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HIGH POINT CONFIDENTIAL: A beacon of darkness High Point scandal sheet covered the city's seamier side

HIGH POINT CONFIDENTIAL: A beacon of darkness High Point scandal sheet covered the city's seamier side

Yahoo19-04-2025

HIGH POINT
Long before America had the National Enquirer, High Point had The Beacon.
Most old-timers of a certain age in these parts remember — or have at least heard about — The Beacon, a titillating weekly tabloid of the 1940s and '50s that relished looking on the seedy side of life in High Point: Extramarital affairs. Sensational slayings. Crooked businessmen. Contentious divorces.
You get the idea.
'It was the local scandal sheet, but people sure read it,' the late Joe Brown, a former High Point Enterprise reporter and editor, once told The Enterprise for a story about The Beacon and its pseudo-journalistic exploits. 'People bought it on the street, but then they hid it under their coats when they went to work because nobody wanted to be seen with it.'
Of course, being seen with The Beacon wasn't nearly as bad as being seen in The Beacon. Imagine being the subject of one of these juicy stories:
'Wife Catches Hubby In Hotel Room With Girl.'
'Drunk Smacks Aged Mother In Face.'
'Husband Catches Man In Wife's Bedroom.'
'Well Known Local Man May Be Arrested For Carnal Knowledge.'
One particularly embarrassing front-page story in 1948 told of a local couple's separation — The Beacon actually published their names, though we won't do that here — in which the wife filed for divorce because her husband could not perform in the bedroom.
'Immediately after their marriage,' The Beacon wrote, quoting court records, 'the plaintiff discovered that her husband was entirely impotent and incapable of sexual relations or cohabitation.'
This is the same publication that published front-page photos of grisly crime scenes, including the brutal 1951 murder of Mary Hopkins and the 1942 murder of Thomasville police officer George Arnold Kemp, whose body was found at the bottom of an elevator shaft.
In other 'Hall of Shame' moments, The Beacon once wrote about a local middle-school music teacher having an affair with a prominent businessman; contacted a psychic about the 1954 mysterious disappearance of High Point waitress Veronica Cox; called Elvis Presley a 'champion hog caller'; told the story of a well-known High Pointer who impregnated a 15-year-old girl and then tried to get her to have an abortion; chronicled the journey of a man who had a sex-change operation in the early 1950s; featured the story of a young man who married a pretty High Point nurse, only to discover his bride was actually a man; and told the tale of 'Floggin' Flossie,' a paramour who, when confronted by her lover's angry wife, beat the woman senseless with an umbrella.
The Beacon was the brainchild of Wade Renfrow, a former Enterprise reporter who decided to launch his own newspaper ... if you can call it that.
A fearless scandalmonger — think Jerry Springer with an old, rickety typewriter — Renfrow tattled and titillated. Salacious stories not only peeked into couples' bedrooms but also routinely exposed philandering husbands who'd gotten caught with their pants down, sensationalized gory murders, overplayed incidents of domestic violence, scandalized interracial relationships, ridiculed drunkenness, and skewered mighty businessmen and holier-than-thou politicians.
Renfrow ran The Beacon from 1939 until 1952, attracting countless readers — and no doubt making countless enemies — with his reckless, no-holds-barred, tabloid-style journalism. He was sued — or threatened with legal action — on several occasions.
Copies of The Beacon sold for a nickel apiece, and the sales boys frequently sold out when the paper hit the streets on Thursday mornings. Just ask acclaimed journalist and author Jerry Bledsoe, who grew up in Thomasville and worked as a Beacon paperboy during the mid-1950s.
'It never took long to sell all the papers I was allowed to have,' Bledsoe told The Enterprise for an article in 2007. 'Easiest money I ever made as a kid.'
When Renfrow sold The Beacon in 1952, about a year before his death, the new owners vowed to change the paper's sullied reputation. For a time, they did just that, replacing the lurid copy with stories that were far less juicy and, frankly, far less interesting. It wasn't long, though, before more lascivious stories began to creep back onto the front page.
The owners tried one last time in January 1956, proclaiming in a front-page story, 'Beacon To Avoid Filth In Militant New Policy.' Adultery, divorce proceedings, illegitimacy and other scandalous topics would become taboo, the article stated.
Alas, that announcement may have sounded The Beacon's death knell. Within a year, the paper folded. Today, it's but a memory for those old enough to remember one of the most colorful chapters of High Point history.

