Meritor ChampTruck World Series® Brings Thrill of Big Rig Racing to Gateway …








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MADISON, Ill., July 15, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Drivers will rev their engines for an exciting weekend of heavy-duty truck racing when the Gateway Motorsports Park hosts the Meritor ChampTruck World Series®.

“We’re bringing the thrill of semi-truck racing back to the United States for the first time since 1993,” said Mark Kollasch, director of Field Sales for Meritor. “The Meritor ChampTruck race at Gateway Motorsports Park is free and fan-friendly. People have access to the trucks, drivers and teams, so there’s plenty of excitement for everyone.”

The two-day race this weekend in Madison is the fifth event in the Meritor ChampTruck World Series. Admission to the Gateway is free and includes full pit and paddock access for all events as well as open grandstand seating. Gates open to the public at 8 a.m. on Saturday, with Meritor ChampTruck practice, qualifying and racing events taking place throughout the day. In addition, a Meritor ChampTruck driver autograph session is scheduled for 2:45 p.m. Saturday. On Sunday, a full day of activities includes a second autograph session at 11:30 a.m., two heat races and the podium race at 2:45 p.m. An awards ceremony will close out the event. For more information, visit the ChampTruck website at www.champtruck.us.com.

Meritor, Inc. is executive title sponsor of the Meritor ChampTruck World Series for the 2015 season. Nine events conclude with the 2015 Meritor ChampTruck Series National Championship at Las Vegas Motor Speedway Oct. 30 through Nov. 1. Drivers earn and accumulate points for the national championship event. Any conventional or cab-over truck that’s at least 5 years old can race in the Meritor ChampTruck World Series events throughout the country.

Ricky Rude, driving a 1995 Peterbilt 378, finished first in the podium race in the fourth Meritor ChampTruck World Series Race at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway on July 4. The next regular season race is at Virginia International Raceway in Alton, Virginia from Aug. 6 through Aug. 9.

An overview of the Meritor ChampTruck World Series, including interviews with drivers and the Meritor DriveForce™ team, is available at http://youtu.be/NrlvnY-MDm4  and http://vimeopro.com/user17218163/bumper-rea-big-trucks#/video/132228776.    

About Meritor
Meritor, Inc. is a leading global supplier of drivetrain, mobility, braking and aftermarket solutions for commercial vehicle and industrial markets. With more than a 100-year legacy of providing innovative products that offer superior performance, efficiency and reliability, the company serves commercial truck, trailer, off-highway, defense, specialty and aftermarket customers around the world. Meritor is based in Troy, Michigan, United States, and is made up of more than 9,000 diverse employees who apply their knowledge and skills in manufacturing facilities, engineering centers, joint ventures, distribution centers and global offices in 18 countries. Common stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol MTOR. For important information, visit the company’s website at meritor.com.

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Quake-hit Nepal asks other nations to lift travel advisories

c 2014, WLOS ABC 13 | Portions are Copyright 2014 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or distributed.

WLOS News 13 provides local news, weather forecasts, traffic updates, notices of events and items of interest in the community, sports and entertainment programming for Asheville, NC and nearby towns and communities in Western North Carolina and the Upstate of South Carolina, including the counties of Buncombe, Henderson, Rutherford, Haywood, Polk, Transylvania, McDowell, Mitchell, Madison, Yancey, Jackson, Swain, Macon, Graham, Spartanburg, Greenville, Anderson, Union, Pickens, Oconee, Laurens, Greenwood, Abbeville and also Biltmore Forest, Woodfin, Leicester, Black Mountain, Montreat, Arden, Weaverville, Hendersonville, Etowah, Flat Rock, Mills River, Waynesville, Maggie Valley, Canton, Clyde, Franklin, Cullowhee, Sylva, Cherokee, Marion, Old Fort, Forest City, Lake Lure, Bat Cave, Spindale, Spruce Pine, Bakersville, Burnsville, Tryon, Columbus, Marshall, Mars Hill, Brevard, Bryson City, Cashiers, Greer, Landrum, Clemson, Gaffney, and Easley.

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Prometheus Group Announces Mobile Capabilities For SAP Plant Maintenance

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TDC outlines family-friendly plans

PANAMA CITY BEACH — New aspects of the Beach tourism marketing campaign in 2016 will focus on reeling in family visitors during the traditional Spring Break month of March, creating a new Thanksgiving event and launching a new national Beach television fishing show.

