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Daily Archives: 09/15/2015

Legendary PHS coach, neighbor shot to death

Arrest made in double killing

PICKENS — The community was rocked Monday when legendary Pickens High School football coach Bill Isaacs and his neighbor, Dickie Stewart, were shot and killed in broad daylight.

A man who lived across the street from the victims is charged with two counts of murder in the killings.

Albert Leon Bowen, 64, of 412 Gilliland Road, is charged in the case, according to arrest warrants. A bond hearing was waived Tuesday for Bowen, who is also charged with two counts of possession of a weapon during a violent crime.

Pickens County Sheriff’s Office chief deputy Creed Hashe said the preliminary investigation revealed the shooting may have stemmed from an ongoing dispute between Bowen and one of the victims. He said detectives will be looking into the history of any and all activity between the parties as the investigation continues.

Authorities received initial calls about several gunshots being fired and a report of at least one person on the side of the road at around 9:50 a.m. on Monday, according to Hashe.

When deputies arrived at the intersection of North Homestead Road and Gilliland Road, they found two men lying in a grassy area dead of multiple gunshots, Hashe said.

Bowen was immediately taken into custody at his home, which is located at the intersection of the two roads, Hashe said.

According to warrant, charges were filed against Bowen based on a witness statement and his own verbal admission of guilt.

Two weapons were seized from Bowen’s home, according to Hashe. In addition to two murder charges, Bowen faces two counts of possession of a weapon during a violent crime.

Authorities have scheduled a news conference for 10 a.m. Thursday morning to discuss the investigation into the shooting.

“The Pickens community is grieving over the void felt countywide from the loss of two great men that were so well-respected,” Pickens County sheriff Rick Clark said. “Though we may never understand what drives a person to commit such evil acts against his fellow man, it is important to the surviving families and to this community as a whole to attempt to give them the answers to lingering questions when appropriate. Our hearts and prayers continue to be with all of those that have been affected by this horrific event.”

 

Community members mourn shooting victims

Public memorial planned

Saturday for Isaacs

PICKENS — Word of the shooting deaths of legendary Pickens football coach Bill Isaacs and his neighbor, Dickie Stewart, spread quickly around the community Monday.

[cointent_lockedcontent]Current Blue Flame coach John Boggs said he was shocked when he learned of the killings after his second-period class.

9-16 Page 1A.indd“It hit me like a ton of bricks,” said Boggs, who had a Shrine Bowl career as a center under Isaacs before graduating in 1991.

“Outside of my parents and grandparents, I don’t know of any other human being who has had as much influence on me as Bill Isaacs did. Being a 5-year-old kid sitting there in the stands watching Pickens play games and growing up and watching Bill Isaacs coach teams and then having played for him myself, he had a huge impact on what I’m doing now.”

Boggs, who is in his first year as head coach of his alma mater, said Isaacs had recently become more involved in the program he took over as a fresh-faced 24-year-old in 1965 and led until his retirment in 1993 due to health concerns.

“He really battled through a lot last spring health-wise, and getting back healthy and9-16 Page 1A.indd seeing him out and about was really good the past few weeks,” Boggs said.

Boggs said Isaacs and longtime assistant Andy Virgil had been in attendance at each of the Pickens Touchdown Club’s luncheons this season.

“Being able to get Coach kind of off to the side and talk a little football was fun, because he’d be able to just start popping that stuff off like it was yesterday, talking about little things like coaching technique and different things with plays and ways to run it,” Boggs said. “Just seeing his eyes light up and him start pulling that stuff out, it was like he was right back in the trenches right now.”

Boggs said he also had the opportunity to get to know Stewart through Isaacs.

“Back last spring, I was able to spend some time out in the yard with Dickie and coach, just talking, hanging out and spending some time together,” said Boggs, who said he graduated from PHS in the same class as Stewart’s daughter. “I really enjoyed getting to know him and the kind of person he is. Of course, a lot of folks in the community knew Dickie and respected him as well, so that makes it even more tragic.”

Former Pickens mayor Ted Shehan was also friends with both Isaacs and Stewart.

“When we were recruiting (Isaacs) to come to Pickens, I had the honor of showing him around,” Shehan said. “The Pickens Booster Club asked me to show him Pickens and what a great place it was to live.

