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Leopard Cody Barnett
Leopard Cody Barnett
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Leopard Barnett likes a hard hitting football game
by Savanna Pope
Sports Writer
Jun 19, 2013 | 19 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Leopard Cody Barnett
Leopard Cody Barnett
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Cody Barnett is a rising junior at Lakewood High School. When he’s in school, his favorite class is math, but when class is over his favorite place is the football field.

Cody has been awarded the Defensive Player award for football twice.

Even though football is his favorite, baseball comes in a close second. Cody was on a travel ball team called the Rangers and the team made it into the second round of the playoffs.

“I’ve played baseball for about 7 years. I played the short stop, 3rd base positions, and anything in the outfield. I like baseball because it’s kind of a challenge for me, but it wasn’t enough of a challenge for me like football is, and that’s why I’d rather play football now,” Cody explained.

In talking about football, Cody stated that he’s able to get his aggressions out when playing the game.

“I was a line backer and left guard in football. I like football because it’s a tough contact sport. It’s nice, maybe, getting a big hit, and having everyone get fired up during the games. When everyone starts getting pumped up, then the players normally start playing good. I’ve played football since I was about 6 years old, and my favorite thing about football has always been the contact of the sport. I’m good at playing football, because I’m very aggressive when I get out on the field. I never hold anything back, I can just let it all out,” he said.

In looking back over this past season, Cody smiled as he remembered traveling to Trask, where Lakewood won, 32-14.

The Leopard snagged his first interception at that game.

Getting an interception was a goal Cody had set for himself at the beginning of the year, and he was happy he had been able to accomplish it.

To make him better on the football field, Cody tries to train daily in Brazilian Jujitsu. He said he uses the N.C. Justice Academy gym when he can.

Cody’s professional influence is Brian Urlacher, “ What I like about him is that he was always a hard hitter. He always gave it his all, no matter what.”

Brian Urlacher is a retired American football linebacker who spent his entire 13-year career playing for the Chicago Bears. He played college football for the University of New Mexico, where he was also recognized as an All-American and became one of the school’s most decorated athletes.

As for a coach’s influence, Cody said Lakewood’s football coaches never allow him to give less than 100 percent.

“My football coach, James Lewis, has made me into a better athlete by pushing me hard. If I had any slack he would jump on my back about it. He would always tell me not to quit, and I love football enough to try my best at it so I don’t want to give up,” he asserted.

“If my coaches were to see that I wasn’t going as hard as I could in practices, they would make me stay after and do something extra, and its never fun to have to do something like that. I try to be the best that I can be, so that doesn’t happen. My coach is always there to motive me anytime I need it on the field or off,” he added.

As for a home influence, Cody talks about his brother, Michael, and his dad, Mick Barnett.

“Michael is always there to push me and we work out together,” he said.

Cody said his father is always willing to do whatever was needed to support him and he can count on him being on the sidelines to yell out encouragement.

Cody is still undecided as to what he wants for his future. He’s considering applying to four-year colleges, but he’s also thinking of enlisting in the Marines to become a military police officer.

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Slow down or pay the price
Jun 19, 2013 | 4416 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Local travelers have been forewarned — speed on Sunset Avenue during the month of June and you’re likely going to get caught.

Those who get a ticket have no reason to complain — they’ve been told enforcement will be beefed up with the focus on speeders, so those who travel above the posted 35 mph speed limit will be getting exactly what they’ve bargained for, and rightfully so.

Clinton police issued the advance warning late last week, a day or so before starting their intensely focused campaign along the stretch of highway that statistics show is the city’s most congested and the place where the most personal injury accidents have occurred over the past year.

It is to the credit of Police Chief Jay Tilley and the department that utilization of newly enhanced software is pinpointing areas where officers need to focus their attention and they, in turn, are being dispatched to those areas for assorted kinds of enforcement be it criminal or traffic-related.

Either way, it proves that the software is doing its job, as are police officers.

In the case of the ramped up Sunset enforcement, Lt. Tim King collected the traffic data and analyzed it, then came up with the recommended solutions that include the heightened enforcement of the area, which runs from around the U.S. 421 overpass all the way beyond Sampson Community College.

The hope is that the enforcement campaign will slow people down and, at the same time, reduce mounting personal injury accidents, many of which occur in that same area.

