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Articles: Preventing Sunburn Carolina Girls...Have Careers Spoleto $ Priceless $ Online Magazine

Mt Pleasant Magazine

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Mount Pleasant, South Carolina's number one online magazine. A great resorce for all your information on what's going on East of the Cooper

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Page 1: Mt Pleasant Magazine

Articles:

Preventing Sunburn

Carolina Girls...Have Careers

Spoleto

$ Priceless $

Onl

ine

Mag

azin

e

Page 3: Mt Pleasant Magazine

ContentsFrom The Editor 5

Preventing Sunburn 10

Carolina Girls...Have Careers 12

Playing Hamlet On A Flying Trapeze 13

Spoleto 14

Spotlight on Roberts of Charleston 16

Summervile Real Estate 18

Charleston’s Office of Cultural Affairs New Website 20

No One Realizes How Beautiful It Is To Travel 22

Just Let The Wardrobe Do The Acting 24

Commerical Real Estate - Renting In Todays Market 26

If I Were Shipwrecked, And Could Only Have One Book 28

Don’t Sit Under An Umbrella Waiting For It To Rain 30

Can You Find The Gorget? 32

The Bed Has Become A Place of Luxury To Me 34

If People Sat Outside And Looked At The Stars 36

How To Make Grits 37

Every Normal man Must Be Tempted At Times 39

The Palm Tree Strives Ever Upwards 40

How To Set A Table 41

If You Can Organize Your Kitchen 45

10 Reasons To Plant Trees Now 46

When Twilight Drops Her Curtain Down 47

Bunker Shot Perfection 49

Carolina Girl Gear 50

Neighborhoods 52

Time To Refinance or Buy?! 56

About Mt. Pleasant 58

www.MtPleasant.sc Online Magazine | 2009 3

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Buy LoCaLPromoting local business is as simple as having other company’s business cards or brochures posted on a board in your store. In an effort to promote your area, we are distributing decals that say “Check us out at www.MtPleasant.sc,” in hopes that local shoppers will visit the site to find local restaurants, clothing, specials, coupons and more. We are doing our part, so please join us, and promote your local merchants, and everyone will benefit!

top ten reasons to think LoCaLBuy LoCaL - Be LoCaL – heLp LoCaL Businesses

1. Buy LoCaL -- Support yourself and Mt. Pleasant. Many studies have revealed when you buy from an independent, locally owned business in the your own area, rather than a nationally owned businesses, considerably more of your money is used to make purchases from other local businesses. Local businesses continue to strengthen the economic base of the local community. These include case studies showing that local local owned businesses generate a premium in enhanced economic impact to the community and our tax base.

2.support LoCaL area Community Groups: Non-profit organizations receive an average 250% more support from smaller Mt. Pleasant area business owners than they do from large companies.

3. keep your area unique: Where we shop, where we eat and have fun -- all of it makes our community home. Our one-of-a-kind local businesses are an integral part of the distinctive character. Local tourism businesses also benefit. “When people go on vacation they generally seek out destinations that offer them the sense of being someplace, not just anyplace.” ~ Richard Moe, President, National Historic Preservation Trust.

4. reduCe environmentaL impaCt: Locally owned businesses in your area can make more local purchases requiring less transportation. This generally means contributing less to sprawl, congestion, habitat loss and pollution.

5. Create additionaL JoBs: Small local businesses are the largest employer nationally and in the community, provide the most jobs to local residents.

6. reCeive Better serviCe: Local businesses often hire people with a better understanding of the products and services they offer, and take more time to get to know customers.

Cont. next page

From the editor

www.MtPleasant.sc Online Magazine | 2009 5

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7.invest in your Community: Local businesses are owned by people who live in this community, and they are less likely to leave, and are more invested in the commu-nity’s future.

8. put your taxes to Good use: Local businesses require a relatively little infrastructure investment and make more efficient use of public services as compared to nationally owned stores entering your area.

9. Buy What you Want, not What BiG advertisinG BudGets Want you to Buy: A South Carolina marketplace comprised of tens of thousands of small businesses is the best way to ensure innovation and low prices over the long-term. A multitude of small businesses, each selecting products and services based not on a national sales plan but on their own interests and the needs of their local customers, promises a much broader range of product choices.

