Up & Coming Weekly

September 16, 2014

Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.

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14 SEPTEMBER 17-23, 2014 WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM -Computer Systems Management -Server Migration/Deployment -Telephone System Installation/Repair -Network/Internet/VPN Design -Multi-Site Support -System Design/Consulting -Voice/Data Cabling -Virtual Server Implementation -Converged Network Integration -System Maintenance/Repair Customized Business Technology Solutions 3724 Sycamore Dairy Rd, Suite 100 ■ Fayetteville, NC 28303 ■ (910) 864-8100 ■ Fax: (910) 864-0174 ■ E-Mail: art@allegranc.com Please proofread this copy and artwork carefully. after proofreading, if there are no changes and artwork is ready to move into production please sign and return this form to us by one of the following options: • fax: 910.864.0174 • email: allegra-art@nc.rr.com • Deliver: 3724 Sycamore Dairy rd, Suite 100 • fayetteville, Nc any expense incurred in the collection of this debt, including court cost and attorney fees, will be the responsibility of the purchaser. "In signing below I assume responsibility for all prepress, and bindery costs, as well as any costs for reprinting, which any error which I may find after the job is printed." Approved, no changes. Approved, with changes. _________________________________________________________________ Signature business cards scale: 20% qty: 1 each 4.5"x72" 23"x35" Thank You for Voting Us BEST BAKERY 2433 Hope Mills Road Fayetteville, NC 28304 (910) 424-4242 Life's too short...Eat Dessert First! HOT Fried Croissants Daily at: 6 a.m. • 9 a.m. • 12 p.m. POLITICS POLITICS Most Responsive City/County Politician and Most Respected Civic Leader Judge Elizabeth Keever Judge Beth Keever, who announced her retirement from the bench earlier this year, has scored quite a coup this year, taking not one, but three categories in our Best of Fayetteville Politics category. Keever, a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and of the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill School of Law, has earned the respect of Cumberland County residents during her tenure on the bench. Keever has spent the majority of her legal career in Cumberland County, joining the office of District Attorney Ed Grannis as the first woman assistant district attorney in 1975. Dur- ing her tenure as a prosecutor, she was instrumental in founding both domestic violence and victims' rights programs. In 1982, Governor Jim Hunt appointed her as the first woman District Court Judge in Cumberland County. She was later elected to a four-year term and has been re-elected seven times since her initial appointment. In 1994, North Carolina's Chief Justice named her Cumberland County's Chief District Court Judge, and she has served in that capacity under five chief justices. She has expanded our local court system programs to include family court, drug courts and safe havens for families. Judge Keever has served our state and nation in many important legal and ju- dicial capacities, and she has been honored for her distinguished service locally and at the state and national levels, including recognition from the American Bar Association. She is also a faithful and longtime member of the choir of Hay Street Methodist Church. While her legal acumen serves her well in the courtroom, those who know her best will tell you she gets bonus points for being lots of fun with a unique and wry sense of humor. Biggest Local Scandal Fayetteville's VA Medical Center Earlier this year when the nation's Veterans Administration Hospitals came under fire for reporting fraudulent wait times for appointments, which ultimately led to the deaths of veterans, Fay- etteville's VA did not go unscathed. An audit by a Congressional com- mittee found that the Fayetteville VA had the longest wait times for appointments in the en- tire nation. That wasn't news to local veterans, many of whom have spent years waiting to get disability claims processed. The national audit showed that Fayetteville vets wait 29 days on average for a primary care

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