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Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Charles Anthony's The Pub

While reading the article in today's Advertiser, I remembered how truly good the food and service were at the Montgomery Mall location. So, I called today to see if they were open for lunch again, especially during the Christmas Season when so many people are out shopping. Unfortunately, they are only open for dinner and I find that sad because the business was built on the lunch crowd, especially the older crowd. Most of the patrons have aged now and find it difficult to get out in the evenings.
So, I wish Anthony would reconsider the lunch decision and maybe open for lunch from the week of Thanksgiving until Christmas. I think he would find it profitable to the business in many ways.
Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Obscene Commercials

Well, I thought Hardee's was the worst until I saw a Levi's ad on TBS a minute ago. It was so bad that I thought the channel had been scrambled or I had bumped the keypad to that moron, Dr. Ruth!
What are these advertisers thinking? An ad showing two young people taking off their clothes and pouncing on each other in bed is hardly "wholesome" advertising. Good grief, they ban alcohol and tobacco commercials, but they show this? (As if we haven't been inundated enough with the embarrassing ED commercials and feminine hygiene ones!)
This is 5:30 in the afternoon, when children are watching TV before dinner. I pity the parents trying to explain this one!

Integrated Thanksgiving Service

Before Thanksgiving, Mt. Carmel Baptist Church in Simsville, Alabama had its seventh annual community Thanksgiving service with our "sister" church, Mt. Carmel Missionary Baptist. What a remarkable idea and blessing this was, and what foresight from the leaders in our little church.
Last Thanksgiving, we had the service at the "black" church and our minister, Larry Layne, delivered the message. This year, we hosted the service, and Rev. Glover delivered the message. What a treat. This dear old man is now 85 and this was his third service that day. He had undergone 42 chemo treatments this year and yet was committed to carrying on this long-overdue tradition. I only wish that all of mankind could be as committed to being the Christian examples set by Rev. Larry Layne and Rev. Glover, as well as the membership of Mt. Carmel.
Sunday we learned that Larry Layne is resigning as pastor of our little church. Larry is a full-time Hospice Chaplain at Prattville Baptist, a Chaplain in the Air Guard, and has led our little flock for eight years. He is being deployed to Iraq in January as Wing Chaplain and will be away for four months. Last year, he was deployed to Landstuhl AFB in Germany.
I pray that we will continue to carry on this blessed tradition in our little community. We are all made in God's image and He was the Great Artist who painted each of us with a different brush, much like He did the flowers in the field. What an inspiration to put aside all our denominations, races and creeds and come before the throne of the Almighty and worship Him as the One God of us all and to be reminded forevermore that Heaven has no back door.
This is the holiest of seasons for Christians everywhere and I pray that in honor of these two men of God we commit ourselves to peace in our homes, our communities, our nation and the world. It all begins with each of us and if we all strived to live by the Golden Rule--Do unto others as you would have them do unto you--there would be no domestic violence, no crimes, and no wars. As the song says, "Let there be peace on earth, and let it begin with me."
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Location: Montgomery, Alabama, United States

I am a retired legal secretary and widow. I grew up in Midway, AL and graduated from Union Springs High School (now Bullock County High). I attended business school; went to Atlanta and lived there for 13 years; lived and worked in Silver Spring, Maryland for seven years. I have a daughter and two granddaughters, and am the middle child of five. Both parents are no longer living. My mother was quite a poet and my father was a self-taught musician and a very good one. My 30-year-old nephew, Bruce Evans, was killed in the line of duty with the Jackson County, MS Sheriff's Department on July 18, 2000, leaving a beautiful wife and two beautiful children, ages 8 and 5 1/2, so I suppose that pushes me to make my voice heard about crime and punishment.

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