10. promote LoCaL prosperity: An escalating body of economic research shows that in an increasingly homogenized world, entrepreneurs and skilled workers are more likely to invest and settle in communities that preserve their one-of-a-kind businesses and distinctive character.

Larry LocalEditor in Chief

www.MtPleasant.sc Online Magazine | 2009 7

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CEO Dennis Stewart

EditOr in CHiEfLarry Local

CrEAtivE dirECtOrDaniel Holliday

Art dirECtOrAmy Coats

WEb dEvElOPErS Allen BaylessMatthew Coats

ACCOuntinGMarie Bentley

AdminiStrAtiOn & mArkEtinGVivi MorilloAngie Woods

WWW.mOuntPlEASAnt.SC OnlinE mAGAZinECopyright © 2009Carolina Media Services. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. Not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs.

3290 Ashley Phosphate Road Charleston, SC 29418(843)720-9604Fax: (843)[email protected] www.MtPleasant.sc

carolina media SERVICES

carolina media SERVICES

Page 10: Mt Pleasant Magazine

preventinG sunBurnSpring is here and Summer is just around the corner and with the warmer weather comes an increased risk of sunburn. Whether you are a beachgoer, golfer, jogger, or shopper, long outings in the sun, even when it is cloudy, can cause damage to your skin. Aside from making you miserably uncomfortable, sunburn can also lead to premature aging and skin cancer, the most common form of cancer in the United States. Sunburn early in life increases one’s risk of developing skin cancers later in life such as melanoma, basal cell carcinoma, and squamous cell carcinoma.

Improper tanning bed use is also a source of sunburn. When your skin is exposed to sunlight, it produces a pigment called melanin to help protect itself against ultraviolet light.

Sunburn doesn’t just happen in hot weather - reflection of light off the snow can also cause sunburn. It is visible radiation damage to the skin. UV rays are a type of radiation energy, which are given out by the sun and sun beds/tanning lamps.

If you feel your sunburn is severe enough, call your doctor. Your doctor will probably ask you how severe your condition is and if you have any other significant health problems. The doctor can then make the decision to treat you at home or in the office or refer you to an emergency center.

Conditions that should motivate you to go to an emergency center include the following:

• Severe pain

• Severe blistering

• Headache

• Confusion

• Nausea or vomiting

• Fainting

treatment oF sunBurn

Here is list of the methods for treating Sunburn:

• Over the counter medications like ibuprofen, may help to relieve pain from sunburn. (Aspirin should be avoided in children who are running a fever.)

• If blisters are present, dry bandages may help prevent infection.

• To alleviate pain and heat (skin is warm to the touch) caused by the sunburn, take a cool (not cold) bath, or gently apply cool, wet compresses to the skin.

• In most cases, prehospital care involves providing simple first aid to treat patient symptoms.

• If your case is mild and not life threatening, your doctor may simply suggest plenty of fluids, aspirin, or other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDs).

Fortunately, skin cancer is largely preventable when sun protection measures are consistently used. These measures include:

• limiting exposure to the sun during the hours of 10 A.M. to 4 P.M., when the sun is the most intense

• using a sun block with an SPF (sun protection factor) of at least 15 year-round

• Wearing protective clothing and hats/sun visors

• Stay out of the sun!

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CaroLina GirLs … have CareersWhy shouldn’t we? Double income houses are no longer a luxury; they’re practically a necessity. But there’s no reason you should have a career you hate just to make the mortgage payment.

assess yourseLF

What sort of career would be the most satisfying for you? If you don’t even know where to start, there are endless free career tests available online, including the Myers-Briggs which is one of the most comprehensive assessments available; a simplified version of which can be found online. The complete version, however, should be administered by a professional.

