The Role Of An Attorney In A North Carolina Real Estate Closing

IMG_0006Robert S. Thompson is an attorney practicing real estate and estate planning law in Moore County for the past 33 years. He is certified by the North
Carolina State Bar Board of Legal Specialization as a Specialist in commercial and residential real estate transaction and also in estate planning and probate law. There have been vast changes in the law with respect to real property in the past 10 years and my conversation with Bob will attempt to explain the changes and requirements as well as the intricacies of real estate in Moore County in particular.Bob has served in the following capacities:

  • Chairman, Board of Zoning Adjustment, Town of Southern Pines – current
  • North Carolina Bar Association Continuing Legal Education Committee-current
  • North Carolina Bar Association Real Property Section Council
  • North Carolina Bar Association Real Property Task Force

Bob discusses a myriad of issues that both Buyers & Sellers of real estate should be aware of.

Moore County’s real estate market is very active and getting a better understanding of the closing procedure is a very important piece to the real estate transaction process.

Bob can be reached at his Southern Pines office : 325 West Pennsylvania Ave, Suite E, Southern Pines, N.C. 28387 – 910 692-2244.

http://www.foreproperties.com/real-estate/%e2%80%9clawyer-up%e2%80%9d-at-the-closing-table/

Operation Frontline Recovery

IMG_0012 The sobering statistics are well-known to active-duty military members and their families. Suicide is more likely than combat death for veterans.”

View article in The Pilot

Senior Airman Stone Hazlett and retired Sgt. Chris Hurley not only know this, they are doing something about it to help their military brothers
transitionalize back to civilian life.

 

Operation Frontline Recovery is a program that has been given birth by these two eloquent and passionately committed speakers. Therapeutic Gardening is the hook and compassion for their brothers is the engine that has gotten this program quickly off the ground.

Stone & Chris cover a myriad of issues facing the returning service members. Their word pictures and personal reflections created an aura in the
recording studio and an immediate awareness of a severe problem that hits home and does not get lost amongst the many media messages we are bombarded with daily.

Stone can be reached at 910 797-9942. Chris at 910 975-1980.

Visit their Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/OperationFrontlineRecovery/?fref=ts

Website: www.growtoheal.org

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2016 Blues Crawl & A Conversation With Al Mangum & His LIfe In The Radio Industry

Herb Cameron, chairperson of Sun Events and past President of the Preservation Board joins us by phone to talk about the upcoming 2016 Blues
Crawl event on Saturday, July 9th in Southern Pines. The event has grown each year since its inception in 2000 and has easily become one of the most popular summer evening events in Moore County and beyond. This year some of the venues.

Annual Blues Crawl 2016 Line Up

Sunrise Theater Headliners: 7:30pm & 9:30pm
Beverly Guitar Watkins, Johnny Rawls & The King Bees

Jefferson: 9pm-1am
Mac Arnold & Plate Full O Blues

Rhett’s: 9pm-1am
Donald Ceasar

Eye Candy: 9pm-1pm
Sammy Blue

Wine Cellar: 7pm-11pm
Juke Joint Johnny & the Hurricanes

O’Donnell’s: 9pm-1am
Charlie Sayles & the Blues Disciples

Bell Tree: 9pm-1am
Abe Reid & the Spikedrivers

Nosh: 8pm-12am
Big Bump & the Stungunz

Betsy’s: 8pm-12am
Big Ron Hunter

Day Band: 11am-3pm
Michael Wolf & D.B.A. Under the marquee

Tickets can be purchased at the Sunrise Theatre

IMG_0005Al Mangum, has spent the majority of his life in the radio business wearing the hats of DJ, Broadcaster, Writer, Marketing Director and Mentor. His reflections over his career provide a testament to the power of always being able to reinvent yourself as you go.

Al Mangum grew up in Brandywine, Maryland in Prince George’s County. Although it was only 20 miles below Washington D.C. it was then a very rural farming area, predominately tobacco. There were only 56 in his 1955 high school graduating class.

With the mandatory military draft ahead, Al went in the Navy Reserves as a high school senior and on active duty from 1956-1959 as a Navy Hospital
Corpsman; half of that time with the 3rd Marine Division in Okinawa.