“Bill was not only the greatest football coach Pickens has ever had, but he was also one of the best friends I have ever had.”

Shehan said he has known the Stewart family all his life and often discussed Pickens family history with Stewart.

“He was one of the most likable people you would ever want to meet,” Shehan said.

Virgil, who first met Isaacs when the two played together at Appalachian State in 1960, coached at Pickens with Isaacs from the beginning of his tenure through his retirement.

“We went through a lot of good times and bad times here together,” Virgil said. “We talked and we laughed and we did a lot of things together.”

Although Isaacs led the Blue Flame to seven region championships and a 181-109-5 record, including a stretch of 57 consecutive regular-season wins from 1969-75, during his 28 seasons at the helm, Virgil said one of the things his friend would be most remembered for is the impact he had on generations of young people coming through Pickens.

“He mentored a lot of folks, a lot of kids coming through high school, and tried to teach them the right way to do things and prepare them for what lie ahead,” Virgil said. “I know a lot of guys have come back and thanked him for all he did for them.”

More than 20 years after his retirement, Isaacs’ legacy still looms large in Pickens. In addition to football, Isaacs also coached basketball and softball at for the Blue Flame and served as athletic director and assistant principal at Pickens during his nearly three decades at the school. A Pickens High School Athletic Hall of Fame member, Isaacs was inducted into the South Carolina Athletic Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2011.

Former coach Bob Allison, who was an assistant under Isaacs for 23 years and more than 250 games, said Isaacs “put Pickens on the map.”

“He will be tremendously missed by the whole community — not just by the players he coached,” Allison said. “I already miss him very much.”

Former Blue Flame star Rick Anthony, who played at the University of South Carolina and then the World Football League and NFL after his playing days under Isaacs at Pickens, said he was a hard-nosed coach who expected the best from his players.

“The skills and toughness I learned under Coach Isaacs allowed me to further my career, and I will always be grateful for that,” Anthony said.

Anthony was also a cousin of Stewart.

“Dickie was a good man who took a big interest in our family,” he said. “He always headed up the annual Anthony family reunion and put a great deal of time into it. He will be greatly missed.”

Anthony’s wife, Peggy, is a longtime Pickens volleyball coach who said Isaacs was responsible for her taking over the Lady Blue Flame program in 1976. She also said Isaacs had a special relationship with her father, Dr. John M. Harden, a former Pickens doctor.

Pickens mayor David Owens, who also played for the Blue Flame under Isaacs, said the coach always took care of all his players on and off the field.

“It is a tragedy, and I hated to hear of his passing,” Owens said. “The Pickens community lost two great men (on Monday).”

Former coaching rivals also remembered the impact Isaacs had on them.

Easley mayor Larry Bagwell, a longtime coach of the Easley Green Wave, said the rivalry between his teams and Isaacs’ were “second to none.”

“Bill talked tough football, and his team exemplified it, and you had to be ready when you played them from beginning to end,” Bagwell said Tuesday. “He and I got along real well, and I can’t believe his life has ended.

“Last night, at our council meeting, the pastor who gave the invocation was a former player of his and he spoke highly of him. I thought that was a great testimony.”

Legendary Daniel coach Dick Singleton, the namesake of the Lions’ Singleton Field, reflected on the camaraderie local coaches had during the time he, Bagwell and Isaacs were facing off on opposing sidelines.

“It’s not like that now — it’s changed like the times changed,” he said. “It was a close-knit group. We were good competitors, but we were close-knit and knew each other. We knew each others’ families — I knew (Isaacs’) wife and son, who played for him.

“It’s a sad time for the people in Pickens and elsewhere. I especially feel bad for him and his family.”

State Sen. Larry Martin and State House Rep. Davey Hiott, both of whom attended Pickens during Isaacs’ tenure, also remembered him and Stewart on Tuesday.

“My heart goes out to both the Stewart and Isaacs families,” Martin said. “Their deaths are a big loss to our community and the lives they touched in the community.

“This was a tragedy for all involved,” Hiott added. “My thoughts and prayers go out for the Stewart family and Isaacs family during their time of loss. They were both great men, and this type of thing is not supposed to happen in Pickens. The community will miss them both.”

