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June 18 crime report
Jun 18, 2013 | 2676 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

LAURINBURG - Amanda Clark, 26, of 16740 Sanders Circle was arrested Friday under a warrant for one count of simple assault, according to a sheriff’s report. Clark was placed under a $500 unsecured bond.

LAUREL HILL - Kim Lewis of Bunch Road reported a breaking and entering and larceny at her home on Friday, according to a sheriff’s report. An Acer laptop computer and Sony PlayStation were reported stolen.

LAURINBURG - Amanda Lee, 29, of 7380 Hasty Road was arrested Saturday under an order for arrest for one count of failure to appear in court, according to a sheriff’s report. Lee was placed under a $5,000 secured bond.

LAURINBURG - Haynes Stone Farm on Smyrna Church Road reported a larceny on Sunday, according to a sheriff’s report. Some 590 feet of copper wiring was reported stolen.

LAUREL HILL - Nicholas Caulder, 22, of 22760 Marston Road was arrested Sunday for one count of driving while license revoked, according to a sheriff’s report. Caulder was placed under a $1,000 secured bond.

WAGRAM - Courtney Harrington, 22, of 23921 Riverton Road was arrested Sunday under a warrant for one count of injury to personal property, according to a sheriff’s report. Harrington was placed under a $250 secured bond.

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Letter: Critical protests
Jun 18, 2013 | 382 views | 0 0 comments | 17 17 recommendations | email to a friend | print

To the editor:

Referring to Raleigh’s “Moral Monday” protests, Sen. Thorn Goolsby changed the title to “Moron Monday,” and insulted the protesters with derogatory terms.

Somecitizens agree. Criticizing and insulting protesters is not uncommon on other continents or on ours.

Thomas Paine was criticized and insulted for writing “Common Sense,” but continued to write encouragement for our nation’s colonists to protest and oppose British exploitation of the colonies through taxation without representation. Colonists protested via what became known as “The Boston Tea Party,” because of Parliament’s manipulation of the British Empire’s tea trade in favor of the British East India Tea Company, which was owned in part by members of Parliament. Sadly, after the Revolution, veterans were hunted down and killed for protesting unjust foreclosures and limited representation in the Massachusetts legislature during (Daniel) Shays’ Rebellion.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton protested limited rights for women; Ernestine Rose protested limited human rights; Dorothea Dix protested the appalling conditions of prison confinement. Are they criticized and insulted today? Medgar Evers was assassinated by Byron de Labeckwith for protesting minority voter restriction in Mississippi, but his effort did not die with him. Laurinburg’s own Terry Sanford was highly criticized for attempting to extend educational opportunity, and opposing racial discrimination; how many of his critics are buried in prestigious locations such as the crypt at Duke University Chapel?

Goolsby referred to today’s Raleigh protesters as “old hippies.” I suspect he is at least partially right. Was it responsible political leaders, or young protesters insulted with the title “hippies,” who protested the sacrifice of America’s troops on the altar of war profiteering in Viet Nam? I know some of them protested the sacrifice of our troops on the same altar in Iraq. Today, they are protesting issues such as tax breaks for the wealthy at the expense of N.C. workers, the revival of predatory lending that so exploits N.C.’s working poor, a return to voter restrictions for minorities, and the transfer of funds from public schools to private schools for the privileged.

Obviously, critics either deny or simply cannot see the great good the “old hippie morons” are attempting to accomplish in Raleigh through civil disobedience, and many who can see will continue to criticize for political purposes. But considering the pattern, history will be kind to today’s protestors, in spite of the criticism and insults they are now enduring, now won’t it?

Robert C. Currie Jr.

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Eva Alford
Jun 17, 2013 | 216 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Eva Alford, 90, died on Thursday, June 13, 2013 at Morrison Manor in Laurinburg. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, June 18 at Piney Grove United Methodist Church in Maxton. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. Purcell Funeral home is serving the family.
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Sprint Cup Series driver Greg Biffle celebrates his win in the NASCAR Quicken Loans 400 auto race at Michigan International Speedway, Sunday, June 16, 2013 in Brooklyn, Mich. AP Photo.
Sprint Cup Series driver Greg Biffle celebrates his win in the NASCAR Quicken Loans 400 auto race at Michigan International Speedway, Sunday, June 16, 2013 in Brooklyn, Mich. AP Photo.
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