According to the University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center, the top most satisfying careers of 2009 are:

- Clergy

- Physical Therapist

- Firefighter

- School Principal

- Artist (fine art)

- Teacher

- Author

- Psychologist

- Special Education Teacher

Careers in south CaroLina:

Around South Carolina, jobs are as varied as the colors in a peacock’s plumage. After you’ve taken a career assessment test and/or considered all of your top choices, create a list and look into the requirements and availability of each choice. Be sure to check what education levels/degrees are required and whether or not they are available in your area. If you’re absolutely strapped and have no idea where to start, the top industries in South Carolina that will be growing through 2014 are “travel agent” and pretty much anything in the health industry. Specifically, the top hiring jobs in South Carolina in 2009 are:

- Diagnostic Medical Sonographers

- Psychiatric Technicians

- Surgical Technologists

- Dental Assistants

- Physical Therapist Assistant

- Psychiatric aides

- Dental Hygienists

- Nuclear Medical Technologists

- Radiologic Technologists and Technicians

Finally, the top employers in South Carolina, offering 3,000 – 15,000 jobs yearly, are:

- US Department of Energy

- Medical University of SC

- Siemens Diesel System Tech

- Chest Pain Center of Greenville

- Corrections Department

- Greenville Hospital System

- Spartanburg Regional Med Center

- University of South Carolina

- Spartanburg Regional Healthcare

Do a little more research: Once you’ve narrowed the list down to a few top choices, feel free to conduct some informal interviews over the phone either with a hiring agent or with someone in the industry. Find out the top job requirements, what you would be doing on a day to day basis, and if you found someone in your chosen industry, ask them their top likes and dislikes about their job.

Last step, find an opening and set up a series of interviews. It’s better not to put all your eggs in one basket by only interviewing at one or two jobs. If you happen to find the perfect job at the first interview, great! But it often takes a couple tries, so don’t get discouraged.

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spoLeto may 22 – June 9, 2009

Charleston, South Carolina, is perhaps the most appropriate place in the United States to stage a festival that celebrates the arts. With its long and rich history of culture, its natural beauty, terrific Spring weather, affordable hotel rooms, and the inspiration it has provided to artists over the years, no place could be finer.

Charleston claims many cultural firsts. The very first performance of an opera in the American colonies took place in the city during the first half of the 18th century. While the English Ballad opera Flora or Hob in the Well is no longer performed, Porgy and Bess – which has often been called the greatest American opera – was written

in Charleston over two hundred years later. The Dock Street Theatre, was built in Charleston in 1734, and it is the first theater built specifically for public performances in the American colonies. The original theater burned down two years later and was eventually rebuilt. Over the next two hundred and fifty years, many other theaters said to rival the best in Europe were built in Charleston.

Today, Charleston is a city of well-preserved stately homes, lofty churches and countless historical sites. You can also visit the Island where the Civil War officially started. Theaters are within walking distance from one another, and a stroll is often rewarded with the glimpse of a lavish garden or of a previously unnoticed architectural detail. Award-winning restaurants and

boutique shops add to the city’s eclectic character.

Just minutes from historic downtown Charleston, glorious beaches await at Isle of Palms, Sullivan’s Island, and Folly Beach, where Gershwin is said to have composed the music for Porgy and Bess. (The area also has some of the finest golf courses in the US.)

Recently the Spoleto organizers announced a program to make most of the performances more affordable. In some cases tickets are as low as $10.00.

So what are you waiting for? Come to Spoleto and explore the best in opera, dance, theater and music, as well as all the sights and sounds Charleston has to offer. Make your reservations early, the best shows go fast.

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www.MtPleasant.sc Online Magazine | 2009 15

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spotLiGht on roBerts oF CharLestonCharleston is a city renewed for its beauty, its history, its Southern hospitality, its culture, its annual Spoleto Festival of music and theater, its luxury accommodation, and its fine dining. In a petite building tucked back away on one of the its main streets, Robert’s of Charleston supplies a unique blend of haute cuisine and music: piano music during dinner, and songs by host Robert Dickenson, who entertains between courses and while his guest enjoy disserts. An Evening at Robert’s is not just a sumptuous feast but an event, suitable for celebrating important occasions. At the end of a jewel box of a room, between the diners and the kitchens, stands a large reproduction of Botticelli’s Venus rising from the sea, a reminder that Robert’s is not just a restaurant but an establishment devoted to art -- the art of fine dining and the art of fine music.

Robert himself is trained to provide both. After studying at the Culinary Institute of America, when it was located in New Haven, he pursued an early love by going to London to study opera. When he returned, he faced a dry period in the hiring of opera singers, and he had a family to support. By the time an invitation arrived to join the company of the New York City Opera, he was committed to the restaurant he had started. Today Robert’s is a family affair, his daughter MariElena also a CIA trained chef, her husband Joseph Raya manager of the

house.

