https://www.upandcomingweekly.com/


  • I’m a musician and am curious about what the guitar industry is doing to ensure that the wood it uses is not destroying forests.            
             — Chris Wiedemann, Ronkonkoma, NY

      Though it has not received a lot of press to date, the industry is on the case—in part for the sake of its own survival, and thanks to the hard work of a handful of green groups, guitar makers and wood suppliers.
      {mosimage}In 1996, Gibson, one of the world’s premier guitar brands, became the first in the industry to make some of its instruments using wood certified as “sustainably harvested” by the nonprofit Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). By 2006, some 42 percent of the wood purchased by the company for its Gibson USA electric guitars came from FSC-certified sources. By 2012, Gibson expects to increase that to 80 percent.
      Gibson isn’t the only instrument maker greening up its footprint: Taylor, Fender, Martin, Guild, Walden and Yamaha, along with Gibson, have signed on as partners with the Music Wood Coalition, a project of the leading environmental non-profit Greenpeace. The coalition, which is also made up of a half-dozen tonewood suppliers, hopes its efforts will protect threatened forest habitats and safeguard the future of trees critical in manufacturing instruments of all kinds. Eco-advocates and guitar makers alike fear that the spruce, maple, mahogany, ebony and rosewood trees that have been the foundation of the wooden instrument industry for years are being cut down faster than they can be replaced.

      The coalition’s initial focus is on halting the aggressive deforestation going on in Southeast Alaska. Greenpeace has been in talks with Sealaska Timber Corporation, one of the biggest logging operations in Alaska, to get 190,000 acres of the company’s privately owned Southeast Alaska timberland — a prime source of Sitka spruce, a wood coveted by instrument makers for its use in guitar soundboards — certified by FSC. Greenpeace Forest Campaign Coordinator Scott Paul views getting these forestlands certified as an important win-win opportunity for Sealaska, which wants to maintain a viable income stream, and for instrument makers who need a dependable source of resonant, durable and beautiful woods.
      “These [private] lands are going to be logged,” says Paul. But with FSC oversight, he says, the forests can be managed sustainably. And the process is already underway, with the first part of the two-step certification process already completed. “Our goal is to create a demand…for FSC certified ‘good wood’ as the only acceptable music wood from the North American coastal temperate rainforest,” adds Paul.
      Guitar makers know that the woods they’ve used for years might not continue to be had at the quantities and low prices they’re used to, but they are willing to adapt: “Alternative woods are the key to successful guitars,” says Bob Taylor of Taylor Guitars, which has been a pioneer in the use of exotic and sustainably harvested tonewoods in their high quality acoustic guitars. “But the market needs to go there all together.”
      Tradition is a huge driving force, agrees Paul. “Players expect a spruce soundboard, a mahogany neck, an ebony or rosewood bridge.” There needs to be a leap of faith in changing markets, he says, where people are becoming more environmentally conscious.
      CONTACTS: Gibson USA, www.gibson.com; Forest Stewardship Council, www.fscus.org; Greenpeace Music Wood Coalition, www.musicwood.org; Taylor Guitars, www.taylorguitars.com.
      GOT AN ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTION? Send it to: EarthTalk, c/o E/The Environmental Magazine, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; submit it at: www.emagazine.com/earthtalk/thisweek/, or e-mail: earthtalk@emagazine.com. archives.php.


  •   How many times in the past two years have you heard it proclaimed that roller derby is back in Fayetteville? Now add it once more to your list. The ladies of Rogue Rollergirls want you to know that there is more to us than meets the eye. We have put together a season of flat track roller derby that will have you clinging to your seats at the start of every jam. Come prepared to shout and cheer as your favorite skaters battle with competition from around the East Coast.
      {mosimage}Check our schedule for the latest dates for upcoming bouts. Our next home contest is March 29 as the Rogue Rollergirls take on the Columbia Quad Squad from South Carolina. The Quad Squad, spurred on by last year’s loss, returns to avenge its good name. Cheer Rogue to victory as the girls protect their undefeated home title. 
     Come back for more on May 10 and watch Fayetteville’s home teams, the Black Mambas and  Cherry Belles, wage war on the track. On June 7, it’s the Richland Regulators from South Carolina ready for a showdown with the Rogue Rollergirls. 
      Tickets are available online at etix.com or visit Edward McKay’s on Bragg Boulevard. Ed McKay’s now carries Rogue Merchandise!
      Still haven’t gotten your fill? What is this thing called roller derby that is sweeping the nation?  Rogue’s very own Rachel Sumja, aka Bull Lee, first introduced roller derby to Fayetteville back in 2006 and never looked back. Want to know more about the women of derby? Find out more in the Rogue Report where we will feature skaters, refs, and coaches. Learn how the game is played. See skaters in action on the track. 
      Think this game is for you?  Want to know how to get involved?  Walk or roll on down to the next Rogue practice at Round-A-Bout, 880 Elm St., on Thursdays, 7:30-9:30 p.m. and on Sundays, 10 a.m. to noon  Make sure you look for the Rogue Report for all things roller derby.
  • BAZAAR AND BAKE SALE

      The Sharing Hearts Ministry of Mt. Carmel Church will have its Spring Bazaar and Bake Sale on March 14 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Mt. Carmel Church to benefit Women’s Ministries and the ministries it supports.
      There will be a variety of vendors at the event, which, among other groups will be raising money for CORA’S — Community Out-Reach Services. CORA’S is the vision of Lynda Branch, who formed the nonprofit to help the members of the community in the following areas:
      •Career and Financial Planning
      •Computer Training
      •Drug and Alcohol Program
      •Youth Orientation Ministry
      •Post Abortion Counseling
      •GED Classes
      •Abstinence Program
      •Pregnancy Testing
      •Parental Relationships
      •Prenatal Care
      “Pastor Wiley Hughes has been a Godsend for us,” said Branch. “I don’t know if we could function without what he and Mt. Carmel have done for us financially.”
    Renee Gibbs, director of Women’s Ministry, says CORA’S is just one of the many organization the church helps.
      “Pastor Wiley is very cognizant of the needs of the community,” said Gibbs. “He is very giving.”
      For more information about the Spring Bazaar and Bake Sale, call Gibbs at 257-5109 or check out the church’s Web site, www.mountcarmelchurch.net.

    FAYETTEVILLE GETS TREE CITY AWARD FOR SEVENTH YEAR

      The city of Fayetteville has been named a Tree City USA for the seventh year by the Arbor Day Foundation. The award recognizes cities nationally for their commitment to community forestry.
      Municipalities must meet four standards to gain the distinction: having a tree board or department, a tree care ordinance, a comprehensive community forestry program and an Arbor Day observance and proclamation. The city met the criteria by having members of the Joint Appearance Committee serve on a tree board, enforcing a tree ordinance for public land and by Parks & Recreation staff planting, pruning, irrigating and fertilizing trees. Parks and Recreation also selects the trees, making sure they grow well in Fayetteville. Mayor Chavonne presented a proclamation for Arbor Day and there were tree plantings at Cape Fear Botanical Garden and five schools.
      “A community, its elected officials and its citizens that provide needed care for its trees deserves recognition and thanks,” said John Rosenow, chief executive of the Arbor Day Foundation. “Trees are a vital component of the infrastructure in our cities and towns, and they also provide environmental and economical benefits. Cities that are recognized with a Tree City USA designation go to great lengths to plant and care for the community forest.”
      Chavonne said the award shows the city’s continued commitment to the environment.
      “In winning this award for the seventh straight year, the city has proven that we are dedicated to our goal of a more attractive city,” he said. “Being a green city helps our environment and affects our economic development and appearance in so many positive ways. This Tree City USA award is further inspiration to our community that we are making strides and that those efforts do make a difference.”