The latest traffic data collected shows that over the past year those personal injury accidents have climbed 187 percent, with the largest chunk occurring on Sunset, this year at 43, up from 15 in 2012.

The rise in those injury accidents can mostly be attributed to speed, King and Tilley said.

That’s something that should not be lost on anyone who has driven down Sunset in the last six months to a year. People fly down the four-lane, ignoring the posted speed to travel 45 mph or higher. In fact, King said the highest speed clocked on Sunset was 84 mph. That’s absurd and highly irresponsible of any driver. Speeds that fast have no place in a highly congested area like Sunset, and officers are right to crack down. Doing less would be a disservice to all those trying to travel to and from work, school and places outside the city safely.

We believe law enforcement officers have the right recipe for ensuring folks lift their foot from the gas when they zoom along Sunset at speeds that are totally unacceptable and highly dangerous.

The warnings should be enough to slow most motorists down in the short term. But it is our hope that even after the heavy enforcement subsides that people will think twice before returning to old speeding habits. We now know that Sunset is highly congested and an area prone to personal injury accidents. Taking our foot off the gas even a little could mean the difference in whether an accident occurs or not.

Wouldn’t you rather be the one who prevented an accident than the one who might just cause it?

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The father of thousands
by Micki Cottle
Guest columnist
Jun 19, 2013 | 1365 views | 0 0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Situated about midway down nature’s southeast arm, scattered like a crossword puzzle on either side of highway 117, the small town of Rose Hill, NC, has almost defied time. Oaks and pines branch protectively across side roads, and tangled forests of dogwoods, multi-colored camellias, and azaleas still enchant visitors with their lovely wildness.

Ducking down a sleepy side street, as the shadows of dawn are lazily chased away by an impatient sun; a new day washes over an 18th century garden and rests lightly on the 1913 gray and brick face of “Herring’s Hearth.” Here, in a world apart, tucked into the pocket of this small town, lived a gentleman who has opened the door to higher education for thousands.

William Dallas Herring and his twin sister, Susan, were born in this house in 1916. Two of six children born to Dallas Burke Herring and Lulu Southerland Herring. It was Dallas who named his home, Herring’s Hearth, because, as he recalls, it reminded him of the many wonderful hours he spent beside the fire with his family and friends, especially during the cold, bleak winter days of his childhood and youth.

On this cool morning, Dr. Herring and I shared a small table lamp that illuminate his features. He was a slender gentleman, with inquisitive eyes and a pensive smile. Once he was described as a “Country Squire” and it stuck. Herring had a calm reassurance about him, ready to meet the world in his dark suit, white shirt, bow tie and courtly manners. He seemed ever the same, and his 87 plus years, sat lightly.

Today, Herring’s Hearth is also home to the “McEachern Library of Local History.” It boasts well over 4,000 books, a multitude of historical files, 36,000 index cards, documenting genealogical references that stretch from Main to Texas extending deep into the valley of the Mississippi. It crosses the countries, from Scotland’s highlands to a haunting sweet lullaby in the green hills of Ireland and elsewhere.

When visitors step through this doorway, they find themselves in the heart of yesterday. In Herring’s Hearth, time has almost stood still, echoes of another era scamper through the halls. And for a moment, an hour or an afternoon, today pauses, and the past sits gently on their shoulder. History buffs from around the nation came to this place to find their roots, discover their heritage. Dr.Herring, ever the historian, ever the gentleman, walkd them slowly through the centuries, and guided them patiently in their search.

In 1938 William Dallas Herring received his bachelor’s degree, cum laude, from Davidson College. A philosophy of hard work and dedication had been instilled in him by his family at an early age. So, it was without hesitation that he returned home when his father became too ill to run the family business, the “Atlantic Coffin and Casket Co.” Later that same year he was elected president of the company, a position he continued to hold until his death.

When 1939 rolled around, Herring’s warm personable style and natural talent for leadership landed him the office of Rose Hill Mayor; at the tender age of 23 he was easily the youngest mayor in the nation, and would serve his small town successfully for 11 years.