Robert’s offers one sitting a night with a fixed menu of multiple appetizers and dessert, and a choice among three main courses. On the night we were there, we dined on pate maision, a sea scallop mousse, and a savory pear and goat cheese turnover. We chose the duck rather than fish or beef, ending with a cake filled with fruit and covered with a bourbon caramel sauce. All the while, red and white wines flowed freely. During the leisurely repast, Robert came “on stage” three times, his high lyric baritone filling the room with a variety of operatic and show tunes, some popular Italian songs, and a medley from My Fair Lady. This was not background music, but a show, and the smiles of Robert’s guest revealed their pleasure.

One afternoon on our visit to Charleston we walked along it’s main shopping street, stopping at a store with a sign exhorting passers=by to keep alive the art of live music. Alas, whatever performing venue had existed there was now permanently closed. Charleston offers live music, not only during the Spoleteo Festival, but in many restaurants from which a hybrid of jazz, pop, and rock wafts out on the streets. For those who love cabaret however, Robert’s is the place to go.

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CharLeston’s oFFiCe oF CuLturaL aFFairsLaunChes WWW.CharLestonarts.sC, as thier neW arts WeB siteFrom: Charleston Currents

The City of Charleston’s Office of Cultural Affairs has launched http://www.CharlestonArts.sc, a companion Web site to the OCA’s primary page at the city’s official site. CharlestonArts.sc will be updated daily with information and features, including an arts calendar that users can search by date, artist, presenting group or venue; social networking widgets; and a directory of local arts and cultural organizations and venues.

“We are hopeful that CharlestonArts.sc will be a major benefit to local artists and arts organizations by disseminating information about their events with the most up-to-date information to a broader public,” said Ellen Dressler Moryl, director of the Office of Cultural Affairs.

Other options for users at CharlestonArts.sc include the following:

• Arts organizations can download forms from the Office of Cultural Affairs, submit events, update contact information and compare performance dates with other area organizations.

• The Tools for Professional section of the Web site features job listings for arts professionals, including full time and part time work as well as internships and volunteer opportunities with arts and cultural organizations in the tri-county area.

• Updated grant opportunities for arts organizations, with detailed information, including deadlines, application and contact information.

• Call for Submissions and Call for Auditions pages with details about the location, deadlines, fees and additional requirements.

The new Web site also hosts connecting pages for general information on the Office of Cultural Affairs and its projects: the Charleston Farmers Market, the City Gallery at Waterfront Park, Holiday Magic, Happy New Year Charleston!, the Holiday Parade of Boats, the Lowcountry Quarterly Arts Grant Program, Piccolo Spo-leto and the MOJA Arts Festival.

The Web Site was developed and is being hosted by Carolina Media Services ( www.ONLY.sc) .

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CommerCiaL reaL estate – rentinG in today’s marketFirst make sure that the area you have chosen is right for your intended business. If you plan on expanding, take that into consideration. Do you need to be close to an expressway, or the local airport? Before you decide, think ahead, because you may be getting into a long term commitment.

Make sure that any space you’re considering is big enough for both your current needs, and your foreseeable growth. Be realistic and never over-commit.

Do your homework beforehand. Investigate traffic patterns; tour the area and building. Find out who the previous tenant was, and why the business left. Learn

what kinds of marketing the location does in support of its tenants (if any) and whether co-operative marketing funds are available to you.

Weigh the benefits of guaranteed foot traffic at a mall location against premium rent. Some malls require that all tenants stay open during mall hours, and pay for common area usage as well as the store’s own space and upkeep. Stores may also be asked to pay a percentage of sales to the mall.

Identify your closest competitors. Also check out neighboring businesses with an eye for complementary products or services. If you are locating in a mall, check the lease agreement for any guaranteed protection against competition.

Evaluate whether the physical location and space is a good fit with your product line. Do you need a large, bright space or is an office warehouse sufficient?

Investigate any restrictions on signage. Signs are vitally important to retail businesses, yet many landlords decide on what a store can and cannot do. The rules may be even stricter in a mall, which closely monitors its physical appearance.