  •   In April 2008, the Cape Fear Regional Theatre staged a Southern tour d’force, as Good ‘Ol Girls hit the stage. The play, written by Jill McCorkle and Lee Smith, brought rave reviews from local audiences and drew the attention of UNC-TV.
      On Friday, March 6, the CFRT will host a red carpet premier of the play, which UNC-TV filmed. The television broadcast of the play is scheduled for April 22.
    The premier party is open to the public, and will feature a wine tasting and hors d’oeuvres from 6:30-8 p.m., with a screening of the production at 8 p.m. The authors will be on hand to celebrate this important event in the life of the theatre.
      {mosimage}The musical’s title tells you what the play is all about. To quote the play, good ‘ol girls “know that big hair and a big heart do not mean a small mind.” They also love to go to Myrtle Beach with the girls and have been saved more than once.
      The show, which featured Pamela Bob, Kendra Goehring, Libby Seymour, Gina Stewart, Cassandra Vallery and Liza Vann, tells the story of a group of Southern women from birth to the grave. It’s told in vignettes, with music interspersed throughout.
      According to Bo Thorp, the artistic director of the theatre, “This is a play about women. It tackles women’s issues at various times in their lives — particulalry Good ‘Ol Girls who you can find anywhere in the South.”
      The stories were written by Smith and McCorkle, and most of them are rooted in reality. Many of these vignettes were written before the two first ladies of Southern literature collaborated on the play.
      Smith and McCorkle are both noted N.C. authors. Smith and McCorkle have a passion for storytelling. The kind of laugh-out-loud storytelling that is rooted in the uniqueness of the South.
      The songs were written by Marshall Chapman and Matraca Berg, both noted songwriters.
      Officials from UNC-TV were intrigued when they heard about the play and made a visit to the theatre to see the play on stage. They were won over, and brought a film crew in to film the play before it closed.
      What the rest of the state will see on television, many local residents saw first hand, and to celebrate the achievement, the theatre hopes they’ll return for the premier.
      Tickets for the premier party are $30, and can be purchased by calling the CFRT box office at  (910) 323-4233. 
  •   The Gilbert Theater presents On the Verge — a tale of exploration of time, place and space — starting March 19 and running through April 5.
      The play is written by Eric Overmyer, directed and designed by Paul Wilson; Elysa Lenczyk is in charge of stage management.
      “The basic plot features three Victorian era ladies who set out to explore terra incognita,” said Wilson. “This word is Latin and means unknown land.”
    Wilson added that they are not really exploring space: they are exploring the future, circa the 1950s.         
      {mosimage}The cast includes Caroline DePew, Sharyn Beal, Sandra Epperson and Paul Woolverton. DePew plays Alex, who is the youngest of the group. She experiences momentary flashes of insight from the future and loves to play with language. In the ‘50s she becomes a rock ‘n’ roll songwriter and dabbles in writing Burma-Shave jingles.
    Woolverton plays Alphonse, Grover, the Gorge Troll, the Yeti, Gus, Madame Nhu, Mr. Coffee and Nicky Paradise — these are the human landmarks the women run into on their journey to the future. Beal plays Fanny, who is the middle member of the team. She is the most conservative and middle-class but, like Alex, she also blossoms in the ‘50s. The path that she chooses is more of a Father Knows Best kind of existence.
      Epperson plays Mary, who is the oldest of the three women. She is the most adventurous and the only one who does not choose to remain frozen in the popular culture of the ‘50s. 
      The Gilbert, founded in 1994 by Lynn Pryer, is a community theater located in the heart of historic downtown Fayetteville. Its mission is to give local artists, actors and musicians a place and an opportunity to showcase their talents. The theater has produced more than 80 contemporary and classical theatrical productions. Some of their diverse projects and productions entail the creation of a standing company of Commedia dell’Arte (a form of improvisational theater started in 15th-century Italy) actors, a children’s puppet show, a special performance for a blind audience, staged readings, workshops on theater production, a statewide playwriting competition, recognition of new writers and the production of plays. The theater has incorporated a student review night that consists of high school students meeting the director and the cast. A concerted effort is made to involve students on and off the stage. Accolades include Best Performance/Play in Up & Coming Weekly’s 2008 Best of Fayetteville issue , as well as being featured in Our State Magazine in February, 2007 and featured in the PBS show North Carolina Weekend.          
      The ticket cost for On the Verge is $10. Reservations are highly recommended. For more information call 678-7186.

    Contact Shanessa Fenner at editor@upandcomingweekly.com

  •   Looking to get your Scotch on?
      If you’re of Scottish descent, love all things Scottish, or simply enjoy tartan and bagpipes, then the Charles Bascombe Shaw Memorial Scottish Heritage Symposium is for you.
      The event will be held March 20-22 at St. Andrews Presbyterian College, with a special “Kirkin of the Tartans Worship Service” at Laurinburg Presbyterian Church.
      The event includes world-renowned lecturers from around the world speaking on all things Scottish, as well as internationally known musical performers, such as award-winning songstress Isla St. Clair.
      Though held in the appropriately named Scotland County, the event has Cumberland County roots. It started in 1989 as a celebration of the coming of the first Highland Scots to this region and was initially organized by the Museum of the Cape Fear. After five years it was discontinued and the event was taken over by the staff of St. Andrews, among whom was Bill Caudill, who was on the original Scottish Heritage steering committee and who now teaches, among other things, a bagpipe course at St. Andrews.
      “It’s really just taken off as an event,” said Caudill. “It’s a chance for local folks to get in touch with their Scottish roots. I really don’t think people understand the influence the Scots who emigrated to this area have had on the culture. You can even see it in the architecture.”
      The event will kick off on March 20, 11 a.m., with a ribbon cutting for the relocated Scottish Heritage Center, followed shortly by registration. Highlights for the rest of the day include lectures by Scottish professors and intellectuals, followed by a reception at the William Henry Belk College Center. The day will finish up with the Scottish Heritage Awards Banquet at the William Henry Belk College Center at 7 p.m.
      The fun continues on Saturday with late registration from 9-9:30 a.m., followed by a presentation called “Bagpipes in the Movies” by Patrick King from 9:30-10:30 a.m.
      Events scheduled for the rest of the day include:
      •Early Scottish Farmsteads in the Eastern Carolinas, Bridget O’Brein;
      •The Songs of Scotland, Isla St. Clair;
      •Local Resources for Global Communities, Eleanore Harris;
      •Panel discussion and questions.
      Saturday finishes up with a concert at 7:30 p.m. featuring the prize-winning St. Andrews Presbyterian College Pipe Band with Isla St. Clair.
      On Sunday, the Kirkin of the Tartans Worship Service will kick off at 11 a.m. at Laurinburg Presbyterian Church.
      For more information, call Tim Van Hooser at (910) 277-5258. Also, you can check out the Web site www.sapc.edu for additional information.

     

  •   The Jack Britt High School district is experiencing growing pains; if current predictions come true, those pains will worsen significantly in the near future. 
    BRAC, the Base Closure and Realignment process at Fort Bragg, will bring approximately 40,000 people to the area by the relocation deadline of Aug. 15, 2011. This number includes U.S. Forces Command, U.S. Army Reserve Command, civilian employees, contractors and their families.
      It is the family component that has officials with Cumberland County Schools concerned. According to local officials, both elementary schools in the Jack Britt district (Stoney Point Elementary and E.M. Honeycutt Elementary), the middle school (John Griffin Middle School) and Jack Britt itself are already operating beyond capacity. Estimates project 6,000 new students in the western part of the county by 2013. While all those children won’t be enrolling in the Britt district, these traditionally high-performing schools and the availability of new housing in the western portion of the county is very attractive for families moving to the area. Honeycutt and Stoney Point have high End of Grade scores; John Griffin’s successes have designated it as a National School to Watch; and Britt has a recent principal of the year, high test scores and the acclaimed Academy of Integrated Technology.
      Dana Faircloth, a realtor with Remax Premiere Properties, says computer-savvy parents research which communities offer a reasonable commute to Fort Bragg; she says they also look at school report cards as well as awards received — items that make Britt attractive to prospective new residents.
      “When I do a listing the first thing I write is Jack Britt school district,” said Faircloth. “It’s what my clients are looking for.” 
      She says location is the backbone of her business and her clients see a variety of affordable housing in the district — both apartments and homes.
      John Griffin Middle School opened 10 years ago with 750 students and currently has nearly 1,400, making it roughly the same size as Southview High School. Mike Mangum, the principal at Griffin Middle School, says he uses varying schedules (both block and standard), utilizes every inch of space (including six new huts) and stringent hallway regulations to maintain the school’s high level of performance. Mangum said he believes the district can meet the coming challenges successfully as long as funding is available to build new schools.
     {mosimage} “The only way this will become a problem is if we can’t build new schools,” said Mangum. “Unless you’re in the hallways during class changes you can’t tell we have 1,400 students here.”
      Conrad Lopes, the Jack Britt principal, is also convinced his school can handle the coming population surge if new schools are built and the county maintains a dialogue with the military to ascertain that changes in the community to assist old and new residents alike.
      “We have a unit with six new classrooms so we don’t have overcrowding yet.,” said Lopes. “The central office does such a great job I don’t forsee this as a problem.”
    Cumberland County Commissioner Breeden Blackwell said it’s still a guessing game as to how much money the school system will need to handle the influx of students.     He said he anticipates the federal government “will surely send money, we just don’t know how much or how it will be allocated.” 
      Blackwell said that the commissioners are aware of the overcrowding situation in the Jack Britt district and realizes it district faces challenges because it has “very attractive, high performing schools.”
      Blackwell said meeting the educational difficulties is only one of the problems the western portion of the county will face, as the expected growth brings with it worries about roads, water, sewers and development standards.
      “Frankly, everybody is in a little quandary,” said Blackwell.
      However Blackwell says he is certain that, “BRAC is going to be a blessing for our community and there is no downside if we get the money to make it work.”


