Mar 22, 2007 | Music | Comments Off
Warning: Former Egyptians frontman Robyn Hitchcock is coming to town Friday, and he can steal your girlfriend if he wants. The guy does it all – singer, songwriter, guitarist, abstract artist, short-story writer and thespian. Hitchcock will be joined onstage at the Cat’s Cradle by the Venus 3: R.E.M.’s Peter Buck, the Young Fresh Fellows bassist Scott McCaughey and drummer Bill Rieflin of Ministry. The band – which, as Hitchcock points out, is also “3/4ths of the Minus 5 and half of R.E.M” – is on tour promoting its 2006 release, Ole Tarantula.
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Mar 22, 2007 | Music | 0 Comments »
The Moaners’ new release, Blackwing Yalobusha, is already gathering the group a splendid set of review as the duo, just back from a trip south that included Austin, New Orleans and Hattiesburg, get ready for their release party at Cat’s Cradle.
For the record, out this month on Yep Roc, guitarist Melissa Swingle and drummer Laura King traveled to the small house in Walter Valley, Mississippi where blues revival label Fat Possum once house its studios.
The sessions amid the ghosts in the heart of delta blues country were rockus as is the record that came out of them.
Mississippi Moan: The Making of Blackwing Yalobusha, a mini documentary of the trip south and the proceedings in the studio filmed by Yep Roc label chief Tor Hanson, is available on the Yep Roc site at http://yeproc.com/artist_info.php?artistId=958 or at The Moaners site at www.themoaners.com/
The release show for Blackwing Yalobusha is at Cat’s Cradle Saturday, March 31 at 9:30 p.m. Spider Bags and Un Deux Trois open. Tickets are $8.
Mar 22, 2007 | Opinion, Sports | Comments Off
By Frank Heath
Sports Columnist
If it’s mid-March and people around Carrboro aren’t thinking about basketball, something is wrong. But folks around this sleepy mill town are thinking about hoops, which can mean but one thing — the UNC men’s basketball team is still in the NCAA Tournament, so all is right.
This truth comes courtesy of what I’ve taken to referring to as the “Ty and Tyler Show,” named for Carolina’s sizzling inside-outside duo of Tywon Lawson and Tyler Hansbrough.
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Mar 22, 2007 | News | Comments Off
Most state Emergency Medicaid spending funds childbirth and pregnancy-related complications for uninsured women, emergency care for sudden-onset problems and end-stage complications of chronic conditions, says a new study from researchers at the university and the Carolinas Center for Medical Excellence.
According to the study, Emergency Medicaid spending, which represents about one percent of the state’s Medicaid budget, increased 28 percent, from $41.3 million in 2001 to $52.9 million in 2004. Emergency Medicaid reimburses hospitals for emergency care provided to patients who would otherwise qualify for Medicaid but are ineligible because federal law excludes undocumented and legal immigrants who have been in the U.S. for less than five years. According to the Government Accountability Office, states with high immigration rates have seen a rapid increase in Emergency Medicaid spending.
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Mar 22, 2007 | Opinion | Comments Off
It is entirely appropriate to take a moment or two out of March Madness to appreciate a frenzy of activity of a different kind.
Just a short drive out Jones Ferry, Old Greensboro, N.C. 54 or Mount Carmel, there are people hard at work nurturing seedlings, weeding through coldframes, getting crops in the field and preparing the land for another rotation.
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Mar 22, 2007 | Opinion | 0 Comments »
By Robert Dickson
Staff Writer
This is the column where I’m supposed to tell you that this isn’t my grandfather’s newspaper. He’s the gentleman you see in the photo accompanying this piece. He and my grandmother started a paper in Raeford, bought another one and merged them into The News-Journal in 1928.
The more I think about it, however, The Carrboro Citizen that I envision is just an updated version of The News-Journal of 79 years ago.
What community newspapers are supposed to do is keep up with the normal workings of a town. Sure, we’re going to cover the unusual and the sensational but we’re not going to create the news TV-style or twist some story into something it isn’t.
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Mar 22, 2007 | News | Comments Off
Well, nothing lasts forever. That’s essentially the message of a couple of upcoming local screenings — the “nothing forever” in question being the good life, as we’ve heretofore known it, here in the U.S. of A.
On Sunday, March 25, from 1:00 to 5:00, the Community Church of Chapel Hill Unitarian Universalist will be hosting a screening and discussion of What a Way to Go: Life at the End of Empire from Chatham County filmmakers Sally Erickson and Tim Bennett. This documentary examines our capacity for denial, and the urgency to confront that denial, as we relentlessly pursue this wholly unsustainable lifestyle, and as our physical world just keeps tumbling down. A discussion with Erickson and Bennett will follow.