The country was atremble with the rumble of events that would shape its history; small towns all over the nation were caught up in the winds of change. Herring deeply felt the needs of Rose Hill and its citizens. He pushed for the construction of a town hall and public works system; he organized a fire department; never again would he witness a building burning to the ground because of inadequate facilities. He would fight to see that town streets were paved and sidewalks built. “Whenever he told you anything you could depend upon it absolutely,” said one old friend.

Early in 1951 he served a term as chairman of the Duplin County Board of Education. Soon he had successfully encouraged consolidation of the county’s numerous small schools into seven high schools. Educational costs improved and the opportunities for children to receive a higher degree of learning in a more challenging atmosphere increased two-fold. Even then, Herring could see clearly the direction N.C. education needed to follow.

Within a few short years, (1955) Governor Hodges had appointed a highly successful, energetic Herring to the State Board of Education, by 1957 he would become chairman; a position he would hold until 1977.

These would prove to be turbulent years in North Carolina and the state faced a sensitive chapter in their history as they took steps to integrate their public schools. Herring would take marked steps toward this goal. In 1956 he had been appointed to the State Board of Higher Education, and from this loftier position he devoted his energies to expanding educational opportunities for all North Carolinians.

Herring continued to carve his mark in the equal educational field. Soon his contribution would come in the realm of adult education, or re-education as it was originally known. “How else will we be able to reach the young men and women who simply do not have the price of a residential college education?” Herring asked. He had yet to achieve this dream, and at times felt himself facing long odds. But, Herring was never short on determination, his familiar presence and workable knowledge kept lawmakers on their toes. And like a Mississippi boat gambler, he played the hands he was dealt, with some of the sharpest public minds in the country. While they flexed their political muscle, Herring deliberated, prepared for battle and played his next card.

In the meantime Governor Hodges was pursuing a vigorous campaign in the north to sell “ North Carolina”…and entice industries to come south in an effort to gain jobs for an industrial future in the state. Land and labor were cheap, however the lack of skilled workers posed a tremendous drawback. Hodges ask Herring to go to the drawing board and devise a workable program for industrial progress. “Industry,” Herring had emphasized, over and over “Cannot not develop without trained manpower. We cannot make the change to an industrial economy without this effort!”

By 1958 Herring had presented his second plan, and by 1959, finally, the first industrial training center had opened in Burlington. The state agreed to provide funding for equipment and buildings while federal programs covered the cost of administration and instruction. These industrial education centers would slowly evolve into the NC community colleges that opened their doors to anyone seeking a higher education. The die was cast.

Herring was not satisfied with providing vocational training only, contrary to what some Tar Heel educators might have originally thought: instead, he could see industrial education centers as stepping stones to higher education. “We may gradually introduce… basic academic courses…., following this, it will only be a step to introduce college-level academic programs of a junior college standard,” Herring explained. He was right, but his course of action would not prove to be without conflicts. What was at work, of course, was a natural collision of ambitious leaders competing for a popular vote in the political arena.

In 1963 the legislature passed the Community College Act and with the 1960 election of Governor Terry Sanford, who had campaigned vigorously for “quality education,” North Carolina was finally waking up to a new day in education. Sanford wholeheartedly shared his optimism and admired Herring’s work on the state board as well as his leadership in a statewide citizen’s committee known as the United Forces for Education (UFE). Sanford saw with clarity the future of Herring’s dream to expand educational opportunities beyond high school.

“Illiteracy exists in shameful proportions,” wrote Herring. “There are thousands who have the ability to read, to write and to cipher hidden within them, but they still cannot do it. The talent that lies buried in the untutored minds and hands of tens of thousands of North Carolinians could not be measured by the value of all the gold that has ever been dug from the earth.”

Sanford would say of Herring that he was “North Carolina’s greatest spokesman for education in the twentieth century.” Herring and Sanford developed a lifetime friendship based on their mutual concern for the educational future of North Carolina. Governor James B. Hunt would later describe him as an “educational giant.” His devoted friend and colleague, William C. Friday, President Emeritus, the University of North Carolina, described Herring as an “exemplary leader of his generation.” Herring would capture the reputation of a man who changed “academic history forever.” A man who was determined at all costs not to let our children live and die in ignorance.