  •   “When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.”
      Thus spake the late great Hunter S. Thompson. Thompson could have been passing out a prescription for how to survive the Great Recession we are currently enjoying. Times are weird — face-eating chimpanzees, lawsuits over Geronimo’s skull, and zombie banks stalk the length and breadth of the Homeland. It’s time to turn pro. Oddities are oozing out of the woodwork everywhere you look. As the economy melts down, there is little relief in sight. Like the sailor who killed the albatross in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Rime of the Ancient Mariner, the wizards of Wall Street and the barons of big banking have killed the Ponzi scheme that was America’s financial shell game.
     We are stuck in a frozen financial system like the Ancient Mariner’s ship was driven into the Antarctic ice. Ponder what the glittering eyed Ancient Mariner said about his stranded vessel and compare it to the nightly financial news: “Water, water, everywhere/ And all the boards did shrink/Water, water, everywhere/Nor any drop to drink.” You still have your shares of stock. You still get a 401(k) statement but the shares don’t have drinkability like the Beer ad promises. Like Gershwin’s song says, “I got plenty of nothing/And nothing’s plenty for me/I got no car/got no mule/got no misery.”
      So in the midst of the Great Recession we need diversions. The weirder the better, to distract us from the troubles. The Titanic has already sunk so we can’t rearrange its deck chairs but we can admire the weirdness that is exploding across the fruited plain. Let us consider some of the more unusual events of recent history.
      We’ve all heard of the untimely end of Travis, the 200-pound chimp who lived the abundant life with his human companion Sandra Herold in New York City. Travis and Sandra were quite the item. They bathed together, drank wine together and slept in the same bed. Life was great for the Simian and the Simpleton until that fateful day when a visitor came to see Sandra. Travis went ape and attacked the visitor putting her into the hospital with life-threatening injuries. Travis was dispatched to primate posterity by the New York Police Department.
      {mosimage}How about the colorful, privileged lads of the secret Skull & Bones fraternity at Yale? The Skull and Boneheads are made up of affluent folks who went on to be presidents, senators, and wizards of Wall Street. Descendants of Geronimo recently sued the Boneheads and various government agencies alleging that the Boneheads were hiding Geronimo’s skull in their secret clubhouse in New Haven, Conn. The suit alleges that Prescott Bush stole Geronimo’s skull and some of his bones from his burial place in Fort Sill, Okla., back in 1918. Prescott Bush was the father of President George H. Bush and grandfather of President George W. Bush. The Bonehead dudes are alleged to be keeping Geronimo’s skull in a glass case to use in their double secret initiation rites. Bonehead pledges are supposed to have to kiss Geronimo’s skull to join the club. How would you feel if your grandfather’s skull was being kissed by drunken frat boys? Grave robbing is frowned upon unless you’re really rich and socially well-connected. Geronimo’s descendants want their granddaddy back and buried in one piece. It will be interesting to see if the Boneheads plead adverse possession of Geronimo’s skull in an effort to keep it for future fraternity frolics.
      In keeping with the spirit of zombie banks, consider a recent literary offering: Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice has been revised and updated. Her book has been rewritten with the same characters but to spice things up, zombies have been added to the plot. The new book is now titled Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. The publisher proudly announced the new book has “all new scenes of bone-crunching zombie mayhem.” I choke up when I think how far America is ahead of the rest of the world in utilizing our greatest underutilized resource, the undead. Global warming can be cured by the low carbon footprint of zombies.
      If we can recycle zombies into classic works of literature, it is only a matter of time before the Great Recession joins the undead. Joy will reign once again in Mudville when the Great Recession strikes out.

    Contact Pitt Dickey at editor@upandcomingweekly.com

  •   Many of us of a certain age have had that arresting and unsettling experience of catching an unexpected glimpse of ourselves in a mirror and thinking, “Oh, my word! Who is that old person?!”  We are invariably stunned when we realize, “C’est moi!”
      This must be a universal experience for human beings since someone figured out who that image in the still water really was.  But my generation, the huge, aging bump in the demographic snake known as the Baby Boomers, is fighting back. Apparently, many of us intend to keep going just like we always have despite all evidence to the contrary.
     {mosimage} I need to come clean on this. I have attended every yoga class I could for a decade.  Nowadays, three mornings a week, on a good week, I also go to the gym at 6 a.m. and beat it out on a treadmill and then do all manner of ab crunches and weightlifting exercises, hoping to have Michelle Obama arms even before I ever saw hers. All of this is presided over by a couple of hard body retired military physical fitness trainers who have a vague yet kind tolerance for civilian softies, known to enjoy a glass of wine, a good meal, and napping in a cozy recliner.
      In the bicycle room next door, we can hear the instructor yelling above thumping recorded music, exhorting her class of sleepy spinners to go faster, faster, faster.
    It seems that we Baby Boomers do not plan to age, much less depart this world.
      The New York Times, our national observer of popular culture, is all over this one. In an article last month, Michael Winerip chronicles boomers who are enthusiastically opting for replacement parts — knees, hips, shoulders — in lieu of the ones they have worn out. They seem to feel this is the normal course, not all that different from replacing tread-bare tires or repairing a leaky roof.
      Just another bump in the road on the path of life.
      Winerip’s article is fascinating to this baby boomer. He recounts several of my generation who watched their parents live what we might think of as couch potato lives and die in their 60s and 70s. These boomers came of age exercising and are bound and determined to keep it up as if they were still playing high school football or jumping up and down on the sidelines. As evidence, Winerip cites the rise of knee and hip replacements among the 45-64 age group, surgeries that were once postponed until the joint sufferer could stand it no longer. What’s more, some of us boomers are undergoing multiple surgeries to keep us, literally, in the game. Winerip describes this recent phenomenon as “pushing the frontiers of orthopedic medicine,” and he provides this example.
      “Dr. Stephen J. O’Brien, an orthopedic surgeon, had his patient, Jay MacDonald, 52, lie on the examining table and bend his right knee back toward his chest to test for flexibility …  After replacement surgery on one knee, arthroscopic surgery for torn A.C.L.’s in both knees (skiing, running, tennis), rotator cuff surgery … (surfing, golfing, snow boarding) and an assortment of minor catastrophes (‘the last was a freak — I popped a tendon — doing curls in the gym’), Mr. MacDonald, like a lot of other men his age, has become one of the world’s leading experts on why he keeps breaking down and how he puts himself back together.
      “A few years ago, when his right shoulder went (snow boarding in Vail), he begged Dr. O’Brien to operate. The doctor resisted, telling his patient his injury was so severe that the risk of failure was high.
      “I said, ‘You have to,’” Mr. MacDonald recalled. ‘I want my life back. I want to surf — I’ve been surfing since I was 8. I do big waves — 16 footers. I can’t stop just because of a rotator cuff.’”
      I have tried, completely without success, to imagine my father or any of his friends saying that, although I can imagine several friends of my own generation uttering similar words. Mine is apparently the first generation to widely adopt the concept of exercise as a route to good health and longevity, and science confirms that, generally speaking, we are correct. Exercise does lead to better health and increased happiness for many people, and we are all getting ready to find out about the longevity part.
      The Times article, nevertheless, did make me wonder about too much of a good thing. I know, and you probably do as well, that while I am making a concerted effort to exercise and eat correctly, even though I do fall off the good health wagon with regularity, nothing works as well as it did when I was 15, 20, 30, or even 40. Like me, you may also question whether any amount of surgery can bring us back to where we were in the bloom of our youth.
      I wish Mr. MacDonald and others all the best in their quests for eternal flexibility. As for me, I am just delighted to be here at all.

