TARBORO —
To the Editor:
I attended games at the Indian Lake Sports Complex this weekend to enjoy my friends and see their sons play ball. We are so lucky to have this wonderful facility here that draws crowds from Virginia and other distant areas — along with the money they spend here in Tarboro!
One area needing attention at Indian Lake is the recycling capacity. All the permanent round cans are marked with signs for trash only, directing patrons to discard plastic bottles elsewhere. There were also many unmarked square rolling containers. I never found recycling until I ran into a Town employee who mentioned Thomas Perkins would welcome a suggestion. The only recycling bin he showed me was an overflowing bin next to one tall divided can. One can cannot serve four ball fields! (There were about four trash cans per field.)
At a past Happening on the Common, the recycling and trash containers were parked in pairs, in close proximity. Most people will recycle their plastic drink bottles — it’s the law in NC! — but it has to be easier to do. Even the town employee, in view of the full bin, said it would be OK to throw away my bottles. But it’s not OK.
What kind of commitment will it take to provide adequate recycling to this otherwise premiere facility? I would be willing to support it.
Melanie J. Goff Bradley
Rocky Mount NC 27801
Edgecombe County
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Spring and snow just don’t go together
A check of the calendar tells us that spring arrived last Thursday while my memory reminds me we saw snow flakes flying by in that March wind throughout much of the day.
With Easter this coming Sunday, I’m reminded of a wet Good Friday snow in West Texas that brought anywhere from six inches in Big Spring to 18 inches in Sweetwater on April 5, 1996.
The wind that day was straight off the Polar ice cap and the snow was horizontal much of the time. In fact,the wind compacted the snow so much that it was more that six inches thick on the sides of utility poles in front of the Big Spring Herald.
On Saturday, it was almost completely gone.
Mom and Dad always warned of an Easter freeze and the weather this year seems conducive to such a phenomena of Mother Nature. -
Why is there no answer to the question ‘why?’
Stephanie and I have two grandsons, 7-year-old Alex and 5-year-old Dominick, and every word we’ve heard come out of the mouths of those young survivors at Sandy Hook Elementary School has hit us like a sledgehammer.
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On dealing with humanity
I’m probably not much different from any other grandparent.
As we heard the story Monday morning about the 2-year-old who was treated just about every way but humanely last weekend, we started trying to track the story down. -
Remember all history, good and bad
As we maneuver the ins and outs of life, we develop connectors to link with the timeline of events stored in the recesses of our brain.
On Saturday, Sept. 29, Mom, Daddy and I were in Mississippi Memorial Stadium looking on as Coach Johnny Vaught’s Ole Miss Rebels beat the Kentucky, 16-0. -
Sharing random thoughts
Now that the Olympics are over, what did you think about some of the events?
Come on. How can baseball no longer be an Olympic sport but advanced gymnastic ribbon twirling can get you a gold medal?
Who won the ribbon twirling, anyway?
But talking about the Olympics, how about those two women’s relay teams —he 4x100 and 4x400? What a show they put on! -
Football Fridays not just about game on field
This is the week when it’s time for local schools to be ready, as Friday night signals the start of the 2013 high school football season.
But it’s not just about the game. -
News with color not part of paper’s DNA
Once upon a time, I had a publisher whose seem to think that a day in which at least one hour wasn’t wasted in meetings was, well, a waste.
I don’t like meetings ... especially those that drone on and on and on when one of the participants wastes everyone else’s time asking questions after the fact when it would have been easier for them to have done their homework. -
Olympics: It’s hard to not be jingoistic
Sitting in from of the television, it’s hard not to be jingoistic when you see some young American on the top step of the Olympics award stand, gold medal around their neck and hand over their heart as they sing the Star Spangled Banner.
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Princeville administration claims conspiracy against its efforts
To the Editor:
These are the people who are against our Administration and their negative efforts affect everybody in Princeville since the beginning of this Administration in 2010:
• Former Mayor Delia Perkins
• Commissioner Ann Howell
• Commissioner Gwendolyn Knight
• Former Commissioner Ann Carney Adams
• Former Commissioner Carolyn Sharpe
• Newspaper Reporter, Calvin Adkins
• County Commissioner Viola Harris -
Heat offers opportunities
I’m thankful I don’t have t toil outside for a living, as do many people.
I’ve always been one to take care of my own yard, yet Saturday, we paid Tom Williams to cut the grass. - More Editorials Headlines
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Spring and snow just don’t go together