A public memorial service is being planned for Saturday morning for all players, fans and friends of Isaacs. The event, which is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m., will be held at Bruce Field in downtown Pickens. Parking will be available at Pickens Middle School, Legacy Square and along the street. Former Blue Flame players are asked to wear their jerseys if able, and others are asked to wear Blue Flame spirit gear to celebrate Isaacs’ life.

 

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Café Connections set to host annual gala and silent auction

One of the items that will be available at Café Connections’ silent auction will be a painting by 15-year old Caitlyn Murphy, who painted the piece especially for the auction.

By Rocky Nimmons

Publisher

rnimmons@thepccourier.com

PICKENS — Faith — the word means so much to so many.

It is all that is needed to get through the hardest and the best of times in one’s life. It is not just a simple word, but a way of life for Steve and Ann Corbin of Pickens.

The couple has operated Café Connections on Main Street in Pickens for three and half years as a way to spread faith and their love for Jesus Christ through a hospitality ministry at the location.

“My husband and I started ‘Get Up and Go’ Ministries in 2011, and Café Connections is our local outreach of that ministry,” Ann Corbin said. “We actually do ministry around the world through ‘Get Up and Go.’ Ten percent of the funds brought in here at Café Connections are set aside in a seed fund that will help fund other evangelical ministries.”

The Corbins are Pickens natives and have been Southern Baptist missionaries for 18 years and served in Texas, Louisiana and Colorado. It wasn’t until the couple came back to Pickens that they opened Café Connections.

“The café was a dream Steve and I had more than 30 years ago,” she said. “We were ministered to in a coffee house type of setting back in the 1970s.”

In the ministry, the couple tries to demonstrate the love of Jesus Christ to those in the community through simple acts of kindness and hospitality.

“We feel we have to earn the right to speak into someone’s life,” Corbin said. “We feel that we can do that by being kind, loving and generous.”

Café Connections is a nonprofit entity, and like any ministry, operates on the love and support of the community. Its major fundraiser of the year is its annual Fall for Café Connections Gala and Silent Auction.

For the ministry, it is the life blood that keeps it going through the end of each year and the beginning of the next. The ministry has sent out more than 60 sponsorship letters and invitations. Usually by this time they have their sponsors pretty much in place. Corbin says this year she has only received a small percentage of responses.

“I am thinking ‘Oh my, we have a gala coming up and no way to pay for it,’” she said.

Faith, though, is in abundance at Café Connections, and she has no worries God will provide. With all things, her faith is strong, and just last week another unforeseen sponsor sent a check, not earmarked for the gala, but that is help that she was not expecting. The blessing will make sure the event will happen. Corbin knows God will provide.

“He is telling me I am going to do it a different way this year,” she said.

The gala will feature a standard silent auction, and Corbin said she has some wonderful and unique items up for bids this year. Many of the items have been donated from out-of-state along with some local items as well. The last two events have been fantastic, according to Corbin. As a result, the venue for the gala has been moved to the Feria Estate, located at 263 Concord Church Road in Pickens.

The gala will take place on Oct. 2 and will feature dinner by Smoke on the Water and music by the Cane Creek Bluegrass Band. Appetizers will be served starting at 6:30 p.m., with dinner following at 7 p.m. Tickets are available for the event at $30 per person, with all ticket donations going to help support Café Connections.

Part of the event will be the many items available at the silent action. One of the items will be a beautiful painting by Caitlyn Murphy of a soldier carrying a comrade over his shoulders. The painting is breathtaking. Murphy, who is only 15 years old, painted the piece especially for the auction.

Even though many have helped, this year’s event still needs support.

“We do not charge anything for our services here at Café Connections,” Corbin said. “It is all funded by donations. We have a few that are monthly supporters and a couple of businesses that help us and couple of churches that help support us. We cannot exist in Pickens County unless we get the funds from the gala. This is all important to us. If people want us here, and they have fully embraced us for the last three and half years, we have to have their support for the gala and silent auction.”

