiet just like nothing had happened.
The sea remained unsettled for some time and full of debris
but otherwise, the entire scene had a twilight-zone feel
to it.
People were wandering around in shock; a few of them were
bleeding and some limping or holding their heads. The hotel
staff didnt know what to do. No one really knew what
was happening at this point so I foolishly went back down
to the pool after the third wave. Before a security guard
escorted me away, I got a view of the entire beachfront
scene; it looked like something from the war footage in
Baghdad. There had been a group of masseuses who gave 60-minute
Thai massages for 300 baht (about $8.00) at the edge of
the beach. I saw many of them covered with beach mud trying
to recover any of their materials.
A few of the Palm trees were snapped off; virtually all
of the extensive landscaping was uprooted and deposited
into the pool or was part of the flotsam that got sucked
back out into the ocean as far as you could see.
The hotel management wanted all guests to go to the main
ballroom because there were rumors of more tsunamis on the
way. I went to get Teresa who had noticed the commotion
and seen the waves from our villas porch. We returned
directly to the lobby. Power was off by this time. A nursing
station was set up to handle the injured. I had my backpack
with my computer and was able to access Marriotts
wireless network: this is how we discovered the severity
of the disaster.
Initially, the reports from Indonesia indicated a 6.4-magnitude
earthquake; while not small, this was not a catastrophic
event when it occurs in 12,000 feet of water. However, within
moments it was clear that the USGS reading of 9.0 was the
correct one.
We began to realize how fortunate we were to have been at
this resort. Reports started coming in from staff that Patong
Beach was hit badly and people were killed. Then CNN started
picking up on the global reach of the earthquake; every
time you refreshed their internet site the death count rose.
And it has risen unabated since then.
Rumors of more killer waves persisted for hours; thus, we
had to stay in the lobby area the rest of the afternoon
until they had the power restored and the threat of aftershock
tsunamis had passed. Since the airport was closed, no one
had any idea when we would be able to get out. By the time
we got back to our room it was evening: we watched CNN most
of the night and by morning were exhausted but by then knew
how incredibility lucky we were. Found out we had tentative
flights for day after tomorrow so we watched the TV reports
until it was just too painful to see anymore videotape of
the worldwide tragedy.
As we walked around the property later that day, we could
only imagine what it would have been like without the 20-feet
high beach to absorb most of the energy of the three waves.
Some ocean front rooms looked bombed out; glass doors and
windows blown into the rooms and only sticks left for furniture.
The two oceanfront restaurants were completely ruined with
most of their furniture washed away or broken up. You could
tell which guests were on the ground floor because they
were the ones you saw around the resort for the next few
days in what looked like flowing white pajamas provided
by the hotel until they could replace their ruined clothes
when the shops opened. At first I thought it was a Hare
Krishna delegation.
When we finally got to the airport a few days later, it
was chaotic. People still had that shell-shocked demeanor
and shuffled around aimlessly while waiting for their planes.
Many were wrapped with bandages on arms and legs with the
most severe in wheelchairs and on crutches. Their stories
were frightening. The runway was filled with military rescue
and support planes and helicopters dealing with the injured
and the dead. They called our flight and within 30 minutes
we were lifting off over the Andaman Sea on our way back
to Singapore. Looking out the window at the ravaged coastline,
it was difficult to imagine that only a week had gone by.
The Aftermath
By now you know the rest of the story. The enormity is overwhelming.
Usually when bad things happen in nature, they occur on
a variation of it-was-a-dark-and stormy-night theme: tornadoes,
hurricanes, floods, typhoon, cyclones, hailstorms, etc,
require, by definition, bad weather.
When the proverbial lightning bolt comes out of the blue
on a perfect tropical day, the incongruity makes the cataclysm
even more difficult to understand. Victims families
struggle first with the grief, then with the uncertainty
of what happens next. Closure is impossible for many because
their loved ones will never be found. Survivors try to cope
with the Why not me? issue. The poor and the
children always suffer the most-1/3 of all casualties were
children-whole generations were lost.
Ecosystems may never recover. The Maldives may not be able
to survive economically: with the highest point on the island
chain three feet above sea level, there is a real question
about rebuilding. Since this is perhaps the first natural
world-wide disaster in the modern era (the two world wars
were certainly global in perspective but man-made nonetheless),
the countries of world have a chance to overcome past jealousies,
pettiness, and rivalries and do good.