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Mar 22, 2007 | News | 0 Comments »
Tests show powder sent to campaign not harmful
According to preliminary test results from the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services lab, white powder contained in a letter that arrived at John Edwards’ presidential campaign headquarters in Southern Village on March 14 was not harmful.
Edwards’ staff evacuated the building after a staff member opened the letter and white powder spilled out. The offices reopened on March 15 after preliminary tests on the powder revealed no chemical or biological agents.
The FBI is investigating the case.
Mar 22, 2007 | Celebrations | 0 Comments »

Blunden with N.C. State Energy Office Director Larry Shirley.
By Mary Beth Bardin
Staff Writer
Whether he’s riding his bike to work in rain or shine, advising councils on environmental issues or designing affordable co-housing communities, Giles Bluden is always thinking about sustainability.
That’s why on March 8, Blunden, president of Blunden Studio, a green architecture firm in Carrboro, received one of two N.C. Sustainable Energy Leadership Awards for Environmental Stewardship.
Larry Shirley, director of the North Carolina State Energy Office, presented Blunden with the award during a luncheon banquet at the N.C. Sustainable Energy Conference in Raleigh.
Mar 22, 2007 | News | Comments Off
The Orange County Board of Commissioners on March 13 postponed a vote on the site of the county’s future waste transfer station, requesting more information from solid waste director Gayle Wilson and County Manager Laura Blackmon.
The board is considering three transfer station sites, including two sites off U.S. 70 in the Eno Economic Development District along with the Eubanks Road landfill. The landfill will reach capacity in 2010. The county plans to set up the transfer station to transport its solid waste out of county.
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Mar 22, 2007 | Features | Comments Off
You hold in your hands the inaugural edition of The Carrboro Citizen. (You folks reading from afar on the Web, well, you’ll just have to imagine it.)
This is not the first newspaper based in Carrboro. Roland Giduz rang us up the other day to talk newspaper history and remind us that he had a little paper in the early 1950s based out of the building at 306 East Main Street where Surplus Syd’s is now located. His paper, the Chapel Hill News Leader’s motto was “Leading with the news of Chapel Hill, Carrboro and Glen Lennox.” The pressman did show up the first day with a zinc plate that said “Carrboro News” on it, Giduz said. But it wasn’t used.
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Mar 22, 2007 | News | Comments Off
The Carrboro Board of Aldermen set the date on a public hearing on proposed changes to the town’s land use ordinances that could ease the way forward for residential and mixed-use projects downtown.
The board is studying a revision that would swap requirements for open and recreational space for residential developments downtown for “urban amenities” like public art, plazas, fountains and greenspace.
The way the rules are written, all residential developments are required to set aside 40 percent of the total land used for open space and recreation amenities. The requirement has made it difficult for several downtown projects to move forward because the inclusion of residential units in the developments triggers the open space rule.
Mar 22, 2007 | Schools | Comments Off
Representatives from Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and Orange County Schools on Tuesday presented their capital funding needs to the Orange County Board of Commissioners.
Steve Scroggs, Chapel Hill-Carrboro superintendent of support services, projected that CHCCS will need $136 million over the next ten years to keep up with growth in the district. Orange County Schools superintendent Shirley Carraway presented a plan that estimates OCS will need $11 million over the same time period.
According to Scroggs, growth projections for Chapel Hill and Carrboro indicate that the district will need three new elementary schools, one new middle school and an addition to Carrboro High School in the next ten years.
Mar 22, 2007 | News | 0 Comments »
The Carrboro Board of Aldermen will open a public hearing Tuesday on plans for a six-month development moratorium on nearly 4,000 acres north of town.
The hearing is scheduled during the board’s regular meeting at Town Hall, which begins at 7:30 p.m. (Check www.carrborocitizen.com for exact times and details).
Mayor Mark Chilton said the moratorium is aimed at giving the town’s new advisory board for the area time to look at the pace and type of development in the area and work on changes to the town’s land use plan.
There are two things driving the moratorium effort, Chilton said Tuesday evening.
Mar 22, 2007 | Community | Comments Off
As the war on Iraq entered its fifth year this week, our community observed this somber occasion with several actions.
On Monday night, a vigil was held in front of the post office on Franklin Street. Carrboro Citizen photographer Isaac Sandlin was there. He tells us: “It was really quiet out there. The people keeping vigil were taking turns reading from a collection of personal accounts of soldiers who have been killed in the war, written by the people closest to them. Each account was followed by a moment of silence. The sound of passing cars often swallowed that of the reader. The silence was also occasionally broken by a honk of support or a scream of protest from passing vehicles.”
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