Dan Rowe, the president of the Tourist Development Council (TDC), outlined this strategy to board members Tuesday, saying the marketing effort will continue to focus on promoting 10 popular Beach events from October through January.

The TDC, also sitting as the Convention Visitors Bureau, on Tuesday also approved a task order that calls for Georgia-based The Sports Force to oversee major renovations on a design-build basis to Frank Brown Park that could cost between $3.6 million and $4.8 million. The goal is to bring in more sporting events and year-round visitors, as well as make the complex more appealing so it can compete with other venues.

Despite unprecedented negative national publicity this past Spring Break, only a small percentage of people in a recent survey said they would avoid coming here next March, and those people tended to be 50 years old or older, said Berkeley Young of Young Strategies, a Charlotte, N.C., firm the TDC hired to conduct the recent survey. 

“You could say that 2 percent of the people out there don’t want to come here during Spring Break, and it affects their decision year-round,” he told the TDC.

On the flip side, he said, the survey showed there are a huge number of young mothers with children who visit Panama City Beach because it is an active Beach destination.

“They are not going to have bored kids when they come to Panama City Beach,” he said.

Rowe said they are planning on a new event this year to bring in visitors during the Thanksgiving weekend, with the goal being to generate a spike in visitors like the Ball Drop did for New Year’s Eve.

“This is really to start to create a new opportunity for visitors to come back to Panama City Beach instead of going to grandma’s house, instead of [going to] a family gathering,” he said.

He said the TDC will be reaching out to restaurants, attractions and retailers to create packages for visitors during that holiday weekend.

On Black Friday, the first of two holiday concerts will be held at Aaron Bessant Park. On Saturday, a second concert will be held, and a new Christmas tree will be illuminated and fireworks set off.

The tourism marketing effort in 2016 also will consist of a new television fishing show that is costing the TDC $250,000 for 13 shows, which will get 78 replays per episode.

J. Michael Brown, vice president of tourism development with the Convention Visitors Bureau, said the program will air in January 2016.

“We’re opening doors we’ve been trying to open for a long time, and we have world-class resource here I’m not sure has been really been showcased since the days of black and white TV, so we’re ready to move into the modern age.”

He said the outdoor travel series, which will be aired on the Sportsman Channel with a national audience of 36 million and aired locally on Comcast, will showcase all of the local fishing opportunities.

He said a show segment could feature a red snapper being caught from a charter boat launched out of Capt. Anderson’s Marina, another could feature how to cook the fish, and another could show how to pack fish for shipment back home.

He said major fishing companies have expressed an interest in advertising on the shows.

“We have a world-class beach,” he said. “We want to align ourselves with world-class brands.”

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The Raleigh Clinic For Men Makes Life After Prostate Cancer Less Uncertain …



RALEIGH, N.C., July 13, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Prostate cancer – and more specifically, prostate cancer treatment – is among the leading causes of erectile dysfunction (ED) in men, even years following a successful battle with the disease. The Raleigh Clinic For Men (http://www.theraleighclinicformen.com/) believes men don’t need to trade in their bedroom prowess for a cancer-free life; the clinic’s individualized, proven ED remedy can produce results in as little as 12 minutes and boasts a 92% success rate.



“So many of our new clients are skeptical,” says Director Matt Gillogly. “They’ve beaten cancer, yet they feel like the disease robbed them of something vital. ED isn’t something you can see, but it most definitely chips away at a man’s sense of self-worth. At The Raleigh Clinic For Men, we’re in the business of changing lives. We want men to know there is life after prostate cancer.”


The American Cancer Society projects that nearly a quarter million men will develop prostate cancer in 2015. One in seven men will receive a diagnosis at some point in their lives, and the average age of diagnosis is 66. After lung cancer, prostate cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer death in men. That being said, most men do survive the cancer, although treatment side effects like ED can unfortunately linger indefinitely.



Genetics are naturally out of a person’s control, but men can be proactive about other prostate cancer risk factors. The Raleigh Clinic For Men can’t stress enough the importance of getting regular health checkups, maintaining a balanced diet and engaging in some physical activity at least a few days a week.



Most new clients of The Raleigh Clinic For Men see positive results from the very first visit. Many of these satisfied clients have not been able to perform in the bedroom for years, and their quality of life has consequently suffered. Gillogly explains that sexual intimacy is an integral part of human relationships, as well as a source of energy for all of life’s other endeavors; he’s witnessed hundreds of men undergo complete transformations after getting their “mojo” back.