Negotiate the terms of your lease aggressively. Think about consulting a realtor that is familiar with the area. Never accept wording that’s confusing or that leaves you wondering who is liable for what. Ask for the right of first refusal on adjacent space in case you need to expand. Negotiate for free improvements, free rent, and other incentives before signing your lease.

Hire a real estate attorney who not only specializes in lease negotiations, but knows your area and, preferably, has dealt with your kind of business before. A lease negotiation can cover tens, if not hundreds, of terms, and you want someone in your corner who has seen it all before.

Know who is responsible for maintaining the heating, air-conditioning and other systems, as well as keeping up the parking lot and building exterior. This can be critical in older buildings. Who pays for the utilities and trash pick-up?

The time has probably never been better to start a new venture if you have a business that is not being adversely affected by this economy. Just make sure you get the right location……

www.MtPleasant.sc Online Magazine | 2009 26

Page 29: Mt Pleasant Magazine

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Can you Find the GorGet?The South Carolina State flag is immediately recognizable to native Carolinians, and if you’re spending some time out-of-State, it will probably bring a tear to your eye to see it whizzing by on a bumper sticker or rippling in the soft blue sky of a native license plate. Most folks, however, consistently confuse our flag for a simple representation of a moonlit palm tree. The truth it, the sliver of crescent suspended in the upper left hand corner is not a moon phase: it’s a piece of ornamental armour known as a “gorget”.

A holdover from the days of knights in shining armour, the gorget was originally used to protect the throat and block blows from non-projectile weapons such as swords. Since the gorget originally rested

around the throat, the shape was that of a crescent. In formal armour, the gorget was placed beneath the breastplate and backplate set and supported the weight of the armour. They were often equipped with straps in order to attach some of the heavier armours. By the Renaissance, the gorgets had already achieved an ornamental status and by the American Revolution, it could be seen hanging from delicate chains and ribbons around the throats of officers, signifying their rank.

The first South Carolina flag, designed in 1765, displayed the dark blue of the American troops’ uniforms and a large crescent with the word “Liberty” written within it. While most historians agree that the crescent is the representation of the gorget, which was also worn as a symbol on the caps of American soldiers, there is some argument that the symbol could also stand

for the river bend on which Charleston sits (the crescent was a common symbol used by early American settlements when their Town rested on the curve of a river), or it was a borrowed symbol from the crest of the Bull family, one of Charleston’s early settlers.

The palmetto tree on today’s flag was not included until January 28, 1861, the day of South Carolina’s secession from the Union. The palmetto tree represents the defense of Fort Moultrie from British attack, as the Fort itself was made of palmetto logs: an unexpectedly brilliant construction, as the logs of the palmetto tree are incredibly resilient and absorbed the enemy cannon fire like a sponge.

Either way we have a pretty cool state flag, and gorget is hard to pronounce!

www.MtPleasant.sc Online Magazine | 2009 32

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Want to grow your business?

Join the South Carolina Chamber of Commerce!

As the unified voice of business, the South Carolina Chamber is working to grow wealth for South Carolinians and businesses in order to improve economic development and quality of life.

We help your business and you by:

• GettingyourvoiceheardbyourstatelegislatorsthroughourGrassrootsNetwork• Workingtopassbusiness-friendlylegislation• Keepingyouinformedonissuesandprovidingsolutionsforgrowingyour business through our monthly magazine, South Carolina Business • Providingnetworkingopportunitieswithlegislatorsandotherbusinessowners• Trainingyouremployeesonhumanresources,qualityandmanagementissues• Publishingalegalreferenceseries

Join the South Carolina Chamber of Commerce! Contactustodayat800-799-4601.Learnmoreatwww.scchamber.net.

Page 36: Mt Pleasant Magazine

“Your Local Call Center with a Global Reach”

1-800-724-0000Property ManagementRestaurant ReservationsAppointments/Confirmation

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Employee Call Out LineOrder EntryAttorneysToll Free #sHVAC/PlumbingConference Calling

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Providing State of the ArtMessaging Since 1982

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Our Website!

Page 37: Mt Pleasant Magazine

hoW to make GritsBy now, you should know that grits are not only the starch of choice in South Carolina, it’s also the acronym for “Girls Raised in the South”; so if you don’t have your recipe down by now, it’s time to get boiling.