For example, there is a glimmer of hope even in Sri Lanka
which has been torn by civil strife for 2 decades. However,
it usually doesnt take long for goodwill to dissipate
and the political status-quo return. The eurocentric International
Herald Tribune chided the US about its aid contributions
saying that the US donated less than 1 percent of its budget
in previous year; the more conservative Asian Wall St. Journal
countered in an editorial stating the US contributed 40%
of all worldwide aid in that same year. This whole tragedy
was made for TV and print.
Miles of copy have been written and hours of videotape filmed,
first about the numbers:
How many dead? Which countries? How much damage?
Then stories about individual survival and tragedy:
The two Scandinavian infants who were separately
found alone but ok.
The 20-day-old baby found healthy floating on a mattress
in Penang, Malaysia.
The 72-year old man swept 2 miles out to sea but
managed to swim back to shore.
The family in Indonesia who lost five of their seven
children when they went to pick up fish after the waters
receded before the first big wave.
The 10-year-old student who saved 100 people on a
beach near the Marriott because she had just studied tsunamis
in school and recognized the signs.
Then the truly bizarre:
A woman near the epicenter of the quake, Aceh, Indonesia
was carried out of her house by the waves and dragged toward
her injured neighbor who was struggling to save her nine-year-old
twins; she put the two children on her back and as she was
swept away by the torrent, she was guided by a snake as
big as a telephone pole back to the safety of the mangroves.
Then the ironic:
The JW Marriott Hotel in Bangkok was advertising
heavily in local papers the opening of their new restaurant,
Tsunami, on the weekend of the earthquake.
Then the post-tsunami questions:
Why there wasnt an early warning system in
the Indian Ocean like there is in the Pacific?
Was the US stingy when they first announced
their aid contributions?
Why cant the aid organizations get their act
together in the delivery of services?
Why did tourists receive preferential medical treatment
and attention?
Personally, I am just glad to be alive. I could have been
swimming in the ocean as I did every morning during my stay
in Phuket. I could have been on a jet ski like the King
of Thailands 21-year-old grandson was. I could have
been at the brand new Sofitel Hotel in Khao Lak (just north
of the Marriott) where 3000 workers had worked double shifts
for a year to complete the project: it was completely demolished
in five minutes with 90% of the staff and guests dead. I
could have been shopping on the underground floor of Ocean
Plaza Shopping Center in Patong Beach.
You cant think about the why questions
too much; otherwise you would just pull the cover over your
head in the morning and not get out of bed...probably the
best you can do is say that it wasnt my or Teresas
day, and move on.
Since Americans account for only 5% of Thailands 12
million tourists each year, most of the people I met were
from other countries. Whether Buddhist, or Taoist, or Christian,
or Muslim, or Hindu, as survivors we all had similar feelings
of guilt, inadequacy, helplessness, and sorrow. The clichés
about life become clichés because there is some truth
in all of them: Life is fragile. Life is fleeting. Life
is precious. My banal observations this week confirm all
of the above.
The Thai people are the most generous and truly kind people
that I have ever met in my travels. Maybe as a result of
this global catastrophe we can all strive to be a bit kinder,
a bit more generous, a bit more accepting. Maybe we can
become a little less selfish and a little less critical.
In other words, maybe we can become a little more Thai.
When I taught a course in the humanities, I used Eric Hoffers
philosophical treatise, The True Believer. I had not thought
of it in a long time until this tragedy. During the Depression,
Hoffer, a longshoreman, did whatever he could to survive.
While picking peas one day, he looked down his row and saw
that someone was had begun picking on his row
and was moving toward him. He got angrier and angrier the
closer the two men got together. How dare this pea picker
steal his peas! As they met in the middle of the row, Hoffer
was ready to fight. The man, however, simply poured the
peas he had collected in his hat into Hoffers hat,
looked at him and said, Pass it on. Sounds like
a good strategy for going forward.
As a result of the tsunami, I suspect I have changed in
ways I cant yet imagine. Time will tell. I can say
this: If there is anything you have dreamed about doing
with your life, do it now. Share whatever you can with those
less fortunate than you. Live every day as if it was your
last. Like one of my good friends said to me one day: You
dont know how many nickels are in the meter. I guess
I will just have to live with my new found fear of waves.