      Contact Margaret Dickson at editor@upandcomingweekly.com

  • MARCHING ORDERS FOR MONTH OF THE MILITARY CHILD

    Dear Editor:
      April is the Month of the Military Child and together, we can create an engaged community!
      Many of you have expressed interest in developing a program that can be modeled every April. April is a great month to live in Fayetteville: students will be on spring break the second week in April and the Dogwood Festival is in April. April is also Child Abuse Awareness Month. After the “Living in the New Normal” public engagement held last October, we have reconvened as a community and are actively listening to the requests of our stakeholders.
      Here are some ideas for the Month of the Military Child:
      •Proclamations from the city, county, school board and the state declaring April as the Month of the Military Child;
      •Military Child Appreciation at various locations;
      •School-sponsored programs in the elementary and secondary schools;
      •Military student art/Ppetry contests;
      •Local businesses acknowledging Month of the Military Child on signs and marquees;
      •I really like the idea of a military family bike ride through downtown.
      Of course, many other ideas will emerge and will be welcomed.
      I can continue to  coordinating the Month of the Military Child efforts, with your support.
    Shannon Shurko,
    Military Child Support Liaison,
    Cumberland County Schools

    ON MOVIE REVIEWS AND THE GATES FOUR ANNEXATION

    Dear Editor:
     Heather Griffith’s movie reviews really don’t get it, man. I was OK on a few but when she downplayed Taken, she blew it. That is one movie that deserves more than three stars.
      Also, the subject of annexing Gates Four needs your attention. I don’t care if Tony Rand lives there or not. Gates Four should be annexed and the longer Fayetteville plays around, the stronger they become. Even though they think different, they are no different than anyone else. No one else has been given the time like Gates Four. Who are they afraid of? I think (Up & Coming Weekly publisher) Bill Bowman should write on this. Think of the tax dollars we are losing. If they annexed Gates Four, maybe they wouldn’t have to raise taxes for everyone else.
    Joe Sulich,
    Fayetteville

  •   Wow. Only in Cumberland County can something so simple, fun and delightful like our county fair become the center of confusion, deception and controversy. Well, this is the case in the recent development involving the Cumberland County Fair and local county resident Robert E. Lee of Linden.
      The question at hand is not only: Who is going to manage and present the 2009 Cumberland County Fair? But, who actually owns the name? For 11 years the Cumberland County Fair has grown, prospered and developed into a much-anticipated annual event attended and enjoyed by tens of thousands of county and area residents. So why then is our County Attorney Grainger Barrett having to rally the troops to protect and defend this event from what looks like a community hijacking? Hmmmmm?
      {mosimage}Here is what we know: After the Cumberland Civic Center commission terminated the contract of Hubert Bullard, the former fair manager of 11 years, Robert E. Lee, current retiree and former failed Jaycee Fair promoter of the ‘90s, presented a proposal to the Civic Center Commission to manage the upcoming 2009 CC Fair.
    His platform being that the county should do more business locally. This can only mean that Lee represents a business he wants to bring in, but has never surfaced in any public forum.
      His proposal was rejected and the commission decided to stay with its existing fair contractor J&J Amusements, of Canton, Ohio. (As a side note J&J has hired Bullard as a contractor to help oversee the fair — is this what the commission wanted? We’ll see.)
      After the rejection, Robert E. Lee laid claim to and incorporated the name Cumberland County Fair. He started quietly promoting his own county fair, although he would not say what it was going to be called or where it was going to be held when contacted by our staff. However, we did find out it would be presented in the fall about one week before the traditional date of the county fair. As a result of this, both Cumberland County and Lee have lawyered up. County Attorney Grainger Barrett crying “foul” on behalf of the county’s citizens and asking that Lee “cease and desist,” claiming that the event belongs to Cumberland County. In the meantime. Andy Dempster, Lee’s attorney, is trying to negotiate a compromise.
      Compromise? The question I have is what “compromise?” From where I sit, the 11-year history of the Cumberland County Fair speaks for itself. Under the leadership and supervision of the Civic Center Commission and the direct management of Hubert Bullard, the fair has prospered to become a venue tens of thousands of residents have come to love and enjoy. Why, would anyone, for any reason, want to interfere with that?
      Sorry, Mr. Lee. Cumberland County has come a long way since 1992 when you ran the Cape Fair Regional Fair for the Jaycees. Had that fair been successful a CC Fair would never have been needed. Creating a competing fair venue under any name or in any location will only confuse the marketplace and can only be interpreted as a hostile and vindictive gesture by someone out of touch with the dynamics of this growing community. Local leadership is working overtime to create a higher standard of living for its residents and a better, brighter image of the Fayetteville/Cumberland community. It’s unfortunate, that in this economy and with all the other pressing issues facing our county today, our commissioners, county manager and officials are forced to address and defend this action. This kind of frivolous shenanigan is right out of the ‘90s, Mr. Lee. Cumberland County has moved on and I hope you will too. Let bygones be bygones and let’s move forward with what is really FAIR about the FAIR.


  •   My boyfriend of five years has severe anger and money issues. I constantly helped him out financially, professionally, and personally. If I refused there’d be a fight. Still, I love him dearly because he’s a good guy. He’s always said I’m “the one”; that every other woman has left him, but he wanted to grow old with me. Two months ago, he left me, but came back a week later, teary, saying we’d go to therapy. The therapist said he had Attention Deficit Disorder, and once he got on medication many of our problems would be resolved. A week later, things were great until he said he didn’t love me and left again. He’s flying to Peru to see a girl he dated 15 years ago, and hoping to propose. He called her his true love, and hurt me more by saying he’d “wasted” five years with me. But, I know this fling won’t last. I still truly love him, and I hate seeing our relationship going down the drain like this! — Distraught

      {mosimage}You note that every other woman has left him, like it’s some accomplishment that you’re still there. Sorry, but “Woman survives on barely any dignity for five straight years” isn’t quite on par with “Woman trapped in car for five days stays alive by drinking her own urine and eating the headrest.”
      You spin what you had with him as some great love story, and that’s not totally off. Your denial of reality is right out of “Titanic” -- the scene where DiCaprio’s character is about to freeze to death in the North Atlantic, but first manages to mutter, “I don’t know about you, but I intend on writing a strongly worded letter to the White Star Line about all of this.” Next, you claim he’s “a good guy.” How so? When he’s screaming and maybe even throwing things at you, does he stop for a moment to write a check to the American Cancer Society?
      Of course, you were never “the one,” just the one who paid his VISA bill. And guess what: He hates you for it  and probably hated himself for needing you too much to ditch you. You weren’t his girlfriend; you were his caseworker. You don’t love him; you enable him. And, you weren’t with him for who he is but for who you’re not. To be fair, you two do have one big thing in common: a really low opinion of you.
      Don’t get your hopes up about the ADD meds, which were apparently sold to you as the Glinda the Good Witch of pharmaceuticals. They might help him be more focused and less impulsive. Like psoriasis, the guy’s bound to come back. In preparation for his return, change the locks, change your phone number and pledge to stay out of relationships until you couldn’t imagine putting up with a guy like him.


  •   Click the Image for UCW's Online Edition!

