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Claude Paquin: Getting out of the hole the BoE has put us inIf the school board is short of money today, it’s because of the hole it created for itself, and for the taxpayers, when it decided in the fall of 2000 to issue school bonds repayable in nine years. Steve Brown: Examining some officials’ ethicsWe have been led to believe that ethics laws can tame and civilize the sometimes brutal and inattentive power of government. However, I would charge that ethics laws are nothing but black ink on white paper unless we have public officials who actually commit themselves to ethical decision-making. Ronda Rich: Packing up my suitcasesToo often I used to stop by Mama’s and find her with that look in her eye. I’d know it the moment I walked in, so I silently curse myself for picking that time to drop by. Father Paul Massey: Ask Father PaulAnswers to your questions about life, religion and the Bible Pastors get some of the most interesting questions from people they meet and people in their congregations. Here are a few questions that I’ve gotten during my years of ministry and via email for this column. Cal Beverly: Checks, but no balancesSchool system produces some paid checks, but no actual accounting A few bloggers seem to miss the point of my earlier column: I received NO invoices detailing attorneys’ fees in my open records request. Judy Fowler Kilgore: Finding Your Folks: The rise and fall of Campbell County, Part 1Several times over the years I have mentioned that part of Fayette and Coweta's adjacent neighbor county to the north, Fulton County, was once known as Campbell County. In doing the genealogy columns, I always refer to this area as Campbell, since the name wasn't changed until 1932. Our study of families usually involves those who were in Georgia in the late 1700s and those who settled our immediate area and were here from the beginning, or in the early 1800s. Father David Epps: Behind closed doorsLast week I wrote an article about divorce, “The Gift that Keeps on Taking.” I received two letters from women who took issue with me when I wrote, regarding marriage vows, “That’s one promise that must be kept.” I felt they had something to say. I have changed their names to protect their identities. Michelle Malkin: The four stages of conservative female abuseThere’s something about outspoken conservative women that drives the left mad. It’s a peculiar pathology I’ve reported on for more than 15 years, both as a witness and a target. Thus, the onset of Palin Derangement Syndrome in the media, Democratic circles and the cesspools of the blogosphere came as no surprise. They just can’t help themselves. William Murchison: The moose is looseIt’s a nutty year, a crazy time in our national life, and I’ve decided to decide — you’ll be glad to hear this, John McCain — that the ostensibly nutty choice of Sarah Palin as running mate is nutty in all the right ways. Thomas Sowell: A knock or a boost?Since Governor Sarah Palin’s daughter is not running for election this year, it is amazing how much the media has suddenly become obsessed with her. Her pregnancy not only made the front page of the New York Times, a printed announcement of her pregnancy stayed at the bottom of the television screen on CNN for what seemed to me to be about an hour or more. Sallie Satterthwaite: Mary’s summer 2008Sometimes I think I’m drafting new chapters in the book our daughter Mary will surely write some day. Others have made a living out of writing about adventures like hers. Why not us? Claude Paquin: Fayette school bond issue of 2000After the second defeat of the effort to raise the sales tax in Fayette to pay for new schools, on Sept. 21, 1999, those who were pushing for the extra sales tax were understandably frantic. They were once again condemned (as a matter of state law) to waiting at least a year before staging another such vote, and many were misinterpreting the voters’ message to mean people were against building new schools. Carolyn Cary: Local charity — Fayette Samaritans — needs your help nowA charity that helps feed down and out Fayette Countians is itself down and out — of food and charitable family items — and needs your help. Ronda Rich: 2 strangers are linked foreverSeveral years ago, an obituary in the Atlanta paper caught my eye and I clipped it out. I ran across it recently and, again as then, I found myself fascinated by how it summed up the man that died and what that summation says about our society. Dr. David L. Chancey: Words of wisdom for my newest college studentI had a moment of awakening the other Sunday. At the end of the service we reminded our youth