“Every client who walks through our doors is important to us,” Gillogly adds, “and we train our staff to be enthusiastic, professional and courteous. It takes courage to pick up the phone and make an appointment. We do everything we can to ensure clients feel comfortable and safe in our welcoming and confidential exam rooms.”



About The Raleigh Clinic For Men



The Raleigh Clinic For Men is a medical practice focused on one thing: men’s sexual performance. It doesn’t matter if you’ve struggled with E.D. for weeks or years, or if your E.D. is a result of diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol or prostate surgery.



Under the expert care of North Carolina licensed physicians, professionally trained and educated in solving your E.D., you will see and feel results in 10 minutes right in the office. Men from all walks of life, regardless of their medical condition, experience positive results. Don’t you think it’s time for you to join the legions of satisfied men who have walked through our doors? Experience the best solution to fixing your E.D. today, only at The Raleigh Clinic For Men.



Contact:



Matthew Gillogly
3708 Forestview Rd, Suite 207
Raleigh, NC 27612
(919) 578-8700
Email





SOURCE The Raleigh Clinic For Men

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INTERACTIVE MAP: Expert says record-breaking year of shark attacks

Experts said saltier water caused by a coastal drought, along with the water’s warmth, and the increase in fish swimming close to shore are factors drawing sharks towards packed beaches.

Two men were fishing in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina, on Friday morning when they caught a shark, witness Chloe Finlay told ABC News.

The shark was measured at 77 inches and then released.

No one was hurt, but already this year along the Carolina coastline there have been 11 shark attacks — all but one happening just in the last three weeks.


Man bitten by shark on NC Outer Banks is 10th this summer for Carolinas coast

A shark bit a 67-year-old man several times Wednesday in waist-deep water off North Carolina’s Outer Banks, officials said, the seventh in a record-breaking year of shark attacks for the state’s coastal waters.

A spokeswoman at the Greenville, North Carolina, hospital where he was taken said Wednesday night that the man, Andrew Costello, was in fair condition.

He suffered wounds to his ribcage, lower leg, hip and both hands as he tried to fight off the animal, said Justin Gibbs, the director of emergency services in Hyde County. The attack happened around noon on a beach on Ocracoke Island, right in front of a lifeguard tower, he said.

“He was pulled under by the shark,” said Gibbs, who said witnesses reported the animal was about 7 feet long.

  • INTERACTIVE MAP: See where the attacks happened in the Carolinas:

 He was swimming in waist-deep water with his adult son about 30 feet offshore, the National Park Service said in a news release. There were no other swimmers injured.

Costello was the former editor-in-chief of the Boston Herald, the newspaper reported early Thursday.

Costello’s niece, Freya Solray, told the newspaper Costello’s wife and sons were with him at the hospital, where he was “doing well.”


RECENT ATTACKS:


Costello is the seventh person attacked along the North Carolina coast in three weeks, the most in one year in the 80 years for which the Florida Museum of Natural History’s International Shark Attack File keeps records. The highest previous total was five attacks in 2010. Three of the 52 confirmed shark attacks between 1935 and 2014 were deadly, according to the database.

Most of this year’s attacks happened in shallow water. The injuries ranged widely: An 8-year-old boy had only minor wounds to his heel and ankle, while at least two others have required amputation. Another person attacked Saturday had initially been considered at critical risk of dying.

  • WATCH about safety tips before heading into the water:

Shark experts say the recent spate of attacks along on the coast of the Carolinas is due to so many more people getting in the water. Americans made 2.2 billion visits to beaches in 2010, up from 2 billion in 2001, according to a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers estimate.

The record-breaking numbers of shark bites might be related to an unseasonably hot June that rapidly raised ocean temperatures off North Carolina and prompted fish to migrate north earlier than usual, said Chuck Bangley, a shark researcher at East Carolina University.

“So when you have more marine life in general in the water and then more people heading to the beach than usual, then you’ve got a potential recipe for accidents to happen,” Bangley said.

  • WATCH: Shark scientist George Burgess talks about “unique situation” on coast:

Roger Rulifson, a distinguished professor of biology and senior scientist at East Carolina University, said recently that there have been reports of small bait fish coming closer to shore this summer, which attracts sharks. There have also been reports of larger numbers of sea turtles along the coast, which sharks also like to eat, he said.