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Opioid overdose deaths drop in Missouri, but rural areas fight stigmas, barriers to care
Opioid overdose deaths drop in Missouri, but rural areas fight stigmas, barriers to care

Yahoo

time04-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Opioid overdose deaths drop in Missouri, but rural areas fight stigmas, barriers to care

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This article first appeared on Beacon: Missouri and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

A year ago, Trump was convicted of 34 felonies. What happened at the trial?
A year ago, Trump was convicted of 34 felonies. What happened at the trial?

Yahoo

time30-05-2025

  • Yahoo

A year ago, Trump was convicted of 34 felonies. What happened at the trial?

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Santoyo running for Kane County sheriff, says focus is on mental health, police cooperation and cultural immersion
Santoyo running for Kane County sheriff, says focus is on mental health, police cooperation and cultural immersion

Chicago Tribune

time09-05-2025

  • Chicago Tribune

Santoyo running for Kane County sheriff, says focus is on mental health, police cooperation and cultural immersion

Luis 'Lou' Santoyo, an Elburn village trustee, recently announced his bid for Kane County sheriff in 2026. So far in the race, Santoyo, a Republican, is running as are two Democratic candidates, current county Undersheriff Amy Johnson and former Kane County Sheriff's Office employee Salvador Rodriguez. Santoyo, who was born in Mexico and grew up in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago, said an experience as a child seeing a man shot informed his decision to pursue law enforcement as a career. 'i kind of made a promise to myself somewhere along the line … I want to be in a position where I can actually stand in the gap for other people who can't defend themselves,' Santoyo told The Beacon-News on Thursday. He started his career working in the Cook County Jail, he said, then worked as a police officer and detective in the Cook County Sheriff's Department. Afterwards, he worked part-time in the Elburn Police Department, while also teaching middle school and later high school students, he said. According to his website, he investigated crimes like child exploitation and gang violence as a detective and worked as a forensic artist, hostage negotiator and dignitary protection specialist. He has also worked with immigrant and underserved communities, he said. In 2023, he was elected an Elburn village trustee. Santoyo, who said he previously voted for incumbent Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain, said he'd considered running for sheriff for some time, but with Hain stepping down saw an opening to run for the job in 2026. He filed his statement of organization with the Illinois State Board of Elections on April 16. Santoyo, who — unlike the two other candidates in the race so far — has no direct experience working in the Kane County Sheriff's Office, said he hopes to 'shake up the paradigm a little bit' in the office. He noted, for example, concerns about how the sheriff's office and local municipalities' police departments work together, noting the high-profile public dispute between the sheriff's office and Aurora Police Department over the 2023 officer-involved shooting of James Moriarty. Santoyo said he plans to foster more communication and collaboration if he's elected sheriff. Another one of his policy ideas, he said, is to partner with mental health experts and institutions to support police training and activities — for example, having a mental health expert present at interviews or interrogations, in advance of a case going to court. Should he be elected, he said he'd also foster stronger relationships with educational institutions in the county, and focus on what he calls 'cultural immersion.' Santoyo said he believes there's a relationship between a 'misunderstanding of cultures' and racial profiling, and suggested the sheriff's office could create educational opportunities for officers on the demographics and beliefs of residents of the county. 'I'm really focusing more on the word 'serve' rather than 'protect,'' Santoyo said Thursday, referring to the popular motto adopted by many police departments. 'Because we already know how to protect, and we're good at it.' As for the race itself, Santoyo, who describes himself as a 'moderate Republican,' said he sees the role of sheriff as a nonpartisan one and wants to serve the community 'even-handedly.' He said he'd prioritize compliance with both state and federal law when it comes to immigration enforcement. 'I can't in good faith come and say that I'm a far-right guy and shut the door to people's needs who are on the other side,' Santoyo said on Thursday. 'They can call me a RINO (Republican in name only). They can call me whatever.' The mid-term elections, which include the Kane County sheriff seat, will take place on Nov. 3, 2026, with the primary next April.

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