Celebrating Womenโ€™s History Month and the all-female surgical team at UNC Health Lenoir

Every March, Womenโ€™s History Month reminds us to pause and celebrate the women who have changed the world, especially those whoโ€™ve done it by healing others. Medicine hasnโ€™t always been an easy field for women to break into, but from the first female doctors in the 1800s to todayโ€™s surgical leaders, women have pushed through barriers with intelligence, compassion, and grit. 

Electric bills leave Kinston residents searching

Across Kinston, a troubling conversation continues to grow louder. It is happening in living rooms, church parking lots, grocery store aisles, and community meetings. The topic is the same everywhere: extremely high electric bills. Residents throughout the city are reporting utility bills that seem almost unbelievable. Some families say their monthly statements have reached $700, $1,000, and in some cases even $2,000. For many households, these amounts are not simply difficultโ€”they are devastating.

Obituary: Delmas Colton Head

Delmas Colton Head, 90, passed away peacefully on Monday, March 16, 2026, in Snow Hill, North Carolina, surrounded by his family. The family will receive friends from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday, March 18, 2026, at Seymour Funeral Home in Goldsboro. A private graveside service to celebrate his life will be held on Thursday, March 19, 2026, at Gurley Family Cemetery.

Evelyn Dove Coleman: Lean Back & Let Go

When I was young, my camp counselor at the Betsy-Jeff Penn 4-H Camp taught me how to relax into floating on my back in the swimming pool.  The body of water seemed so big to me then. I felt the need to control my little body in it. But the wise counselor taught me how to allow the water to support me.  And when I followed her advice, swimming became easy peasy.  She simply said to "Lean back and let go."

Hickory Grove Church (9)

Hickory Grove was organized as a Free Will Baptist (F.W.B.) congregation by 1841. Evidence suggests they met as a house church until their building was constructed around 1860. Although it continued as an F.W.B. work throughout the 1840s and 1850s, little is known about Hickory Grove during the 1860s.