Patrick Thornton, 47, from Charlotte, was bitten Friday at Avon Beach off the Outer Banks.

“It took a pretty big chunk out of my right leg so I started punching the shark and then it grabbed my back and must have bit me in the back,” Thornton said.

Thornton fought back, which experts suggest in an attack, but scientists are having a hard time explaining why so many attacks are happening.

“When we get a chance to look at more forensics, like more detailed oceanographic data, we might find a smoking gun, but for now we don’t have it. And that said, our situation right now is we’ve got a problem on our hands,” said George Burgess, director of the Florida Program for Shark Research.

Burgess believes a combination of several environmental factors, like warmer water, an abundance of bait fish along the coast and more people in the water, may be causing an influx of attacks. He said this is a Mother Nature issue, not one that people can fix outside of making wise choices.

“Since we’ve got the brains and the sharks have the teeth, it’s incumbent for us to make the modifications, especially since we are entering their house,” Burgess said.

To ensure complete safety, Burgess said beaches may have to be closed for a few days. He said the environment will change and this problem will disappear, but people should use caution in the meantime.

State tourism officials said they still feel comfortable encouraging people to head to the coast, as long as visitors are informed.

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“I think people realize that the risk is still minimal based on the millions of people that go to the beach in North Carolina, but people just want to know how to be a little more safe when they go out,” said Whit Tuttle, executive director of the Department of Commerce’s Visit North Carolina. 

Lynette Holman, 44, of Boone, said she was on the beach Wednesday with her husband and 10-year-old son when she noticed a commotion about 50 yards down the beach. She saw a man walking through knee-deep water and then people rushing to help him out of the surf. There was no panic or screaming, and the nearest lifeguard on duty told her she thought the man might have been having heart trouble. Then Holman saw a gash above his knee.

“The skin was pulled away. It was an open-wound gash,” said Lynette Holman, a journalism professor at Appalachian State University.

Laura Irish Hefty of New Hope, Pennsylvania, said she was about 100 yards away when she saw a crowd gathering. She said her husband, David, saw blood on both of the man’s legs.

Costello was treated on the beach for about 20 minutes until he was stabilized and carried off the sand and beyond the dunes to a road, Hefty said. A helicopter flew him to Vidant Medical Center in Greenville, about 85 miles away.

Swimmers were back in the water within a couple of hours, Hefty said.

“Nobody seems to be that scared,” she said.

Shark bites teen on Isle of Palms Tuesday

Another shark bite was reported in the Isle of Palms, South Carolina that occurred Tuesday.

Isle of Palms County Park officials said a 12-year-old boy was bitten in the back of the leg around 6 p.m. near the pier. Lifeguards were able to respond quickly and treat the victim.

The shark was estimated to be between 4- to 5-feet, officials said.

He was taken to the hospital in a personal vehicle.

Reported on June 23, a 9-year-old boy was nipped on St. Helena Island while standing in about 12 inches of water.

SHARK ATTACK HISTORICAL DATA: 

    CLICK HERE to see more about shark attacks in North Carolina (Source: Shark Research Institute, Inc.)

     

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    North Carolina’s Crystal Coast to Host The World’s Largest Saltwater …








    MOREHEAD CITY, N.C., July 13, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — To the delight of fishing fanatics across the country, The Crystal Coast has reeled in the world’s largest saltwater tournament trail – the Southern Kingfish Association. Avid anglers are invited to retreat to Morehead City, located within the Southern Outer Banks of North Carolina, for the 24th Annual Mercury Southern Kingfish Association National Championship, Oct. 22-24, 2015.

    Whether it’s for a novice or seasonal “old salt,” each year the contest hooks thousands of anglers, providing a remarkable fishing experience and excellent pay out – recently more than $83,000 in cash and prizes for the Top 7 Mercury PRO teams, plus more than $270,000 in cash and prizes to the top placing National Champions. Making its inaugural debut on the Morehead City waterfront, the destination is ideally situated along Intracoastal Waterway, giving the frothy blue waters that caress its shores a crystalline quality often compared to the waters of the Caribbean. 

    “With the National Championship being our largest event of the year, we make a concerted effort to partner with dynamic fishing destinations that share our enthusiasm for the sport and put a fresh spin on the overall experience,” said Jim Butler, SKA Director. “There are plenty of fish in the sea, but we’re elated to have hooked a host destination as special as The Crystal Coast.”  