By 1961 there were five public junior colleges emphasizing art and science, and seven industrial education centers focusing on technical and vocational education. Governor Sanford agreed with Herring that there was a need to coordinate the two systems. Their joint efforts succeeded and in 1963 the General Assembly established the North Carolina Community Colleges system.

Today Herring could boast, of being the father of the 58 campus community college system that successfully educated over 800,000 students last year alone. The voice of the New South was lifting and rising. And the crescendos of thousands of educationally deprived North Carolinians were no longer just whispers in the wilderness of ignorance.

_________

During his outstanding career in education, and even well into his retirement, Herring would be awarded and remembered for his hard work and dedication to his state. He was North Carolina’s “Educational Man of the Year” as early as 1954, and he received the state’s highest award for citizenship in 1972. In 1980 he accepted the Hugh McEniry award from the North Carolina Association of Colleges and Universities for his outstanding services on behalf of higher education. In 1979, the Duplin County Board of Commissioners established May 6-12 as Dallas Herring Week.

The State Board of Community Colleges officially recognized Dr. Herring in 1983, in recognition of the NCCC system’s 20th anniversary; as an individual who made a significant contribution to the establishment and development of the NCCC colleges. In 1985 a scholarship was established in his name at James Sprunt Technical College, where he served on the board of trustees. JSCC has honored him with a building, a lecture series and a scholarship in his name. Also in his honor, a $200,000 Herring scholarship to Davidson College was donated by Dr. and Mrs. Barton Hayes, of Hudson Mills. Herring also had the distinction of being awarded four honorary doctorates.

On a warm summer night in July 2003 ; “An evening honoring Dr. Herring and Commemorating the 40th Anniversary of the North Carolina Community College System,” it was announced that the William Dallas Herring Leadership Development Institute had been established through a pledge of $250,000 from Herring’s friends in Duplin County…the Murphy family, the Johnson family and the Quinn family. Hundreds of friends turned out to remember and praise Herring for his foresight and determination.

NCCC System President, H. Martin Lancaster, who made the announcement, said that the Institute’s purpose is to select and train the “brightest stars” in the System to eventually become community college presidents. These “Fellows,” the first five W. Dallas Herring Fellows currently NCCC System vice presidents, will be enrolled in the William C. Friday Center at the University of North Carolina, in Chapel Hill, to prepare them to serve as presidents of community colleges throughout the state.

Welcomed and acknowledged as the new “Fellows” were: Dr. Ralph G. Soney, Mitchell CC: Dr. Linda Thomas-Glover, Guilford Technical CC: Dr. Kay Albertson, Wayne CC: Dr. Sharon Morrisey, Asheville-Buncombe Technical CC: and Dr. Mark Kinlaw, Robeson CC.

The Institute will choose “Herring Fellows” as funds are available. Also attending the memorable evening was the former Governor Bob Scott, (NCCC System President, 69-72), who said of his friend Herring, “The one word to describe him is ‘vision’. And he had the extra gift of turning that vision into an actual program.”

There is really no way to actually close a written history of a man such as Dr. Herring, for his history by its nature is still being written every day of his life. What stands out is his record of successful achievements, both as an educator and as a human being. He shaped the future of education as surely as one would mold a piece of clay.

Herring treasured his memories, and he gently recalled an elderly black minister who could neither read nor write, grasping His hand firmly and thanking him for the opportunity to learn. “Now I can read the word of God,” he said, with a grand smile on his face, “and I learned at your college!”

Then there were the mill workers, who developed a technical skill at a local industrial education center, and were finally able to support their families with a decent wage, and stand a little taller when their own children received their diplomas. The multitudes of artists who contribute their talents to make our great state a place of beauty. And the thousands of nurses who grace the halls and emergency rooms of NC hospital. Graduates from community college nursing programs, that were once told, “they would never succeed.” Herring stood fast, stuck to his guns; and the nursing program not only succeeded, but graduated the highest scoring nurses in the nation.

So we can merely hope to highlight the reality of his yesterdays, at this moment at hand, in this time, in this place. The pages of his life continue to turn. He is still a painter, sketcher, historian and writer. So many stops and turns, so many decisions, so much living has passed during his 87 plus years of life, that I can merely touch the essence of his days. The faces that have brushed the pages of Herring’s life have added multitudes of rich stories, of beginnings and endings that continue to reach out over the years to inspire and offer the opportunity to learn and grow to generations yet to come.