Would I do anything differently? I do wish I could take
my college physics lab exam over: I now have a much better
understanding of the wave mechanic concepts of amplitude,
refraction, and wave run-up. And one final bit of practical
advice: If you ever see the ocean recede in front of you
in a Red-Sea-Old-Testament fashion, run in the opposite
direction as if your life depended on it. It probably does.
Obituaries
Carl
Arthur Conner
Carl Arthur Conner, 74, of 2028 North Terrys Bridge
Road, Halifax died January 4 at Halifax Regional Hospital.
Mr. Conner was born in Halifax County on September 13, 1930,
the son of Arthur Henry Conner and Sallie Wilborn Conner
and was married to Frances Coates Conner. He was a member
of Bethel Baptist Church.
Survivors include his wife; four daughters, Wanda Conner
of Woodbridge, Vickie C. Newton of South Boston, Sheila
C. Forlines and Kimberly C. Lloyd, both of Halifax; three
brothers, Joseph H. Conner Sr., Edward A. Conner and Willis
D. Conner, all of Scottsburg; 10 grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services for Mr. Conner will be held tomorrow, January
6 at Bethel Baptist Church at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Vance
Midgett officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.
The family will receive friends this evening from 7:00 until
8:30 at Powell Funeral Home, and other times at the home.
Those wishing to give memorials are asked to consider Halifax
County cancer Association, P.O. Box 875,South Boston, 24592
Mary Irene Morris Bennett Crymes
Mary Irene Morris Bennett Crymes, 71, of Crewe died January
1.
Mrs. Crymes was the daughter of the late Obie and Kathryn
Blanks Morris, formerly of Halifax County, and the wife
of Len Crymes. She was the widow of James Crider Bennett.
Survivors include her husband; two daughters, Brenda B.
Clark and husband, Bobby, of Farmville, and Kathye B. Chambliss
and husband, Joe, of Greenville, N.C.; one son, James Michael
Bennett and wife, Sondra, of Richmond; her grandchildren,
Gary and Michelle Kerns and their children, Maryssa and
Dylan of Cary, N.C., Ryan and Becky Norton and children,
AlecZander and Shae, all of Raleigh, N.C.; a stepson, Ronnie
Crymes and wife, Nancy, of Richmond; one brother, Mac Morris
and his wife, Reabel, of Burkeville.
Funeral services were held at 2 p.m. January 3 at Crewe
United Methodist Church with the Rev. Rick Woodall officiating.
Burial followed in Wards Chapel Cemetery.
Those wishing to give memorials are asked to consider the
Nottoway Rescue Squad, 501 E. Virginia Avenue, Crewe, 23920,
or Crewe UMC, 607 Georgia Avenue, Crewe, 23930.
Robert Miller
Robert Miller of 3125 Dan River Church Road, South Boston
died at his home January 3 at the age of 54.
He was born in Albany, Ga. on June 15, 1950, to the late
James Williams and the late Ophelia Wesley and was married
to Brenda Brown Miller.
Survivors of Mr. Miller include his wife; 10 children; a
host of grandchildren; and one sister, Minister Betty J.
Wesley of Richmond.
Funeral services for Mr. Miller will be held tomorrow, January
6, at noon at Dunn & Sons Funeral Home in Halifax with
the Rev. Phillip Brown officiating. Burial will follow in
Brown Memorial Church of God in Christ Cemetery.
The family will receive friends this evening, January 5
from 6 to 7 at the funeral home and other times at the home.
Tale
Of Two Champions
Armstrong, Spencer Compete In Muay Thai Boxing
BY Doug Ford
G-V STAFF WRITER
Former Muay Thai Boxing champion Ken Armstrong is attempting
a comeback this year - and he may have Glenn Spencer Jr.,
to thank for it.
Armstrong, a 34-year-old Halifax County resident and Camp
23 Correctional Officer, is scheduled to fight February
26 in Atlanta, the first Muay Thai fight for him since 1996.
Spencer, a 33-year-old Raleigh resident and student of Armstrong,
won the Light Cruiser Weight (185 pound) title in Muay Thai
Boxing December 11 in Atlanta, and Armstrong found the spark
he needed to return to the ring while training Spencer.
I met Glenn about two and one-half years ago in Raleigh
and we started training around here," Armstrong recalled.
He started getting some amateur bouts in Virginia
Beach, Norfolk and Roanoke, before we met someone who was
holding fights every Saturday night in Georgia, and Glenn
went down there," he continued.