    “Our local community couldn’t be more excited to host this world-famous saltwater tournament,” says Carol Lohr, The Crystal Coast Tourism Authority executive director. “Morehead City is a beloved gem of The Crystal Coast, and we know our SKA competitors and their families will love discovering the gleaming beaches, active salt-water adventures, small town charm and divine dining our destination offers.”

    Named “Best Yachting Town” by Yachting magazine, The Crystal Coast offers year-round vacationers the freedom to spend their days exploring un-crowded coastline, dining at flip-flop friendly restaurants, shopping at boutiques filled with coastal treasures or setting sail on cruises. The South facing beaches course east and west, lending views of the dazzlingly bright sun rise to greet the day and then slip into the glistening waters for a stunning sunset. Consistently revered and acclaimed, The Crystal Coast has recently earned nods from Travel + Leisure, naming Beaufort “America’s No. 1 Town,” in addition to other notable achievements such as “Best Spring Break Destination” by Outside Magazine and “Top 25 USA Wreck Dives” by Scuba Diving.

    For more information on the Southern Kingfish Association, visit www.fishska.com or call 800-852-6262.    

    To experience North Carolina’s Crystal Coast, visit www.crystalcoastnc.org or call (800) 786-6962. Engage with the brand socially utilizing #MyCrystalCoast via www.facebook.com/crystalcoast, @CrystalCoast_NC on Twitter and @thecrystalcoast on Instagram.

    FOR MORE MEDIA INFORMATION:
    ANNA WHIDDON/LAUREN NOVO
    THE ZIMMERMAN AGENCY • 850.668.2222
    AWHIDDON@ZIMMERMAN.COM

     

    SOURCE North Carolina’s Crystal Coast

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    Food Lion Lowers Prices on Thousands of Items








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      Food Lion













    SALISBURY, N.C., July 13, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Food Lion has announced significant investments in prices throughout its stores by lowering prices on thousands of items that are most important to customers as the grocer taps into its longstanding heritage of low prices and convenient locations. The price reductions also include new, easier ways for Food Lion customers to save brought to life by new signage throughout the store.

    “Affordable prices and great deals are a significant part of our heritage at Food Lion and the reason why we have invested further to bring our customers even lower prices,” said Meg Ham, president of Food Lion. “Today’s announcement is not only about making grocery shopping more affordable for our customers, but also making it easier, as we have redesigned our in-store signage so customers can easily identify savings throughout the store.”

    The price reductions are based on extensive customer research of frequently purchased items, such as everyday staples like apple juice, peanut butter, frozen vegetables, canned beans and household items like paper towels, detergent and much more. Food Lion customers can take advantage of the new savings starting today throughout our stores. 

    Every day, customers will be able to identify “Ways to Save” by using three easy-to-spot signs:

    • Hot Sale: Food Lion’s top weekly MVP specials, and the best prices throughout the store, only available with an MVP card.
    • WOW: Lower prices on thousands of items that matter most to our customers, offered for longer periods of time.
    • Low Price: Essential items throughout the store, priced affordably every day.

    The price investments are an extension of Food Lion’s “Easy, Fresh and Affordable. You Can Count on Food Lion Every Day!” strategy. Other components of the strategy customers can experience in all of Food Lion’s 1,100 stores are an expanded assortment of products and a renewed focus on customer service brought about by new customer-centric training for Food Lion’s 63,000 associates. In 2014, the company remodeled the first 76 stores as part of it’s Easy, Fresh and Affordable strategy in the Wilmington and Greenville, N.C., markets and will complete an additional 160 stores in the greater Raleigh, N.C., market by the end of 2015. All of Food Lion’s stores will be remodeled in markets over time to make shopping easy, fresh and affordable for customers.

    About Food Lion
    Food Lion, based in Salisbury, N.C., since 1957, has more than 1,100 stores in 10 Southeastern and Mid-Atlantic states and employs more than 63,000 associates. By leveraging its longstanding heritage of low prices and convenient locations, Food Lion is working to own the easiest full shop grocery experience in the Southeast, anchored by a strong commitment to affordability, freshness and the communities it serves. Through Food Lion Feeds, the company has committed to provide 500 million meals to individuals and families in need by the end of 2020. Food Lion is a company of Delhaize America, the U.S. division of Brussels-based Delhaize Group (NYSE: DEG). For more information, visit www.foodlion.com.