Or as Dr. Herring said in 1960, “North Carolina has wrought well for the American democracy. It has indeed been a land where the weak grow strong and the strong grow great, because it has dedicated itself to the unalterable truth that education is the open door to freedom and prosperity. That door, that golden door, must never be closed.”

(Editor’s note: This story was written by Micki Cottle in 2004 for the State Magazine; before Dr. Herring’s death. And the dream still lives.)

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Mt. Pleasant holding anniversary celebration for Fullwoods
by Mae Bell Williamson
Browns Chapel
Jun 18, 2013 | 7606 views | 0 0 comments | 26 26 recommendations | email to a friend | print

There will be a pastor’s anniversary event celebration honoring the 26 years of devoted service provided by Bishop Varnie N. Fullwood Sr. and Elder Idella Fullwood, First Lady. Come and join the church family at Mt. Pleasant Missionary Baptist Church Inc., 4442 Bonnettsville Road, Clinton, as they come together in unity to celebrate the church’s man and woman of God for 26 years of working for the Kingdom of God. The anniversary services are as follows: Thursday, June 20, Dr. S.E. Bryant of the Snowhill Missionary Baptist Church, Roseboro, will be guest speaker accompanied by the choir and church family; Friday, June 21, Bishop Eva Darden, pastor of House of Praise in Newton Grove, will be guest speaker accompanied by clergy members and the choir of the Southeastern District Assembly of Churches. Sunday morning worship service will begin at 10:45 a.m. on June 23 with guest speaker Pastor Willie Pennington of Kingdom Word Church, Newport News, Va., and the Mount Pleasant Mass Choir will minister through music. The culmination service will be held Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. The guest speaker will be Pastor David Flowers of Central Baptist Church of Whiteville; he will be accompanied by his church family and choir. Make plans to attend this great series of services.

You are invited to join us for the Greater Mount Calvary Combined Choir anniversary celebration Sunday, June 30, beginning at 3:30 p.m. on Southeast Boulevard, Clinton. The groups that will be performing are the Endtime Messengers of Kinston; Prophetic Worship of Clinton; Brother Johnny and Minister Tralia Faircloth of Roseboro; Elder Antonio Patterson of Clinton; Selah of Roseboro; Faison Singers of Roseboro; William Singers of Roseboro; N.C. Prayer Tower of Clinton; Tracy Nettles McKinnon and New Destiny of Fayetteville; Blessed by Faith of Sanford and many more. For more information, call 385-4037.

The first annual Male Chorus Extravaganza will be held Saturday, June 29 at the Friendly Community Center, 421 Hanson Road, Clinton, beginning at 7 p.m. The doors will open at 6 p.m. Scheduled to appear on the program will be Cutts Chapel Male Chorus of Angier; Snowhill Male Chorus of Clinton; Jordan Temple Male Chorus of Lillington; Andrew Chapel Male Chorus of Clinton; Mount Zion Male Chorus of Dunn; First Baptist Male Chorus of Roseboro; Robinson Chapel Male Chorus of Clinton; Warsaw Male Chorus of Warsaw; Lisbon Street Male Chorus of Clinton and many others. For more information, call 910-249-2357 or 910-916-8514.

Regular morning worship service will be held at the Cedar Creek Missionary Baptist Church Sunday, June 23 at 10 a.m. The pastor, the Rev. Alice Jean Boykin, will bring the message and the adult choir will render the music. Everyone is cordially invited.

Men’s Day will be celebrated Sunday, June 23 at the First Baptist Church, Bowden, beginning at 11 a.m. The pastor, the Rev. Harold Boykin, will bring the message and the male chorus will provide the music. All are invited.

The Pastor Aide service will be held at the Running Branch Disciple of Christ Church, Clinton, Friday night, June 21, beginning at 7:30 p.m. The guest speaker will be Eldress Evelena Oliver, choir and congregation of Warsaw. On Sunday, June 23, the Ushers Anniversary will be held at 3:30 p.m. The guest speaker will be the Rev. Victor Wilson, along with his choir and congregation of the Lisbon Street Missionary Baptist Church in Clinton. The host pastor is Elder Calvin Deans. All are invited to both services.