Proper grits do not come in an easy to open, plastic-lined paper packet. As My Cousin Vinny put it, “Real grits take at least 20 minutes to cook”. In fact, they take a couple hours, but it’s worth every simmering second.

So get rid of the Quaker Instant Grits and mosey on down to the rice isle. Grits can usually be found either here or in the baking isle. If you’re lucky enough to live near a localproduce market or farmer’s market, 99% of the time you’ll find more than enough grits in stock. Some local favorites include Anson Mills grits and Charleston’s Favorite Stone Ground Grits.

Now that you have the dry goods, make sure you have some fresh chicken stock, milk, cream and butter. Oh yes, you’re making these the way God intended.

Measure out your dry grits (1 cup of dry grits makes roughly 2 servings) and clean them by placing them in a bowl and filling the bowl with water until the water is an inch or so above

the grits. Skim off the chaff and drain. Don’t worry, it doesn’t have to be com-pletely dry, just get it as close as pos-sible. Now, dump the wet grits into a pot and pour in twice as much chicken stock as grits. Bring this to a boil, then reduce to medium-low. Now add equal portions cream and milk up to 2 and ½ times the amount of grits. So, if I was making this recipe for two, I would have used 1 cup dry grits, 2 ½ cups chicken stock, 1 ¾ cups cream and 1 ¾ cups milk. Add salt and pepper to taste, then sit back and let it simmer. The lon-ger the grits simmer, the richer they’ll be. Typical time is 20-30 minutes, but some of the best grits sit for an hour to two hours at low to medium-low heat, just soaking up that cream and milk. Right before you serve the grits up, stir in a healthy pat of butter and, if you’re feeling a little wild, grate a handful of parmesan or cheddar cheese over the top.

Play with and perfect this dish to your liking. The recipe is purposefully simple for the sole reason that it’s up to each southern girl to come up with her own special twist on this Southern Classic.

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Page 38: Mt Pleasant Magazine

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Each week you have a chance to win an Applebee’s gift card worth up to $25.00!

Page 39: Mt Pleasant Magazine

“Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands & hoist the

black flag”

Henry Louis Mencken

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“It is the nature of the strong heart,

that like the palm tree it strives ever upwards when it

is most burdened.”

Sir Philip Sidney

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How to set a tableAs a lady of the Carolina’s, small shows of simple grace and etiquette should become as second nature to you. Now, this isn’t saying that you have to run out immediately and have visiting cards printed, or go buy a sterling silver tea set, but having knowledge of little things like place settings means a lot to locals and ultimately, shows that you truly care for and respect the civility which is the heart of South Carolina. Even at an informal dinner, it’s a good idea to create a centerpiece. This can be a week-long labor of love or, in most cases, a small setting thrown together about five minutes before the guests arrive. A few snippings from the

juniper tree for frilly greenery and aromatic scent, a handful of flowers arranged in a low bowl or small vase, a couple strategically placed pieces of fruit and a candle or two and your centerpiece is complete. A bouquet of flowers from the local florist or, better yet, a nearby farm, would also work, but no matter what, the point is that you have one. Another little pointer: don’t make the centerpiece taller than eye level. Guests would like to be able to see each other when they speak and it could mess up a lovely arrangement if you’re having to part the sunflowers every time you want to ask a question. As for your silverware, if you have sterling silver, use it. Even, and especial-ly, if it’s your great grandmother’s set that’s been passed down for generations. She never intended

for you to keep it wrapped up in crumbling bags of velvet. Silverware and formal china, however pretty and expensive, were meant to be used and this is a great time to show them off. Even if you don’t have formal silverware, though, the point is to have the place settings prop-erly arranged and in the end, no one will really care what the silverware looked like as long as there’s plenty of food and wine.