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    After a century of mocking, a push to restore pride in how Appalachians …

    • Ginger Smyth and her fiancé, Michael Culicerto sit for an interview in Pineville, W.V., on Tuesday, June 9, 2015. A team from West Virginia University was in Wyoming County collecting samples of the local dialect and gathering oral history. (AP Photo/Allen G. Breed) (The Associated Press)

    • North Carolina State University Linguistics Professor Walt Wolfram types in his office in Raleigh, N.C., on Tuesday, June 16, 2015. Wolfram says words like “Cackalacky,” a colloquial term for North Carolina, make regional dialects richer and more interesting. (AP Photo/Allen G. Breed) (The Associated Press)

    • An “I Love Mountains” bumper sticker adorns Jordan Lovejoy’s car in Pineville, W.V., on Tuesday, June 9, 2015. The graduate student returned to her hometown recently to help gather examples of the local dialect for an audio database being created at West Virginia University. (AP Photo/Allen G. Breed) (The Associated Press)

    • Michael Culicerto reads from a script during a recording session in Pineville, W.V., on Tuesday, Jun 9, 2015. The college student is taking part in a project by the Dialect Project at West Virginia University to record and analyze Appalachian speech. (AP Photo/Allen G. Breed) (The Associated Press)

    • Signs advertise an all-terrain vehicle trail named for a pair of famous Appalachian feuding families in Pineville, W.V., on Tuesday, June 9, 2015. With coal on the wane, places like Wyoming County are looking more to tourism as an economic driver. (AP Photo/Allen G. Breed) (The Associated Press)

    In a county beyond the reach of any four-lane highway, a young couple chuckles and swivels in their chairs as they start telling for posterity the story of how they met.

    “You want me to tell the story, or you tell the story?” asks Pete Culicerto, 20, who’s seated next to his girlfriend before a pair of black microphones.

    “I’ll tell it, because you’d make it all cheesy,” says 17-year-old Ginger Smyth, each of her syllables snaking through a black cable into a high-end audio recorder ticking the time off on a green digital screen.

    “Cheesy’s good,” says West Virginia University linguist Kirk Hazen, encouraging a relaxed conversation that allows the accents and speech patterns of their mountain community to flow unhindered by the self-consciousness that sometimes keeps them in check.

    Hazen, who’s spent two decades recording dozens of interviews around West Virginia, is among a new wave of scholars seeking to put to rest “Beverly Hillbillies”-style myths and stigmas about Appalachia.

    Three books in the past year and a fourth to be published soon challenge these century-old stereotypes by noting, among other points, that Appalachian residents speak a variety of Englishes — and not a single monolithic dialect — and that scorn for the region’s speech is often based on outdated notions of how they talk.

    In southwest Virginia, English professor Amy D. Clark has held summer workshops for 15 years for rural teachers to help them teach students to write effectively without shaming them about their speech. The same message runs through teaching units on dialect for schoolchildren in North Carolina and West Virginia.

    Proponents say reducing stigmas about speech has resulted in victories such as last year’s decision by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in East Tennessee to cancel classes aimed at reducing workers’ accents.

    “You’re trying to get across the idea that all language varieties are legitimate. There’s not one that’s somehow damaged and then others that are just fine,” Hazen said. “They’re all just fine.”

    ___

    The first step in changing perceptions of mountain speech is documenting how contemporary Appalachian residents talk, which is why Hazen, who started the West Virginia Dialect Project in the late 1990s, has invited Smyth and Culicerto to a borrowed conference room at an ambulance company on Pineville’s main street. The building shares the main drag with a dress store, two pharmacies and an accountant, all down the hill from the county courthouse.

    Culicerto laughs as he recalls his first encounter with Smyth in the office of Wyoming East High School: “She smiled at me, then I got shy.”

    “He didn’t smile back!” Smyth interjects.

    “No, I didn’t smile back. I turned away,” he said. But they began chatting over social media and soon were eating breakfast and lunch together every day in the school cafeteria.

    In a loosely organized conversation, Hazen and another researcher ask questions about Culicerto and Smyth’s families and their community, such as whether parents are generally involved in teens’ love lives.

    The answers themselves are routine, but it’s the underlying sounds the researchers are most interested in.

