Op-Ed: It’s Sunshine Week
It’s Sunshine Week in South Carolina and the nation. It is a time to recognize and encourage open government and letting the sun shine in on public documents and meetings.
It’s Sunshine Week in South Carolina and the nation. It is a time to recognize and encourage open government and letting the sun shine in on public documents and meetings.
In the first installment of this article, we considered some of the major things that have transpired in the fulfillment of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream.
Seeing that this is the month that we celebrate and commemorate the life and legacy of the late, great Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., it is only fitting that we make a brief investigation to see what has become of his dream.
This devotion is a monthly ministry of the Pee Dee Baptist Association, comprised of 31 Southern Baptist churches in Dillon and Marlboro Counties. For more information call 774-8062.
Featured this month is Dr. Dick Alderman, the pastor of Little Rock Baptist Church, Little Rock.
As I sat in what would be my home away from home for several days, I heard the sound of horns honking, engines roaring, and tires spinning on the very busy street that ran parallel to the hotel where I stayed.
What do you care most about in life?
Most of us would put family at, or near, the top of such a list. Friends would be there. So would our jobs or businesses, our livelihoods. Our homes. Maybe our pets. Our hobbies and pastimes. Add in those around us: Neighbors, the community, etc.
Dear Editor:
I hope you are doing well. My name is Evelyn Alvarez, and I am a student at B. Gale Wilson Elementary School in Fairfield, California. I am in the fifth grade, and Ms. Andrus is my teacher.
To The Editor:
I want to thank you for the front page article about Aaron, Ona, and Brenda Gaddy. They deserve the article.
To The Editor:
I read with great interest fellow writer Michael Goings’ article entitled The Rod, The Switch, and Corporal Punishment. All I have to say is Rev., you hit that nail square on the head.
If someone would have told me some years ago that I would one day be so close to a canine, that I literally share snacks with while we are riding, I would have called them crazy, said they were “out to lunch”, or that their elevator did not go all the way up to the top floor.