Corbin is thankful for those who have become sponsors such as Reliable Sprinkler and the Fee family, Durham-Greene Inc., and Family Practice of Easley. She is also grateful for the donations so far from Great Oaks Dental, Pickens Savings and Loan and Cassell and Hendricks, CPA.

The event not only helps fund Café Connections, but also 10 percent of what is raised through the gala and silent auction will be donated to The Pickens County Dream Center in Easley.

“We had been praying as to whom we could donate this 10 percent to, and they are the ones God has laid on our hearts,” Corbin said. “We refer many of those who come into the café to them and just feel that this is where God wants this money to go.”

To buy tickets, become a sponsor or donate to the event, contact Ann Corbin at (864) 201-1772 or visit eventbrite.com and search for Café Connections Pickens.

 

Cannon plans ‘Scrub Connection’ Thursday

PICKENS — The Cannon Auxiliary will host the “The Scrub Connection” at Cannon Memorial Hospital on Sept. 17 from 7 a.m.-4 p.m.

Scrubs from various makers will be available for sale to the public.

A portion of the proceeds will benefit Cannon Auxiliary volunteer projects.

The sale site will be located down the hall from the entrance to Cannon Family practice at Cannon hospital. For more information, call (864) 898-1252.

 

Flu shots available at Cannon

PICKENS — Cannon Memorial Hospital will offer flu shots at the Cannon Outpatient entrance on Sept. 17 from 6-8 p.m.

Flu shots are also being given at Wellness Wednesdays at the Cannon Annex each week in September from 7-10 a.m.

Hours will be extended in October on Wednesdays from 7 a.m.-noon.

Call (864) 898-1131 to find out more information or to schedule a flu clinic at your church or business.

 

Cannon Memorial seeking volunteers

PICKENS — Cannon Memorial Hospital is seeking dedicated individuals interested in volunteering in various capacities throughout the hospital.

If you have a few hours to spare each week, are 18 years or older, and would like to be a part of a wonderful organization, Cannon would love to have you as a volunteer.

The new 2015-2016 Volunteer Year will kick off October 1, and interested volunteers are urged to apply prior to October.

Volunteer applications can be obtained by logging onto www.cannonhospital.org, or picking up in the Front Lobby at the Cannon.

Volunteers are needed year round.

 

Pickens Fire Department improves ISO rating from a Class 4 to Class 3

PICKENS — The Insurance Services Office (ISO) recently announced that Pickens Fire Department improved in its overall rating from a Class 4 department to a Class 3.

The classification by ISO, known as the Public Protection Classification (PPC™) program, assesses the fire-protection efforts in more than 47,500 communities in the United States. By classifying communities’ ability to suppress fires, ISO helps the communities evaluate their public fire-protection services. Class 1 generally represents superior property fire protection, and Class 10 indicates that the area’s fire-suppression program doesn’t meet ISO’s minimum criteria

“We have worked extremely hard this year to improve our ISO rating,” said Chris Elrod, fire chief for Pickens Fire Department. “It is not only good for the department, but our constituents benefit from the better rating as well as homeowners and business owners insurance premiums factor in their fire department’s ISO rating. The higher the rating, the higher the insurance premiums. The lower the rating, the lower those premiums go.”

When rating a fire department, ISO analyzes the relevant data on three major components of fire suppression: fire department, emergency communications, and water supply. In addition, ISO recognizes community efforts to reduce losses through fire prevention, public fire safety education, and fire investigation.

For more information on Pickens Fire Department, contact (864) 878-2610 or visit www.cityofpickens.com/fire.

 

Courier Obituaries 9-16-15

obits8-6 Page 5A.inddRUTH WALKER

LAS VEGAS — Ruth Kelly Walker, 90, of Las Vegas, passed away peacefully Friday Aug. 28, 2015.

She was born Jan. 4, 1925, in Pickens, to Ivey Clarence Kelly and Sophie Hunt Ke

No idle hands allowed here

Everybody needs to have a hobby — something they do just for fun. olivia6-25 Page 4A.indd[cointent_lockedcontent]Uncle Walter and Aunt Annie Bea both believed firmly in the importance of recreational pursuits and practiced what they preached.