        Appearances are not always an indicator of what lies beneath the surface. The downtown art boom of the last decade seems to have come to an unsettling halt. A second downtown gallery will be closing its doors to art exhibitions. Local artists and art organizations are looking for places to exhibit.
        The Fayetteville Museum of Art’s plan to relocate in Festival Park is temporarily on hold until fundraising can recover from the blows it took from local politics. At a time when there are more talented artists in Fayetteville then ever before, I don’t think one can blame the economy for all the artistic woes in Fayetteville.
        {mosimage} Even in this economic climate there is a silver lining if one looks a little deeper than appearances. You have to look closely at what is being unveiled locally and nationally.
        Nationally, the arts are part of the federal economic stimulus plan. As reported by Americans for the Arts, “The Economic Recovery bill package includes an additional $50 million in support of art jobs through the National Endowment for the Arts grants. We are also happy to report the exclusionary Coburn Amendment language banning certain art groups from receiving any other economic recovery funds has also been successfully removed.”
        Locally, the Arts Council of Fayetteville/Cumberland County seems to be reexamining its role in the arts. The earlier idea of being predominantly a distributor of funds to art agencies has become one of leadership in a different way. 
        The present exhibit at the Arts Council — Distinguished Visions, Timeless Traditions — was a huge step toward the advocacy of educating the public about the rich history of African-American artists in art history and in contemporary art. The exhibit reads like an art history book, a who’s who of significant artists, spanning from the 1930s to the present.
    Certainly there have been solo and group exhibits of significant African-American artists at the Arts Council, but never before has there been an exhibit by artists that spans over 60 years.
        The concept for the exhibit, according to Calvin Mims, arts services coordinator at the Arts Council, “started last year with a conversation with some of our local collectors. They began to tell fascinating stories about knowing certain African-American artists in their youth and how some of them went to school with a particular artist and started collecting their early, unknown works.”
        He continued, “We then thought that it would be an educational experience for the public to share in viewing some of the work collected by local educators, doctors, lawyers and others. Works that are steeped in the memories of magical moments spent with the artist, hearing them tell those stories of their life as an artist and hearing that artist tell the story about why the work was created. This all gave rise to the idea of an ongoing educational experience in African-American art.”
        Distinguished Visions, Timeless Traditions is the result of that effort to showcase the works by collectors; but it is also the beginning of a new initiative at the Arts Council. Confirmed by Deborah Mintz, president of the Arts Council: “The council is committed to developing an appreciation of African-American art by supporting programs, exhibitions and education. The spin-off of Distinguished Visions, Timeless Traditions will be a new affiliate membership called “Friends of African and African-American Art.”
        According to Mintz, “Friends of African and African-American Art will help our community focus on the extraordinary talents of African-American artists in our region and across the country. We are calling on the community to lead in this endeavor.”
        Mintz continued, “For many years, the Arts Council has been serving primarily as a launching place for new and aspiring artists. Today, as several local galleries have closed their doors, visual art opportunities in our community are dwindling. In response to requests from many local artists, the Arts Council is expanding its visual art component.”
        A timely effort, FAAAA according to Mims is “a special membership category at the Arts Council, committed to raising public awareness and appreciation for the artistic legacy of indigenous Africans and peoples of the African diaspora. The group serves as a catalyst to ensure that these outstanding artistic contributions will be enjoyed and valued by future generations. It is an effort to enhance the community’s cultural experience with African-American Art.”
        Mims talked to me about the benefits of FAAAA and how the Arts Council plans to establish the new affiliate.
    “The Friends will promote an understanding and appreciation of African-American art through exhibitions, educational programs and social events,” she said. “They will develop unique exhibitions, lectures and symposia on American art to enhance the public’s knowledge of African-American contributions to the arts, while exploring American history, society and creative expression from an African-American perspective.”
        The primary focus, according to Mims, “will be to fund an exhibit each year during Black History Month and develop a schedule of informative events and activities to occur throughout the month of celebration. Members of the affiliate will raise funds and seek sponsors to underwrite the programs and exhibits for Black History Month, outside the regular sponsorship stream for the Arts Council. 
        A steering committee will develop, select, and plan exhibit content, select guest lecturers, and create a youth education component. Committee membership will include Arts Council board members, artists, art educators and civic leaders interested in African and African-American art and artists. The Arts Council Arts Services Coordinator will serve as a resource and assist the committee in its work.
        The Arts Center is preparing to launch the FAAAA membership drive in late March. The Apprentice level ($25) or higher is a prerequisite for joining the Friends of African and African-American Arts. In addition to your Arts Council membership level, Friends Individual membership is $25 — all tax deductible.
        Members in FAAAA will enjoy benefits and arts enrichment opportunities. Not only are you supporting the arts, but members will be invited to participate in Friends meetings and social events, invitations to special lectures pertaining to African-American art by internationally, nationally, and locally prominent artists and scholars, and attend previews of gallery exhibitions. Members of Friends will take a role in building an understanding and appreciation of African and African-American art in Fayetteville and Cumberland County.
        While the details of when and how FAAAA will be premiered at the Arts Council are still underway for March, there is plenty of time to see Distinguished Visions, Timeless Traditions. The exhibition will remain up at the Arts Council until March 21.
        Before entering the Art Council’s freshly painted gallery spaces, don’t expect to see large contemporary works of art. The works by all the artists are modest in scale, but significant in who is being exhibited. Original images that range from prints, drawings, watercolors, mixed media and paintings represent major African-American artists that have been historically important for some time.
        When first viewing the images, the narrative subject dominates the galleries. Upon closer inspection visitors will see two distinct styles. The narrative competes with a group of abstract artists from the Michigan area.
        The narrative begins with a compelling photograph by Ph.H. Polk. Untitled, the black-and-white photograph, captures the image of a dark man with eyes in the shadow of the brim of his worn hat. The man’s name in the photograph is George Moore, his penetrating eyes create depth in the image, mystery in the story.
        Although the portraits of Polk resonate with visual and emblematic power and are beautiful beyond words, it was his photograph of the First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt who visited the Tuskegee Army Air Field in 1941 that many people are familiar with. In this candid photograph, Polk documented Mrs. Roosevelt getting ready to take a ride in the back seat of an airplane, black pilot Chief Anderson at the controls. Mrs. Roosevelt requested a photograph to take back to Washington, D.C. to show President Roosevelt.
        For over 50 years, as a photographer, Polk focused on life at Tuskegee Institute. As an artist and a teacher, his photographic legacy included portraits of everyday people and many significant people, including George Washington Carver and Dr. Martin Luther King.
        Although few African-American women during the 1930s were practicing artists, and art museums in the segregated South were closed to African Americans, Elizabeth Catlett pursued her goal of becoming an artist by enrolling at Howard University in 1931. Elizabeth Catlett is an artist whose is known for her contributions to the graphic medium.
        In this exhibit there is a relief print by Catlett titled Survivor. A limited edition print, the defiant women in Survivor echoes the politically charged message of many of Catlett’s works — the lives of everyday people, the heroines and heroes of African-Americans.
        Catlett is a master of the relief print and one who uses the medium as much as the message to forge her power of the image. Her technical proficiency is the underpinning of her command of design, form, and content.
    The exhibit also includes many prints by John Biggers, a famous artist from North Carolina. A muralist, teacher, printmaker and easel painter, Biggers is widely known for his images that use recurring themes and objects: the shotgun house (a style in southern black low income housing), Afro-centric symbols; women are always portrayed to denote hope and strength.
        Everything in Biggers images promotes optimism and power. Biggers has been noted as “drawing inspiration from African art and culture, from the injustices of a segregated United States, from the stoic women of his own family and from the heroism of everyday survival.”
        The who’s who of narrative artists in Distinguished Visions, Timeless Traditions includes Charles Bibbs, Hughie Lee-Smith, Betye Saar and William Pajuad. In addition, there is a large body of abstract work from the Michigan area.
    Local artist Dwight Smith was eager to explain how he had come to know all the artists in the exhibit and many, many other historically important artists.
        Smith reflected, “As a young artist in the late 1960s, I joined the National Conference of Artists, a specifically African-American group of artists in academia and professional artists involved in networking. Being from Michigan, I, just like many other artists in the exhibit, was a member of the Michigan Chapter of the National Conference of Artists. Some artists in the exhibit were mentors of mine. Our chapter met once a month and the conference met once a year.
        “I never missed a conference. At any conference you would meet noteworthy artists who were already beginning to be added to art history books, people like Martin Puryear, Romare Bearden, John Biggers — everyone who has made a distinct contribution to the history of art in some way was a part of the conference at some time. Any artist who was doing anything came through that organization.”
        Smith was very clear on the early purpose of the conference and how the organization changed.
        “During the late 1960s and early 70s there were no venues to learn about African-American art — networking was the best way. In networking we knew what type of work was being produced in the studio, we learned who was working in the museums, who was writing the books and who was collecting African-American art. We also did quite a bit of picketing of museums since they weren’t showing African-American artists during that period.”
        Although several of the narrative artists might be better known, the abstract artists in the exhibit reflect a style. Smith pointed out that he, Charles Finger, Shirley Woodson, Al Hinton, Aaron Ibn Pori Pitts and Hugh Grannum are all from the Michigan area, represent the Michigan chapter of the National Conference of Artists, and everyone knew each other.
    Distinguished Visions, Timeless Traditions is more than just a collection of works. It is a cross-section of those artists who have pioneered the African-American voice in art. For information on Distinguished Visions, Timeless Traditions and Friends of African and African-American Art call the Fayetteville and Cumberland County Arts Council at 910-323-1776 or visit their Web site www.theartscouncil.com.