    When Smyth says, “It depends,” the latter half of the word sounds similar to “pin,” an example of a merger of vowel sounds common in the southern part of the state.

    Culicerto remarks that in their relationship, both sets of parents ask the couple out to meals, showing an example of a pleonastic — or redundant — pronoun: “Both sides, they always ask.”

    The two examples are among enduring dialect features in West Virginia, which Hazen’s research shows have remained steady in the state.

    Hazen has also used his research to illustrate that other stereotypical features of Appalachian speech have become rare — such as the demonstrative them (“them apples are the best”) or a-prefixing (“I’m a-going to the store”). Neither of those fading features was heard during the recent interviews in Pineville.

    The recording will later be fed into software that allows researchers to analyze one syllable at a time, then catalog each word for further study.

    ___

    Despite what Hazen’s research shows, many outsiders still have negative impressions of people who speak with a mountain accent, sometimes based on outdated speech features. It can take decades for perceptions about language to change.

    The tone in the conference room grows more serious when questions turn to whether outsiders comment on the way Smyth and Culicerto talk.

    “I think they look at me and they’re like: ‘Oh my gosh, she lives way back in the holler … and is so redneck!'” she said. “They think lower of me.”

    The researcher working with Hazen on the interviews, Pineville native Jordan Lovejoy, said she was made to feel self-conscious about how she talked from a young age and worked until recently to change it.

    She recalled going to New York as a teenager and feeling embarrassed when a hotel clerk couldn’t understand her request for a pen. On a student government trip to the northern part of West Virginia, other students made fun of how she stretched out the vowel sound in “bill.”

    “It’s upsetting,” she said.

    A turning point for the recent West Virginia University graduate was taking a class taught by Hazen about the history of dialect in West Virginia. She learned that a Pineville accent “wasn’t necessarily a bad thing … so I try to be a little more natural now,” said Lovejoy.

    ___

    It’s this kind of breakthrough that educators around the region are hoping for as they experiment with novel ways of teaching grammar.

    Among them is contrastive analysis, an approach in which students diagram spoken sentences and compare them to formal written English. Contrastive analysis is among the methods discussed at the Appalachian Writing Project’s summer institute for teachers, led by Clark, the English professor in Virginia. About 130 teachers have completed the training program since it started in 2001.

    Traditional “right and wrong” approaches to grammar turn off many kids in the mountains, Clark said.

    “Kids don’t understand it. They just think they’re speaking a broken English,” said Clark, one of the editors of the book “Talking Appalachian.”

    Lizbeth Phillips, a middle-school teacher in southwest Virginia who’s worked with Clark’s project since 2004, assigns her students to keep journals of how adults in their community switch between formal and casual ways of speaking. Educators say the approach, known as code- or style-switching, allows students to preserve the way they speak at home and improve their writing without feeling ashamed.

    Phillips said her approach has helped students’ scores on standardized tests, and she was recently asked to work with another English teacher to expand her approach to all eighth-graders at her school.

    “If you’re marching out the red pen … you’re really criticizing their culture and their family heritage and other things. It’s not just about standardizing the language,” she said.

    “I tell these children all the time: Do not forsake your culture. Do not forsake your spoken language, your home language. Keep that. It’s special,” she added. “But understand: when you’re sitting for an interview at U.Va. or sitting at a job interview, you might not want to say ‘y’all,’ ‘you’ns’ and ‘a-going.”

    For middle school students in West Virginia and North Carolina, Hazen and Walt Wolfram of North Carolina State University have worked with colleagues to develop teaching units that emphasize the history of each state’s dialects.

    “It gives them a sense of pride,” said Wolfram, who recently spent a week working with kids in a mountain school system. “They think it’s cool. And it also makes them special. It contributes to the sort of cultural capital of kids who want to be from someplace, who want to have a strong heritage and want to be grounded.”

    ___

    Wolfram believes that Appalachian culture is in the midst of a renaissance in which people are more aware — and more proud — of their heritage.

    “There’s a kind of re-appropriation of things ‘hillbilly,’ which were once considered to be a negative stigma, and embracing it and turning that around into something positive. So people will say, ‘Yeah, I’m hillbilly, and proud of it!'” he said.

    William Schumann, the director of the Center for Appalachian Studies at Appalachian State University, said the trend is demonstrated by larger number of young adults learning how to play traditional mountain instruments.

