Archive - Food and Leisure
March 28th, 2013
Lockelyn Frazier rides comfortably in the back of an Easter-theme wagon during the First United Methodist Early Childhood Development Center’s Easter Parade on Thursday morning. Photo by Bryan Davis
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March 27th
By
Special to the Daily Times Leader
Vaudine Landess had her 100th birthday yesterday at Dugan Memorial Home with her son, Joe Landess and daughter-in-law Eva Landess of Chattanooga, Tenn. She was born March 26, 1913, in Alabama. She moved to West Point and married Foster Landress. They had four children, seven grandchildren and several great-grandchildren. She enjoyed playing Bridge, cooking and being with her family and friends. The staff at Dugan celebrated her milestone birthday with cake and punch. Submitted Photo
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Earlier this week, the Republican governor of North Dakota, Jack Dalrymple, signed into law anti-abortion legislation that will take effect this August, some of which is the strongest the nation has seen yet to challenge the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court case of Roe v. Wade, which legalized abortion in our nation.
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March 25th
I wanted to take today to relay a little snippet of a conversation I heard on Friday night at the Ozark Regional Intercollegiate Rodeo.
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March 23rd
The Wednesday meeting of the West Point Civitan Luncheon Club turned to former president Bill Ladd to introduce his guests, Jim Bearden and Mitzi Thompson from East Mississippi Community College.
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By
Special to the Daily Times Leader
Sally Kate Winters Family Services is pleased to announce March 18-24, 2013 as National Safe Place Week. The week serves to increase awareness about the importance of youth safety and the dangers young people face when they feel they have nowhere to go or are in crisis situations. It also highlights Safe Place, a youth outreach program that connects businesses and volunteers to provide help and safety to youth facing abuse, neglect, bullying or serious family problems.
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My dad was one of those lucky few who went into the military to serve his country during a slow period. By that I mean he went into the Air Force after the Korean War and before the Vietnam War. It didn’t make him any less patriotic, I just think it made him less likely to die. He had his opinions on the war in Vietnam. None were complementary to the men who burned their draft cards or ran away to Canada. I can still remember how angry he was when President Ford pardoned the “draft dodgers.” His feelings toward “Hanoi” Jane Fonda were worse. Much worse.
March 21st
Execution has always been the fate of the worst criminals, bandits and outlaw. Once a condemned man is sent to the gallows society never has to worry about him again. We don’t have to feed him. We don’t have to maintain a jail cell for him. We don’t have to worry about medical expenses for him. There is no cost associated with him after that because they always go from the gallows straight to the grave.
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March 20th
Wednesday, March 20 marked the first day of spring for 2013, and it certainly feels like early spring this week. After a relatively mild winter, residents are already planning afternoon walks and cookouts anticipating warm April and May months. Photo by Donna Summerall
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March 19th
Kramer Sowell is not afraid to get his hands dirty. Or to get his students in the Agricultural Science class dirty. That’s just one of the things that made the West Point School District chose him for Teacher of the Year. He is also Teacher of the Year for the Career and Technology Center. His student look forward to his classes where they learn about livestock, goats, quail and chickens have been raised by the students. They learn about growing food plants and decorative plants at the green house at the back of the CTC building.