  •   Full Throttle Magazine is North and South Carolina’s definitive guide to biker events. The publishers of the publication are currently seeking input from bike enthusiasts on the current N.C. helmet law. Below is the survey. You can fill out the survey at www.fullthrottlemagazine.com.
      1. Would you support tiered licensing for motorcyclists? ie learner’s permit (with restrictions), intermediate rider (helmet & goggles), experienced rider (no helmet IF you are over 21, pass the exp. riders course, and pay $75 annually)
      {mosimage}•  YES, I would support more government restrictions on my freedoms and efforts to help law enforcement officers determine if a rider is in compliance with the law from a distance.
      •  NO, I am not going to support laws that restrict or take away my liberty and give law enforcement more justifiable causes to pull over and harass bikers.
      •  Not only NO, but HELL NO!
      2. Would you support a bill that would tax you $75 per year (for each motorcycle you own) for the right to ride without a helmet.
      •  YES, I am in favor of more taxation as a means to fund unnecessary safety study centers and multilevel government bureaucracy.
      •  NO, I already pay property tax, road use tax (gasoline & tires) highway tolls, and licensing fees
      •  Not only NO, but HELL NO!
      3. Would you support a bill to create a Motorcycle Crash Study Center in NC if it was paid for with $2 million taxpayer dollars from the annual state budget?
      •  YES, If someone else pays for it I would support it.
      •  NO, because it the money comes from the general fund or even federal funds, ultimately, I , the taxpayer pay for it in the end.
      •  Not only NO, but HELL NO!
      4. Would you support a bill in the 2009 legislature for TOTAL HELMET LAW REPEAL that would allow THOSE WHO RIDE DECIDE what safety equipment was right for them?
      •  YES, I think it is every adult American’s right to decide what activities to participate in and what safety equipment is right for them to wear.
      •  NO, I think that everyone should be forced to wear a Federally Approved helmet even though the government cannot determine what that is or guarantee my safety if I wear one.
      •  Not only NO, but HELL NO!
      5. Would you join NC Concerned Bikers Association (CBA) and help to lobby for the right to choose what safety equipment was right for you?
      •  YES, If CBA was on track to focus on getting the helmet law repealed, I would gladly join the fight for freedom.
      •  NO, I am content to be a welfare rider and sit on the sidelines and let others fight for the freedoms that I will ultimately enjoy at their expense.
      •  Not only NO, but HELL NO!
      6. Will you contact your local state Senator and Representatives and ask them to support the repeal of the NC helmet bill?
      •  YES, I would gladly join the fight for freedom to get the NC helmet law repealed.
      •  NO, I am content to be a welfare rider and sit on the sidelines and let others fight for the freedoms that I will ultimately enjoy at their expense
      •  Not only NO, but HELL NO!


  •   Obviously, the entire audience (sizable for an early Monday show) was excited about the Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen trailer. But the laughter and excitement that greeted the trailer for Miss March was really uncalled for, especially considering that no one (not even an untrained expert such as myself) can identify any substantial differences between that and the trailer that followed it, Fired Up
      Marcus Nispel, director of Friday the 13th (95 minutes), has a puzzling career. He directed the violence-as-pornography Texas Chainsaw Massacre remake, AND the Amy Grant video “House of Love.” A man following a career path that takes him from “House of Love” to man impaled on a meat hook is bound to have made some interesting choices in his life. Of course, one of those interesting choices was Pathfinder, so clearly some illegal substances were involved. He doesn’t offend me nearly as much with this remake as he did with Chainsaw, but somehow it still lacks heart. At least My Bloody Valentine included some literal heart (bloody and fabulous); Friday the 13th doesn’t even get that far in the carnage. Compared to other, similar movies, the death scenes seemed restrained, boring and uninspired. There were one or two excellently visceral scenes, but overall there wasn’t anything new here.
      {mosimage}The film opens up in 1980 on some elements from the first movie, slightly re-written, summing up the original nicely. We segue into the genre standard group of unlikable Barbie-and-Ken dolls, walking through the woods. Their names are mostly unimportant because you won’t remember any of them five minutes after leaving the theater. They wander around looking for a very special crop of a very illegal substance, and end up camped out near the all-but-forgotten Camp Crystal Lake from the first set of Jason movies. Interesting to note is the puzzling choice of music playing over some of these scenes.  “Sister Christian?” Really?  Really?    Their curiosity overcomes their common sense (duh) and they explore the camp, which doesn’t end well. Well, at least there’s a ton of nudity mixed with violence.
      Flash forward about six weeks. Turns out that Barbie doll number one, Whitney (Amanda Righetti) has a very concerned brother, Clay (Jared Padalecki). Clay thinks that the local law enforcement aren’t trying hard enough to find his sister, and he spends his days broodily roaming town on his rebellious motorcycle, flipping his chestnut hair and pouting his full, well-defined lips at the townies.
      Eventually, Clay meets up with the rest of the cannon fodder…I mean, characters, and the body count quickly rises. Playing the “good” girl in the midst of the “bad” slacker, stoner, over-privileged dregs is Jenna (Danielle Panabaker Hey! It’s That Girl from Sky High!), who naturally decides to ditch her companions and walk off into the woods with the cute stranger.  Next we get more nudity, more sex and more violence.  What we do not get is more plot.  
      This is no case of style over substance because frankly there wasn’t a whole lot of style. Even so, it was fun keeping track of how many people were getting killed, and the pace moved along quickly. This film isn’t going to make great remake history, but it did entertain. Perhaps adding a little 3D action would have left me feeling more satisfied. Are you listening Last House on the Left?   