    “What 20 or 30 years ago was uncool, is cool again. It’s sort of hipster to be into the banjo,” said Schumann, one of the editors of “Appalachia Revisited,” due out next year.

    Speakers in the region may purposely use vernacular expressions to show they belong to a group of family or friends. In his article about the word “ain’t,” Hazen notes that all West Virginians are conscious of how the word is perceived, and that for the past three decades, its use has been “a choice of social identity.”

    Last summer when the Oak Ridge National Laboratory canceled optional accent reduction classes after some employees complained, the headline in the Knoxville News-Sentinel read: “ORNL bows to Southern pride.”

    The speech coach slated to teach the class, Lisa Scott, said she’s noticed a “strong divide” between people who are very proud of their accents and those who want to change them.

    Scott said most of her accent reduction clients are foreigners who want to speak English with less of an accent, but that she also has many clients from the South, including a woman who recently called her in tears after being mocked at work.

    To Smyth, such tensions are frustrating but very real: “I don’t see anything wrong with me having an accent.”

    ___

    In the conference room, the late afternoon sun shines through the windows as the interview stretches to nearly two hours.

    When the topic turns to the planned construction of a new highway, the couple differs on whether the growth would be a good thing for the county. But they agree they wouldn’t want to grow up anywhere else.

    “I like it being a small town. Everybody knows everybody,” Smyth said.

    “I couldn’t ask for any other place,” Culicerto adds. “I couldn’t imagine growing up in New York City, Atlanta or Charlotte.”

    Culicerto said he finished high school with a perfect 4.0 grade point average. Now an accounting student at Marshall University, he has plans for a master’s degree.

    He knows that the stubborn stereotypes outsiders have of people like him can run both ways.

    “The way they look at us, we might look at them the same way, like: ‘Oh they have a city accent.’ But really, we’re all the same.”

    ___

    Associated Press writer Allen Breed contributed to this report.

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    The perils for tourism lurking offshore – The Virginian

    It’ll undoubtedly be a while before the full effect of the summer of the shark can be measured.

    This much is clear: 2015’s attacks – so far confined to North Carolina’s beaches – can’t be good for tourism. People are staying out of the water, and it’s simply not possible to have a breakfast in Nags Head without overhearing visitors calculating the risks of swimming.

    If there’s any consolation, it is that this has happened before, at almost every beach on every continent.

    Through the first week of July, sharks attacked eight people in North Carolina, most recently a Marine in Surf City. That’s out of hundreds of thousands of visitors.

    Tourism, as anybody in the business will tell you, is about perception as well as reality. The reality is that sharks almost never attack people, none of the victims this year have been killed and it has been more than a decade since a similar run of bites. Nevertheless, the perception, at the moment, is that sharks are everywhere on our shore.

    It’s not true, but the perception will have an effect, if not on the number of tourists who travel to this region, at least on their behavior while they’re here.

    Just ask the folks along the Gulf of Mexico. Eleven people died when the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded in 2010.

    But then BP’s efforts at capping the well failed time after increasingly frantic time. As 3.19 million barrels of oil spilled, it washed onto beaches and into wetlands. It suffocated marine life and reefs. Fishermen couldn’t fish. Tourists canceled their trips. Day visitors stayed away.

    The effort transformed BP’s well-groomed corporate image into jokes about incompetence and even malevolence. It also did a number on the Gulf.

    Tourism officials claim that everything has recovered. Yet reports of new tar balls and tar mats – the sizes and frequencies of which have been greater than previously, naturally-occurring discoveries – washing ashore persist, raising fears about sullied beaches and contaminated waters.

    All that cost BP $18.7 billion in a proposed settlement announced this month.

    “It would resolve the states’ natural resources damage claims and settle economic claims involving state and local governments in Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, according to an outline filed in federal court,” the AP reported.

    There’s no question that BP owes the gulf states huge amounts of money for the damage it did to their coastlines, to their finances, and to their tourism. It has already paid billions in clean-up costs, and to compensate businesses.

    But it’s not clear that any amount of money can bring back tourists expecting pristine beaches. Or restore the reputation of gulf seafood. Or even pay for the cleanup of square miles of dead seafloor.

    When the water cools in North Carolina, the sharks will move on, as they always do. So will the tourists.

    For our friends along the Gulf of Mexico, the real damage to life and business in the gulf will linger long after BP writes that last check.

    –>

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