MLK party goes online
The Star Courier
Usually on Martin Luther King Day, area kids can be found playing and crafting during a holiday from school.
But the coronavirus, like it has with so many other community over the past year, won t be letting that scene play out this year.
“It’s going to be virtual this year,” said Etta LaFlora, executive director of Sunshine Community Services, but King s message of peaceful social change will continue to be at the front and center of the event.
LaFlora said the event will still offer many of the activities of previous years, including games, puzzles, mazes and reading, but they will all take place through Zoom, an online audio and web conferencing program.