    Contact Heather Griffiths at tim@upandcomingweekly.com

  •   Considering he fronts a band with a pretty juvenile name, Hoobstank lead guitarist Dan Estrin has a very mature outlook on his band’s music.
      “People don’t realize we’ve been together as a band since 1994,” said Estrin, conversing with Up & Coming Weekly via a cell phone as the band travels in support of its new CD, Fornever. “We are all older and write songs from a different perspective … a more mature perspective.”
      Local fans of the post-grunge superstars will get a gander at Hoobastank’s “maturity” when the band plays Jesters Pub on March 12 … the group’s first-ever stop here at the home of Fort Bragg.
      “Our new album has heavier themes… it’s about relationships … the good and the bad,” said Estrin. “It’s definitely a little different from what we’ve done in the past.”
      Not that Estrin has to apologize for any decisions the band has made career-wise: the band’s self-titled first album went platinum, while 2004’s The Reason was certified double platinum. The latter was a blockbuster that earned a Grammy nomination for Best Rock Album, and its mega-huge title track garnered Grammy nods for Song of the Year and Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group. The track was also an international smash that rocketed to No. 1 on the Modern Rock, Adult Top 40 and Top 40 Mainstream charts and No. 2 on the Hot 100.
      {mosimage}While it offers the benefit of more mature songwriting, Estrin says the band’s latest, Fornever, also returns to the rock roots of those aforementioned heavier smahes.
      “The songs have been really well-received on the road,” said Estrin. “The fans seem to really dig them.”
      One of the songs generating a lot of positive response on the current tour is “So Close, So Far” — a song sure to strike a note with the band’s Fayetteville fans as the subject matter of the ballad concerns a soldier being stationed in a combat zone away from his family.
      In fact, the opening lyrics just might have the military spouses in the audience reaching for the Kleenex box as they flick their collective Bics in true rock crowd style:
      “I wake up all alone, somewhere unfamiliar.
      Been gone so many days, I’m losing count.
      When I think of home, I see your face.
      I know I have to wait…”
      “Yeah … I expect the military crowd in Fayetteville will really identify with it,” said Estrin. “Everybody likee it everywhere we’ve played it.”
      Not only will local music fans get lyrics to identify with, they’ll be seeing a band at the top of its game; after an 18-month layoff, Hoobstank has been touring arenas with 3 Doors Down and Seether, and, according to Estrin, is “energized” to be back on the road in front of sell-out crowds, playing enormous venues. However, Estrin says the band is also looking forward to the smaller setting of Jesters.
      “There’s something to be said for playing before just 500 or so people,” said Estrin. “It’s more intimate … There can be more of a connection with the crowd.”
      While local fans may get a kick out of “So Close, So Far,” nationally, the self-motivational anthem “My Turn” is climbing the charts like a chimp on amphetamines — the track has already gone to No. 6 on the Alternative chart.
      The video for “My Turn” is also drawing lots of chatter. Designed to be viewed online, the “My Turn” video has the look and feel of a video game, complete with different characters and varying scenarios. Wearing different costumes and swapping instruments, each member of the band performed and was shot individually against a green screen. Together with a gaggle of guests (bikini models, senior citizens, lead vocalist Doug Robb’s mother and father-in-law, among others), the band created a video that’s truly unique — one that offers fans a new experience with each viewing.
      You can check out the video, plus several of the band’s downloads on its MySpace page, www.myspace.com/hoobastank. Tickets for the show at Jesters are $25. For more information, call Jesters at 423-6100 or check out the club’s Web site, www.jesterspub.com.

    Contact Tim Wilkins at tim@upandcomingweekly.com

  • What’s happening with wild populations of cheetahs, the fastest land animals on Earth?      

    — Eduardo Ramirez, Braintree, Mass.

      The brainchild of Grameen Foundation founder MuhDue to its plight in recent decades, the cheetah, which can reach speeds of 70 miles per hour, is considered one of the world’s most endangered species by the Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
      A hundred years ago some 100,000 wild cheetahs inhabited 44 or more countries throughout Africa and Asia. According to the Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF), a Namibia-based non-profit organization, today the species exists in only two dozen of those countries — including areas of North Africa, the Sahel, East Africa and southern Africa — with worldwide population numbers now between 12,000 and 15,000 individuals living in small groups. In addition, about 150-200 of the fast cats live in the wild in Iran (where they are known as the Asiatic Cheetah), their forebears having been brought in from Africa in the early 20th century.
      The chief threats to the cheetah’s existence are loss of habitat, poaching and hunting (their hide and trophies can command top dollar), and getting shot by livestock farmers. Decline of gazelles, wildebeests, impalas and other preferred prey species (also due to hunting and habitat loss) is a factor, too.
      {mosimage}According to CCF, throughout Africa cheetah numbers are dwindling even within protected wildlife reserves due to increased competition from other larger predators like lions and hyenas. As a result, most protected areas are unable to maintain viable cheetah populations, so individual cats tend to fan out beyond wildlife reserves, placing them in greater danger of conflict with humans. Those cheetahs that do survive in the wild come from a smaller, less diverse gene pool, leaving them susceptible to disease and predation in their own right. Furthermore, captive breeding has proven tricky, and wildlife biologists are not optimistic that such efforts can have a measurable positive impact on the cheetah’s future.
      Cheetahs have lean bodies, long legs, a large heart and expansive lungs. And with these features come additional speed; perhaps this is why the cheetah is often referred to as the “greyhound” of the cats. In fact, some say a cheetah looks like a “dog with a cat’s head.” But with weaker jaws and smaller teeth than other large predators, cheetahs have difficulty protecting their kills, let alone their own cubs. This has meant that population numbers for wild cheetahs are falling faster than for other big cats.
      The cheetah’s future may look dim, but conservationists have been working to lessen the decline in some areas. For instance, CCF began educating livestock farmers around Namibia in the early 1990s about how to prevent cheetahs from preying on their livestock without resorting to the rifle. As a result of these education efforts, along with stronger enforcement of endangered species and anti-poaching laws, cheetah populations in that country stabilized — now some 2,500-3,000 cheetahs make their home in Namibia — after having fallen to half that the previous decade. Clearly more such efforts are needed.
      CONTACTS: Cheetah Conservation Fund, www.cheetah.org; Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), www.cites.org.
      GOT AN ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTION? Send it to: EarthTalk, c/o E/The Environmental Magazine, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; submit it at: www.emagazine.com/earthtalk/thisweek/, or e-mail: earthtalk@emagazine.com. archives.php.


  •   President Obama has something North Carolina is missing, something he could give us. And we have something he is missing, something we could give him. What he needs is an active Republican to serve as Secretary of Commerce and work within the Democratic administration.
      What we need is to have somebody from North Carolina in Obama’s cabinet. So far the new president has left us out. It would be a blessing to have a cabinet member who cares about our state and will be there when North Carolina folks need help.
      So, there may be potential here for something that is good for both Obama and North Carolina.
      We have lots of good people who can bring a bipartisan imprint to Obama’s cabinet. They are Republicans who have relevant experience and have shown they can work with Democrats.
    Here are a few candidates:
      {mosimage}Former U.S. Senator Lauch Faircloth has all the resume qualifications for Commerce Secretary. He is a Republican, a real-life businessman, and a former U.S. Senator. More than that, he has already proved that he can serve as Secretary of the Department of Commerce in a Democratic administration. He did just that during Jim Hunt’s first two terms as governor. Of course Faircloth was, himself, a Democrat back then. But he was a conservative, much more so than Hunt or most of the other members of Hunt’s cabinet. Nevertheless, he worked pragmatically and loyally within the framework of Hunt’s program.
      Former U.S. Senator and Congressman Jim Broyhill is another former North Carolina Secretary of Commerce who might be a perfect candidate if he were a year or two younger.
      Another North Carolina Republican with relevant experience in business and government is Luther Hodges, Jr. He served as Undersecretary of the U. S. Department of Commerce in 1979 and as the first Deputy Secretary of Commerce in 1980, in the Carter administration. Although, like Faircloth, Hodges was a Democrat at the time, he certainly demonstrated that he could work in a leadership position in the Department of Commerce under a Democratic president.
      Former Governor and U.S. Congressman Jim Martin has maintained his Washington contacts and knows the economic development game. A scientist with a PhD in chemistry, he understands the importance of education and scientific research to business and economic development. Although a strong Republican, he is collegial and would be a good player on Obama’s team.
      There are hosts of other North Carolina Republicans who ought to be on Obama’s list for Secretary of Commerce, including several Charlotte mayors, whose roles required them to be an active participant in the business recruitment efforts of their city. Current mayor Pat McCrory and former mayors Richard Vinroot and Eddie Knox come to mind as Republicans who would welcome another chance to serve the public, even under Democratic leadership.
      A good case can be made for all these Republicans. But the most likely North Carolina Republican to get Obama’s attention is former furniture executive Dave Phillips. He just stepped down as George Bush’s Ambassador to Estonia. Phillips may be the strongest Republican of the group, having raised thousands and thousands of dollars for Bush’s presidential campaigns. But he may also have the strongest case for working successfully in a Democratic administration, having served as North Carolina Secretary of Commerce under Hunt in the late 1990s.
      In his role as the state’s chief business development officer, Phillips had no problem working hand in hand with Hunt to beef up business recruitment efforts and to sell North Carolina. Surrounded by Democrats in the Hunt administration, Phillips showed could be loyal to Hunt and work pragmatically for the governor’s goals without giving up his own core beliefs.
  •   Fans of the American Girl dolls and accessories will definitely want to attend the American Girl Fashion Show on Saturday, March 21, and Sunday, March 22, at Haymount United Methodist Church in Fayetteville. The fashion show will teach children how clothing has changed over the years to reflect history, culture and the individual style of girls.
      American Girl is a line of dolls and accessories based on preteen girl characters from various periods of American history. Pleasant Rowland began selling them by mail order in 1986. Fourteen million American Girl dolls have been sold, along with 123 million books about the dolls.
      The company’s flagship line is a collection of historical 18-inch dolls that come with books and accessories. The dolls, representing 9-10 year old girls, live through important times in American history and provide a child’s perspective of significant events in American history.
      The fashion show will feature more than 124 girls wearing historical and contemporary outfits based on the American Girl series. The money raised by the fashion show will benefit the Child Advocacy Center of Fayetteville, which works to prevent child abuse as well as developing outreach plans.
      {mosimage}Tammy Laurence, executive director of the Child Advocacy Center, says this is the third year the show had been held for the center and that last year’s fashion show was a “huge” success.
      “We think it will be even bigger this year because we’ve got folks coming not just from Fayetteville, but from Charlotte and Wilmington and all across the state,” said Laurence.
      The girls chosen to participate in the American Girl Fashion show won a previous competition that Laurence said had many contestants from throughout the region. All contestants will be wearing clothes that are one of two sizes: 6x or 10.  All the fashion show participants are from 8-10 years old.
      In addition to the fashion show, there will be tea parties,  a hair salon for the dolls and a special birthday party. Also, American Girl products will be for sale or they may be pre-ordered on the brand’s Web site, www.americangirl.com, and picked up at the fashion show. Refreshments will be served and there will be door prizes.
      There will also be a raffle ticket drawing offering a chance to win a number of American Girl prizes, including: a Just Like You Doll; the Kit and Ruthie Best Friends Collection;  Kit’s Tree House; the Bitty Twins; and the Bitty Baby Starter Collection.
      In cooperation with American Girl, any catalog order you place now will benefit the Child Advocacy Center, with 5 percent of the order’s total going to the organization. Orders must be placed between March 6 and April 5; use the special key code 162440.
      The American Girl Fashion Show will be held March 21 at 11 a.m., 3 p.m. and 7 p.m.; it will be held March 22 at 3 p.m. The event will be in the New Life Center at Haymount United Methodist Church, 1700 Fort Bragg Road. Tickets are $30. For more information, call (910) 486-9700. The event is recommended for ages 6 and up.

