7,000-year-old city uncovered in Egypt
PEW: 1.8 million dead people on voter rolls; 2.75 million people registered to vote in two or more states
Physicists send ‘twisted light’ message
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U.S. students continue to lag global peers in science and math
Louisiana Notables
IN REMEMBERANCE Koy Lee Haywood, 92, died on Nov. 12. He was born in Mt. Gilead to the late W. T. and Lillie Haywood on Nov. 10, 1924, He married Lorene Snider of Denton in 1944 and they resided in Asheboro until 1956 when he found his life’s calling and attended New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary to prepare for Christian education ministry. Upon graduation in 1958, he served as a staff minister in churches in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and Pensacola, Florida. In 1968, he became the Director of Education/Recreation for the Judson Baptist Association, the association of Baptist churches in the greater Baton Rouge, Louisiana area. He later became the Executive Director of the Association in 1972 and served in that position until his retirement in 1987. After retirement, Koy moved back to Asheboro and continued in ministry as the Associate Pastor at Senior Adults for First Baptist Church, Asheboro for 18 years, retiring from that position in 2007. He is survived by his wife of 72 years, Lorene Snider Haywood, daughter Janice Haywood of Cary, and son Ryan Haywood and his wife Charlotte of Oak Ridge, NC. Koy found great joy in his grandchildren, Kristina Snyder and husband Barry of Durham, and Karey Haywood of Arlington, VA, as … [Read more...]
Historic evangelical vote rebuffs #Never Trump leaders
By Will Hall ALEXANDRIA – In a stunning repudiation of a corps of anti-Trump evangelical leaders, evangelical voters overwhelmingly supported Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election, with 81 percent of white evangelicals voting for him and only 16 percent pulling the lever for Hillary Clinton. But Trump also won 58 percent of all Protestant voters and 52 percent of all Catholics. Even conservative women backed Trump, with 78 percent voting for him and only 18 percent backing Clinton. Now, a recently released study by the Family Research Council, a Christian public policy ministry based in Washington, D.C., indicates the abortion issue and concern about the political leanings of the courts were key factors in why evangelicals voted for Trump, thus rejecting #NeverTrump evangelical leaders. OUT OF TOUCH Leading up to Nov. 8, the mainstream media had used the #NeverTrump effort by a segment of the religious establishment to suggest it revealed a deep division among the evangelical faithful. The New York Times ran a headline Oct. 17, only three weeks out from the election, claiming “Donald Trump Reveals Evangelical Rifts That Could Shape Politics For Years.” In the article the flagship of the mainstream … [Read more...]
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