Moore County residents haven’t been able to ask the culprits behind December’s power grid attack why they and 45,000 of their neighbors spent nearly four days in the dark.
An organization formed in response to white supremacy-espousing banners dropped in Moore County hopes to create a “solution-based action plan” for addressing hate in the community.
The Moore County Board of Commissioners on Tuesday condemned an antisemitic banner that was dropped two months ago on a bridge overlooking U.S. 1 in Vass.
Standing on a hill near the Vass bridge where an antisemitic banner was dropped in December, Barbara Rothbeind, president of the Sandhills Jewish Congregation, said the community cannot let its
The Martin Luther King Jr. Day march and following program were anything but quiet, a testament to this year’s theme: “joining voices to pierce the silence.”