With the dinner plate as the center, silverware should be placed in line, an inch from the edge of the table, and arranged from the outside – in, in order of use. On the right, salad fork (smaller fork), appetizer utensil (or another small fork or none at all if you aren’t having an appetizer between salad, soup and dinner), then dinner fork (your biggest fork) closest to the

Page 42: Mt Pleasant Magazine

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Page 43: Mt Pleasant Magazine

plate. On the left, soup spoon, spreading knife for the bread and the dinner knife closest to the plate. Be sure to turn the blade of the knives toward the plate, as an outwardly turned knife is a symbol of ag-gression toward the other diners (don’t you love these quaint little old world idiosyncrasies?). The dessert fork and spoon for after dinner tea or coffee should go across the top of the dinner plate, with the tines of the fork facing right and the bowl of the spoon facing left. Napkins should be folded either as simply or or-nately as you like, and placed in the center of the dinner plate. Glasses are also placed an inch above the knives and in order of use starting from the far right: white wine, red wine, dessert wine and water tumbler. Din-ner should be served from the kitchen and ideally, placed on each diner’s plate by the server/host instead of passing bowls and dishes around.

If it is Thanksgiving at Grandma’s, none of the above applies.

You are cordially invited toCharleston's first evening bridal show!!

July 9, 2009 from 6-10 p.m. Shriner's Building, Patriots Point

Mt. PleasantCome for an evening of fun,

ccocktails and planning.awonderfulwedding.com/show

Page 45: Mt Pleasant Magazine

“If you can organize your kitchen, you can organize your life.”

Louis Parrish

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www.MtPleasant.sc Online Magazine | 2009 46

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“When twilight drops her

curtain down and pins it with a star,

remember that you have a friend though she may

wander far.”

Page 49: Mt Pleasant Magazine

Bunker shot perFeCtion: BLast your Way to a Better GoLF sCore

Bunker shots can be daunting but it’s really all in your head! Use these simple techniques the next time you’re in the bunker and blast your way to a better score.

Golf ScoreFirst, don’t change your swing. Use the loft of the club and your back swing to determine your distance. Of course this will take some practice so you know how to shorten your backswing to get the distance you need. You use your back swing to adjust your distance because you always want to accelerate through the ball. You never want to the club head to decelerate. Also open the club face if needed to decrease the distance the ball will travel.

Use the “bounce” on the club to launch the ball out of the sand. Don’t worry too much about the definition of bounce but try this the next time in the practice sand trap. Take your sand wedge and swing at the sand. Vary the angle the club hits the sand. When you bring the club down steeply you’ll take a lot of sand and leave a large “divot” in the sand. Decrease the angle that you strike the sand until you can feel the club almost bounce off the sand. Feeling that is more important than the actual definition of bounce. The key is to have this bounce feel when hitting the ball out of the sand.

Open the club face and aim slightly right with an open stance with the ball forward in your stance, slightly off of your left heel for right handed golfers. When you swing follow the line of your feet.

Keep the weight on your left foot and don’t try to lift the ball, let the club do the work; trust me the club will lift the ball.

Hit about 1 inch behind the ball. The key is to get sand between the club face and the ball. This is where that bounce comes in to play.

Also, expect more roll on the ball when faced with a down hill lie in the bunker because the ball won’t get as much spin and tend to roll quite a bit.

Use and practice these techniques to get yourself off the beach and onto the green. For more helpful tips, advice, or to add some Golf Tips and Suggestions of your own - you are invited to visit the South Carolina Golfers Blog at

www.Golf.sc/Blog/

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4. Neighborhoods are convenient, and always accessible, since you are already in your neighborhood when you walk out your door.

5. Successful neighborhood action frequently requires little specialized technical skill, and often little or no money. Action may call for an investment of time, but material costs are often low.

6. With neighborhood action, compared to activity on larger scales, results are more likely to be visible and quickly forthcoming. The streets are generally cleaner; the crosswalks are painted; the trees are planted; a festival draws a crowd.

7. Visible and swift results are indicators of success; and since success is reinforcing, the probability of subsequent neighborhood action is increased

neiGhBorhoods1. Neighborhoods are where we all grew up a long time ago. Today, because of golf courses, shopping areas, subdivisions, jobs, schools, and a transient society, a neighborhood means different things to different folks.

2. Neighborhoods can be as small as a dozen or so houses, and be as many as thousands of homes.

3. Neighborhoods are common, and perhaps close to universal, since most people in urbanized areas would probably consider themselves to be living in one.