parents about the student ministry lunch meeting, and it hit me that, for the first time in 14 years, I was no longer a youth parent. Judy Fowler Kilgore: Finding Your Folks: Allen Marlin McWhorter's disappearance and demiseI'm going to stay with the McWhorters this week since I recently got involved in a volley of messages on the McWhorter email list. This Allen M. McWhorter was a relative of Laura McWhorter Thompson Stowers of last week's article since he was the much younger half-brother of Laura's grandfather, Moses McWhorter and, therefore, the uncle of Laura's father, Leroy McWhorter. However, since Allen was the child of a second marriage, he (b. 1795) and his nephew, Leroy (b. 1797,) were close to the same age. Linda Chavez: A majority minority nationA majority minority nation: that’s what the U.S. Census Bureau is projecting by the year 2042, according to new figures released last week. Larry Elder: Major media decide — Vote ObamaLawyers call this a “declaration against interest.” Washington Post ombudsperson Deborah Howell wrote a column in her own newspaper comparing the paper’s front-page coverage of Democratic nominee Barack Obama with that of Republican nominee John McCain. Father David Epps: The gift that keeps on takingI was speaking with a pastor friend recently and he expressed concern that a couple in his congregation may be getting a divorce. I understand his consternation. I’m told that about half of all marriages, inside the church and out, end in divorce. My response to my friend was something like, “A bad divorce is infinitely worse than a troubled marriage.” William Murchison: The senator who won’t go awayI might not have thought of this but for the anointing last weekend of Joe Biden as successor-designate to Dick Cheney — status to be confirmed, or disallowed, at the polls in November. Robert Novak: McCain's VP[Editor’s note: The dean of all Washington political columnists, Robert Novak, is well enough to write occasional columns, of which the first since since his illness was announced is below.] Rick Ryckeley: Cutlery impairedWhen I was growing up, my dad told me more times than I could count, “Life’s just too short to worry about the little stuff. You only need to worry about big stuff.” Thomas Sowell: Anarchy on the InternetThe Internet provides vast amounts of information but it can also spread vast amounts of misinformation, or even deliberately misleading disinformation. Walter Williams: Is college worth it?As parents pack their youngsters off to college, they might ask themselves whether it’s worth both the money they will spend and their children’s time. Dr. Marty Nemko has researched that question in an article aptly titled “America’s Most Over-rated Product: Higher Education (www.martynemko.com/articles/americas-most-overrated-product-higher-education_id1539).” Sallie Satterthwaite: Loving like MollyYears ago a reader scolded me for writing a column that made her sad. I promised her I’d warn her at the top if a column might get teary. Claude Paquin: The 1999 SPLOST vote: A morality taleIn a previous article, I explained how the Fayette school board had scheduled SPLOST votes in March 1998 and in September 1999, and how a majority of the voters said No each time. The board wanted the 1 percent sales tax from SPLOST to build new schools. Ben Nelms: Russia and Georgia: The untold storyRussia. Georgia. A lot has been made on both sides about the reasons why Russia made its move past the South Ossetia breakaway region and continued its march to Gori in the central part of the country and to Poti on the Black Sea coast. The reasons appear to be several, though at least one of those has received virtually no media coverage. Ronda Rich: Cats or possums?You may recall past columns where I wrote of my friend, Stevie, who rescues distressed possums, and then influenced me to do the same when I found an injured possum on my front porch. Sally Oakes: Dealing with changeThe group that gathered recently for our Wednesday night devotion and communion service got to talking about change. We considered whether we liked or did not like change and, as a group, we concluded that change does make us uncomfortable and that we’re more likely (including our teens) to want someone else to change than to change ourselves. Rick Ryckeley: The cardIt came in the mail one day as if by magic. I didn’t request it, didn’t fill out any forms, nor did anyone call conducting a phone survey during dinner. I just opened the mailbox, and there it was. In a red, white and blue envelope was a welcome letter congratulating me for making it to my golden years – and a shiny new AARP card with my name embossed on the front. |