December 2009

Community Commerce

Bill Coats grew up in west central Columbia and remembers, in the early 1960s, an old corner store at the junction of Sexton Road and McBaine Avenue. He didn’t shop there often because his parents thought it was safer for the kids to walk from their home on the south side of Worley Street to another market a few blocks south to avoid crossing the busy street.
Although those stores are long gone, Coats, now 58, has his own community market at McBaine and Sexton. Unitee Market was his chance to run his first business and fill the neighborhood’s need for a store within reasonable walking distance.

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The neighborhood grocery: Looking to the past for a greener future

Fifty years ago, every neighborhood was dotted with small mom-and-pop grocery stores that provided friendly, personalized service. Expanding expressways, plentiful gasoline, the ever-burgeoning presence of automobiles, suburban flight and other factors turned consumers toward large centralized stores. So neighborhood grocery stores have gone the way of local tailors. More than 100,000 small retailers have closed

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What’s On Your Mind, Richard Mendenhall?

Many think of Richard Mendenhall as the owner of Columbia’s largest real estate firm and, perhaps, as a developer.
Mendenhall sees himself differently: “What I’d like on my tombstone is ‘Teacher and Mentor.’”
That’s what he wanted to be when he returned from the Vietnam War where he served in the U.S. Army Special Forces, also known as the Green Berets. Mendenhall said he was an indifferent student before the war. No more.

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