Regular morning worship service will be held at the Browns Chapel Missionary Baptist Church, H.B. Lewis Road, Sunday, June 23 at 11 a.m. The pastor, the Rev. Jeffrey White, will bring the message and the Gospel Choir will provide the music. Don’t miss it.

Regular morning worship service will be held Sunday, June 23 at the Christ Missionary Baptist Church, 5220 Faison Hwy., Clinton, beginning at 10 a.m. The Rev. Marvin T. Clowney Sr. will bring the morning message and the youth choir will provide the music.

Vacation Bible School will be held at the Saint Stephens Holiness Church, Turkey, June 24-28, from 6 until 8 p.m. All children and adults are invited. Refreshments will be served daily.

Vacation Bible School will be held at the Union Star Free Will Baptist Church, Clinton, June 19-21 from 6 until 8 p.m. nightly. All children and adults are invited to participate. Refreshments will be served nightly. Bishop James Leftwridge is the host pastor.

Vacation Bible School is already in progress at the Littlefield Missionary Baptist Church, Newton Grove, from 6 until 8 p.m. All children and adults are invited. Refreshments will be served. The host pastor is Dr. Claudie Morrisey.

Vacation Bible School will be held at the Point Level Disciples of Christ Church, Clinton, June 26-28 at 6 p.m. Refreshments will be served each day. The host pastor is Elder Dannie Robinson.

Vacation Bible School will be held at the Big Piney Grove Missionary Baptist Church June 19-21 from 6 until 8 p.m. All children and adults are urged to participate. The host pastor is the Rev. James Mitchell.

Vacation Bible School will be held at Christ Missionary Baptist Church June 20-21 from 6 until 8 p.m. The closing of VBC and a Community Day Picnic will be held Saturday, June 22 at 11 a.m. Free dinner plates will be served and the community is invited to come and fellowship. The host pastor is the Rev. Marvin T. Clowney.

Revival will be held at the Kingdom Building Baptist Church, 2600 High House Road, Salemburg, June 26-28 at 7 p.m. nightly. Share with everyone you know. The guest speaker will be the Rev. Zephania D. Osok from Shalom Gospel Church of Capital Mega, Kenya. Come and expect a wonderful time in the Lord and you will be blessed in the Lord. The host pastor is Dr. Rudolph Tripp.

Regular morning worship service will be held at the Jackson Grove Bible Church of God Sunday, June 23 at 11 a.m. The speaker for the morning service will be Elder Patrick O. Stewart and the Gospel Choir will render the music. At 3 p.m., a birthday program will be held for Mother Ida Taylor and Sister Eva Evans. Several singing groups will be on the program, including the Gospel Lites of Angier, the New Beginners in Christ, the Chapel Hill Gospel Choir, the Robertson Brothers, soloist Stephene Johnson and others. Everyone is invited.

A Pre-Men’s Day Revival will be held at the Saint Jude Holiness Church, H.B. Lewis Road, Clinton, June 20-21 at 7:30 p.m. nightly On Thursday, June 20, Elder Raph Smith and Saint Stephens of Turkey; Friday night will be the Rev. James , choir and congregation of Saint James Church in Delway. On Sunday, June 23, Elder Willie Bryant will bring the message and the men’s choir will provide the music. At 4 p.m., there will be a male chorus singing program. The Community Male Chorus of Clinton, Cedar Point Male Chorus, Saint Stephens Male Chorus, St. Jude Male Chorus and others will participate. Elder Louise Royal is the host pastor.

Revival will be held at Elizabeth Missionary Baptist Church, 2316 Maxwell Road, Autryville, June 24-28 at 7 p.m. nightly. The Rev. Dr. Jerry Jones, pastor of First Temple Missionary Baptist Church, Greer, S.C., will be the evangelist for the week. FMI, call 567-2332.

We wish Michael Boykin a blessed anniversary during the month of July. I will tell you more about this next week.

We solicit your prayers for the sick and shut-ins everywhere.

Our love and deepest sympathy goes out to all families who have lost a loved one recently.

A thought for today: Love is not love until you share it.

Go to the church of your choice this Sunday and have a blessed week.

Mae Bell Williamson is the news columnist for Brown’s Chapel. You can reach her at 592-2468 or 709-3490.

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