Spencer has compiled a 15-2 record thus far in the sport
of Muay Thai.
He was given a title shot, and the only difference
in his title fight from other Muay Thai bouts was that elbows
were allowed," said Armstrong.
We really had to go into specific training to learn
how to throw and protect yourself from elbows."
The sport of Muay Thai evolved from a style of self defense
taught to the Thai military to fight the Burmese, according
to Armstrong, who said everything goes in Muay Thai boxing.
A fighter can use his hands, legs, knees and elbows against
his opponent, and elbows are especially a potent weapon,
he added.
That could make or break a fighter, and if youre
cut bad enough, it could stop a fight," explained Armstrong.
The only protection you have are 10 ounce boxing gloves."
Armstrong was exposed to Muay Thai while stationed with
the U.S. Air Force in Thailand, first going to a couple
of matches as a spectator, then to a boxing camp to learn
the sport.
Training methods for Muay Thai are similar to those for
boxers, according to Armstrong.
They involve a lot of running, jump roping, situps,
crunches, heavy bag work and Thai pad work," said Armstrong.
Thai pads are big pads similar to catchers mitts,
except much larger. Muay Thai fighters punch and kick them
as part of their training regimen.
Armstrong was fighting in the Junior Welterweight Division
(142 pounds), when he became the first American to hold
the Muay Thai Championship while in Thailand.
He defended his title twice before relinquishing it after
returning to the U.S. in 1997, and he is returning to Muay
Thai simply for the love of the sport.
Im not looking for any big national title,"
noted Armstrong. Ive held the biggest title
someone in my profession can hold. Im fighting
just to be fighting."
Armstrong is currently training for his comeback at a gym
he co-owns in Clarksville, the only gym in the area that
trains both boxers and Muay Thai fighters.
Co-owner Adrian Smith was another who encouraged Armstrong
to return to the ring, telling the 34-year-old Armstrong
to simply go for it."
Smith has compiled a career record of 129-25 and will compete
this time in the MiddleWeight Division (160-170 pounds).
Armstrong has a busy schedule in addition to his comeback
plans and training Spencer.
He is also training local boxer Dinisio Martin for the Rough
and Rowdy boxing competition in Salem January 28.
HCHS Baseball Booster Club Is On
The Brink
Booster Club Officials Will Make A Final
Bid Monday To Save The Organization
BY Joe Chandler
G-V STAFF WRITER
Officials of the Halifax County High School Baseball Booster
Club will make a final attempt to save the organization
when it meets Monday night at 7 p.m. at Halifax County High
School.
Citing a lack of parent support and attendance at meetings,
outgoing club president Brenda Trickey said the Booster
Club is on the brink of folding and likely will fold
unless there is a surge in attendance at Monday nights
meeting.
Booster Club officials are urging parents of players on
the Halifax County High School varsity and jayvee baseball
teams and parents of students who plan to try out for the
team this spring to attend Monday nights meeting.
The purpose of the meeting is to elect new officers and
to make preliminary plans for activities for the upcoming
spring baseball season.
I am sorry to say that if parents dont come
forward to this meeting, the baseball booster club program
may fold, Trickey said.
The last time we held a meeting and attempted to elect
officers we had only six people there, she said.
When you consider how many parents there are of the
players on the two baseball teams, six people arent
very many. We need more help than that if we are going to
continue to go forward.
Therefore, Im asking parents of these young
men who will be a part of the high school baseball program
this spring to attend this very crucial meeting, continued
Trickey.
The club needs new officers every one to two years
to keep the program healthy and running efficiently. We
are urging parents and anyone else in the community who
is interested in supporting and assisting the high school
baseball teams to come to this meeting and express their
concern and willingness to keep the booster club going.
Anyone having any questions may contact me at 575-5122.
The Halifax County High School Baseball Booster Club is
a non-profit volunteer organization designed to assist the
high school varsity and junior varsity baseball teams and
the high school baseball program.
Funds raised by the Booster Club are used for a wide variety
of projects. Projects such as improvements to the high school
baseball field, providing charter buses for the varsity
baseball team on its longest trips for district, regional
and state tournament games and providing end-of-season team
awards for Comets players are just a few of the items that
funds have been designated for.
Last season, the booster club provided funds for practice
apparel for players, district championship plaques and a
year-end awards banquet for players, their parents, and
team coaches.