Upon discharge, Al entered the National Academy of Broadcasting; a professional school in Washington D.C. Some of the adjunct professors
included David Brinkley, Willard Scott, and Sports Announcer’s Jim Gibbons and Bib Wolf. After graduation he took his first radio job as a nighttime DJ and news announcer at a small AM station in Lumberton, NC. In addition, he attended what is now UNC Pembroke, where he met his wife of 55 years, Betty.

Al and Betty live in Pinehurst and both are involved in the local community and especially at their church, the historic Village Chapel in Pinehurst.

Al & Betty have a son and four grandchildren in Holly Springs NC and a daughter and two grandchildren in Perth Australia. They spent the month of
April in Perth with their daughter and her family who moved to Western Australia last year after spending 27 years in Sydney.

Al’s career has been primarily in radio where he has done “just about everything.” He is currently working at WEEB as an independent advertising
sales representative. Stated with WEEB broadcasting the “local morning news” and doing some ad sales. About 4 years later Al decided his semi-retirement job was more than he needed and gave the news shift. However, you will still hear him on many WEEB commercials he does for his clients.

Prior to working at WEEB, from 2005 to 2009, Al was Station Manager at WLHC FM Life 103.1; with studios in Sanford and transmitter in Robbins.

Al spent over 30-years in the Raleigh-Durham market, primarily as General Manager of the Radio Network Division of Capitol Broadcasting (WRAL’s
organization.) The network included the North Carolina News Network and Sports Networks, including – NC State, Duke, Virginia, the NFL Carolina
Panthers, NASCAR, A National Golf Show and other sports networks. He was also the Executive VP of Capitol Broadcasting’s Durham Bulls Baseball Club from 1991-1993.

Al & Betty moved to Michigan in 1961, where Al was a DJ and Program Director for stations in Port Huron and Battle Creek, Michigan, which was the first Top 40 Radio station in Western Michigan.

Prior to coming to Raleigh in 1976, he spent over 10 years with a multi-station broadcast group headquartered in Lincoln, Nebraska; as Program
Director for the Lincoln station and later General Manager of the group’s radio station in Sioux City, Iowa

Soap of the Pines – Local Soap Artisan, Stephanie Lemke

IMG_0033Local entrepreneur, mother of two preschool sons, and Pinehurst Surgical nurse, Stephanie Lemke talks all about her new company, Soap of the Pines. (for both women and men).

Stephanie discusses her various products; their chemistry; pricing, essential & fragrance oils and availability.

From bar soaps to balms, bath fizzies, salve’s and eventually men’s shaving soap, Stephanie continues to experiment with scents, moisturizers, plant
oils, and textures to create the most viable and value based products available in our area.

There is lots of great information here. Who knew that activated charcoal was a great cleaning and skin care agent?

http://www.besthealthmag.ca/best-looks/beauty/detox-and-beautify-your-skin-and-hair-with-activated-charcoal/

https://www.facebook.com/soapofthepines/

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The Weymouth Center for the Arts & Humanities; Yesterday’s Roots and Tomorrow’s Memories

Southern Pines is steeped in history, and nothing is of more significance than the Weymouth Center. Sam Ragan’s granddaughter has returned to her grandfather’s roots and Robin Smith has become the new Executive Director of the Weymouth Center for the Arts & Humanities.

IMG_0015Along with new President, Kathyrn Talyon and Youth Affiliate Chairperson, Schuyler Crowder, these three ladies talk of the history of the Weymouth
Center as well as many upcoming Summer events, including the concert series, Sounds on the Grounds. In between the lines, the magic of the Weymouth Center is captured in this conversation and the Center is primed to promote their appeal to an entire new generation of supporting members.

It’s difficult to think of Southern Pines and not think of the Weymouth Center. This prized piece of history and gorgeous facility is here for
everyone to enjoy.

The Weymouth Center for the Arts & Humanities is open to the public and the facility is available to residents of Moore County for Weddings, Socials,
Business meetings etc.

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Robin Smith,   Executive Director
Weymouth Center for the Arts & Humanities

555 East Connecticut Avenue
Southern Pines, NC 28388

Phone: 910-692-0524
Cell: 310-408-3601
Fax 910-692-1815

robin@weymouthcenter.org
www.weymouthcenter.org