Now, Uncle Walter actually had many hobbies and was versatile in his activities. He spent a lot of time coming up with different ways to rig things to make them work. He was a teller of tall tales and had a credulous and captive audience in all of us.

He’d been a medic in World War I and would operate on man or beast, free of charge. He’d won a dance contest in Atlantic City as a young man and loved music.

He’d farmed, run a service station and a cotton gin and knew how to roller skate. I don’t know that he ever officially retired, because he was always busy doing something.

He had a magic way with all animals and once raised a litter of fox cubs with his hound dog as a substitute mother. They moved in with her newborn pups, and they all nursed together.

He told us he’d been a tent mate of Randolph Scott during the war. This was fame indeed. Randolph Scott was a renowned actor who specialized in Westerns, and we were all very impressed.

When Grandmama heard this story one day out on the front porch, she raised her eyebrows and said, “Really?” in a very skeptical way, so I had my doubts about this story.

He kept us all busy constantly running errands. He’d call a child and say, “Run in yonder and get my” glasses or walking stick or teeth. Sometimes he’d forget to put his teeth in but would remember when it was time to eat breakfast.

He was a faithful member of the American Legion and never missed a meeting.

Grandmama had never learned to drive, and he always took her anywhere she wanted to go. Every Friday afternoon, he’d drive her over to Mattie’s Beauty Parlor and wait in the car while Grandmama had her hair done.

His lungs had been damaged during the war, and he always had a slight wheeze, but it never seemed to slow him down.

Now, Aunt Annie Bea was his baby sister. He adored her and called her Bea. Grandmama called her Honey Bea.

Aunt Annie Bea had her own farm closer to town than ours. She and Uncle Walter always raised a field of watermelons together, and every year would load up the farm truck and drive down to the beach to sell them. This was purely recreational, as they usually spent the proceeds on good seafood before coming home. They’d bring a bushel basket of oysters or a bucket of shrimp on ice, and then oh, how we’d feast.

Aunt Annie Bea was a striking old lady. She’d been a great beauty in her day. She had a great sense of humor and a fiery personality. She played bridge, ran her own farm, told great jokes, and in her spare time — of which there was little — she’d be busy with a lawsuit.

It was a hobby of hers. One of her sons was an attorney, and she’d always be involved in some kind of lawsuit. She enjoyed this very much and would talk about new developments over Sunday dinner.

We children were never informed about her lawsuits, because many subjects in our house were deemed unsuitable for the ears of children. So, after we were all excused from the table and after dinner coffee was brought in, the grownups would lower their voices and discuss these weighty subjects.

We always thought we were missing the best part of the meal, because there was never a dull moment when they talked. It was like listening to a very entertaining radio show.

Grandmama would always keep a sharp eye out for any lurking child with flapping ears and would be quick to tell us to go outside and “Run off some of that energy.” And then she’d think to add, “Don’t slam the screen door!”, but those last instructions were always given a second too late, because it was already slammed.[/cointent_lockedcontent]

Surviving flu season

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has a timely message for seniors: The use of flu antiviral medications cuts the length of hospital stays for those who are hospitalized with the flu, and reduces the risk of needing care after discharge.

That’s important information. The last thing we seniors need this winter is to come down with the flu. It hits us harder than nearly any other age group, with 80 percent to 90 percent of flu-related deaths being in people age 65 and older.

The study cited by the CDC says that the earlier the antiviral medications are started, the better they work. The key is seeing your doctor right away if you think you have the flu, because the medications are by prescription only — not something you can get over the counter. Antiviral drugs can be taken as liquid, pills, an inhaled powder or intravenously.

Seeing a doctor within two days of getting sick and starting the medication within four days substantially reduced the length of illness or hospital stay, the study indicated. Even those who started the medication more than two days later saw some benefit, although not as much. Those who were hospitalized and released were 25 percent to 60 percent less likely to need extended care.

The CDC says even with antiviral medications, it’s still important to get our annual flu shots. Wash your hands frequently with soap and water, or use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer. Don’t touch your eyes, nose or mouth. And stay away from those who are sick.

More tips: Carry a packet of sanitizer wipes and use them everywhere — grocery cart handles, library book covers, door handles, etc. Eat healthy food, drink plenty of water and get enough sleep.

(c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.