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8. Because neighborhood action usually involves others, such actions create or strengthen connections and relationships with other neighbors, leading in turn to a variety of potentially positive effects, often hard to predict.

9. Over and above these community advantages, neighborhood activity may simply be enjoyable and fun for those taking part.

But in addition to these benefits, considerable research indicates that strong and cohesive neighborhoods and communities are linked –quite possibly causally linked – to decreases in crime, better outcomes for children, and improved physical and mental health. The social support that a strong neighborhood may provide can serve as a buffer against various forms of adversity. Sometimes a neighborhood isn’t a neighborhood until an event occurs, which draws people together, to become “neighbors”.

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time to reFinanCe or Buy !?Right now, mortgage rates are at their lowest level since 1971. Think about that. Twenty-five years ago, homeowners were paying as much as 18% on a 30-year fixed. Today it’s just a little over 5%.Combine that

rate with the tax advantages of a mortgage, and you have an incredibly cheap way to build wealth, but you better act now.

Real estate guru Barbara Corcoran has already seen a tremendous surge in refinance applications – more than triple the average – and the number of people getting approved is astronomically higher as well, she says. But that doesn’t mean the low rates are a panacea for the ills of the housing market. It is only once home prices start to go up that we will finally see a light at the end of tunnel, Corcoran says. Until that happens, we are still going to have to crawl out of this mess. “[Low interest rates are] a not a lifesaver,” Corcoran says. “This is just a helping hand.”

David Kittle, chairman of the Mortgage Bankers Association, has this advice to homeowners looking to refinance: Do it. Don’t get greedy searching for another quarter-point. Lock in rates now. He is seeing applications soar over 125% just since Thanksgiving due to the low rates.

Of course, you should only refinance if it saves you at least 3/8 on the rate and if you plan on staying in your home for at least four years, Kittle says. Along with good credit, proof of income and money by means of a down payment or equity in the home, there are certain things every homeowner needs regardless of interest rate levels.

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aBout mt. pLeasantOriginally occupied by the Sewee Indians, Mount Pleasant’s first white settlers arrived from England on July 6, 1680 under the leadership of Captain Florentia O’Sullivan. Captain O’Sullivan had been granted 2,340 acres which included not only the island that bears his name, but also the land that was to become Mount Pleasant. On the earliest map of the time this area was called “North Point.”

In 1696, 51 new settlers arrived. Each family was allotted several hundred acres in the area that became known as Christ Church parish. In 1706 the Province of Carolina withstood several attacks by the Spanish and the French and were victorious in defeating French invaders in an area known as Hobcow Plantation.

Hobcaw Plantation, located between Shem Creek and the Wando River. Later, it was also known as Shipyard Plantation because its deep water and abundance of good timber made it ideal for a shipbuilding.

On September 24, 1860 a public meeting was held in Mount Pleasant that produced the first secession resolution of the state. With the advent of the Civil War, Battery Gary and an adjacent floating battery between Mount Pleasant and Sullivan’s Island were instrumental in defense of the town, as well as attacks on Fort Sumter. The town was also defended by a line of fortifications from Elliot’s Creek at Boone Hall to Copahee Sound. Mount Pleasant was also the secret training ground for the nine-man crew of the Confederate submarine H. L. Hunley. It was from Breach Inlet in 1864 that this small vessel was launched to attack and sink the USS Housatonic.

Mount Pleasant is separated from Charleston by the Cooper River. For many years it was primarily populated seasonally by Charleston residents wealthy enough to afford summer homes across the river from the Charleston peninsula. The population of Mount Pleasant was centered in an area of the town now known as “The Old Village.”

On July 16, 2005, the eight-lane Arthur Ravenel Bridge opened for traffic, replacing the two aging bridges. A week before the new bridge, one of the longest cable-stayed bridges in the western hemisphere, officially opened, pedestrians were allowed to cross the bridge, and commemorative coins were distributed. Also, a fireworks display was a part of the ceremonies leading up to the actual opening of the bridge. Several cars from the same time period as the Grace Memorial Bridge, including several restored Model A Fords, made a final crossing of the old bridges. The remaining portions of the old bridges were demolished. Local residents watched as the bridges were blown up in spectacular shows.

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FinaL Words

The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.

ElEAnOr rOOSEvElt

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