    Contact Tim Wilkins @tim@upandcomiongweekly.com

  •   “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle” is a mantra most often encountered in classrooms or on the side of recycling bins. But if you enter CJ’s Design studio you’ll find a collection of art on display that might have you reciting the three R’s of the 21st century.
      The collection, known as “Winhouse,” consists of a variety of handmade pieces created by local artists Susie Godwin and Lisa Lofthouse. Godwin and Lofthouse first partnered together, not in an art studio, but in a yoga studio. Lofthouse, who owns Breathing Space yoga studio on Raeford Road, first met Godwin when she began yoga classes several years ago. Their relationship quickly developed into a friendship in which both their creative natures found breathing space of their own.
      {mosimage}After returning from a trip to Paris, Godwin told Lofthouse that she wanted a creative way to showcase some photos she had taken on her trip. Lofthouse invited her friend “over to play” in her at-home art studio. The two discovered that their creative ideas inspired and enriched one another. They soon began to combine their efforts to create a variety of three-dimensional pieces showcasing photographs of some of Fayetteville’s best-known landmarks. Some of their early pieces can be seen at Huske Hardware and The Cameo Art House Theatre and can be purchased at City Center Gallery and Bookstore in downtown Fayetteville.
      Godwin and Lofthouse share a love for the eclectic, used, passed-over or discarded. Where most people see something worth throwing in the trash, these two creative conservationists see art in the making. After using local inspiration for their first efforts, they began to mine a different vein after visiting Tucson’s well-known Gem and Mineral Show last February.
      The two returned to Fayetteville with a collection of rocks, beads and ideas. They began to piece together some of their Southwestern treasures with Southeastern overstock, creating unique pieces that are a juxtaposition of time, place and experience, much like the artists themselves. Godwin, a Fayetteville native, enjoys adding touches of green and splashes of red to the pieces while Lofthouse, whose family is in the Southwest, prefers the palette of the painted desert.
      “One of us will start something and the other one will just add on,” says Godwin of the artists’ ability to build upon one another’s work. Their raw materials are as varied as their final products. They use overstock items such as cabinet doors, desk drawers and discontinued fabric swatches, as well as unique details — ranging from beads to keys to sticks they found in the yard. The overall effect is something that is completely unique.   Each piece is hearty, hand-made and hard to resist.
      While the artists are thrilled about their emphasis on recycling the once-used or overlooked, one thing they do not reuse are their ideas. Their pieces are as diverse as they are detailed. Some pieces, such as Mirrored Monks, are simple reflections of the peaceful philosophy behind their shared practice of yoga. Others, such as the piece Ab-Original, which subtly portrays the bold beauty of originality, are statement makers.
      For these artists, the creative process is their passion, their motto being “we’re happy to sell enough to pay for our art supplies,” which means that you won’t have to recycle too many aluminum cans to be able to afford one of their original pieces, which range reasonably from $25-$200. One thing is certain, with such a collision of creativity and conservation, the “Winhouse” collection will certainly have you recycling your smile.

    Contact Meredith Mitchell at tim@upandcomingweekly.com

  •   When most people combine the words “Fayetteville” and “exotic dancing,” the mental picture that comes to mind usually involves g-strings and dollar bills.
      However, the most exotic dancing in these parts does not necessarily include girls with pasties and porn star names; over at the Turkish Grill on Yadkin Road there is a renaissance of one of civilization’s oldest, most sensual, and, most respected dances.
      Every Friday and Saturday night, Leyla and Nadia provide traditional belly dancing to go along with the restaurant’s traditional Turkish and Middle-Eastern fare of gyros, kebabs, kofte, humus and falafel.
      {mosimage}Owners Francis and Seyfi Kalendar say the accompaniment of belly dancing with a meal is very common in Turkey and across the Arabic world, especially in the finer, more expensive restaurants. Francis adds that bringing the dance of the seven veils to Fayetteville has been wildly successful at the Turkish Grill, which has been open about 15 months.
       If you do drop in to check out the restaurant’s sensual dervishes doing their thing, Francis says to remember there is a certain etiquette to tipping … this isn’t, after all, amateur night down on Bragg Boulevard.
    “We’re trying to introduce the proper way of tipping a dancer, which is to shower them with the money — culturally, that is the way it is done,” said Francis. “We sit here and have a good time. It’s like a fun, family atmosphere. At the end of the night everybody is up dancing; more so the women … The men are a little bit shy. Everyone is clapping and whistling.
      “We have a lot of fun,” said Francis. “Last night I didn’t get home until 4 a.m. Everybody leaves here after belly dancing night with smiles on their faces.”
      Perhaps the biggest smile is reserved for Nadia Davis, the featured dancer. Nadia is a native of Iraq where she grew up surrounded by the culture of belly dancing. She says that while her soldier husband was stationed in Germany she began amateur belly dancing for friends and it grew from there. She has now been dancing professionally at the Turkish Grill for about a year.
      “My husband liked to see me dancing,” said Nadia. “I have loved to dance since I was a kid. I had no outfit when I started. My friends brought gifts the first time, including cash, because they wanted to push me to dance. My husband sent me a lot of stuff from India and Afghanistan when he was stationed there.”
      Both Nadia and Francis said that belly dancers tend to “mix and match” outfits, as there aren’t exactly a plethora of belly dancing outfitters populating the street corners of downtown Fayetteville.
      As for her music of choice, Nadia says she mixes traditional with modern tunes … utilizing whatever “moves” her. She mixes the exotic rhythms as easily as she does her exotic clothing into a combination of dance moves gleaned from her childhood in Baghdad.
      “I mix it up,” said Nadia. “I can’t dance to the music unless I’m feeling it. If it’s not touching my feelings I cannot dance. We have many types of different dances in Iraq — in Baghdad it is different … in the south of Iraq it’s different. So I take from this and that and mix.
      “And the music I use is not especially traditional,” said Nadia, “it’s been remade more modern. I don’t like the fast music … I like to feel and enjoy the music.”
      If you would like a taste of this exotic dancing as well as the Turkish Grill’s exotic, yet healthy, food, come by the restaurant every Friday or Saturday night beginning at 7. The dancing usually lasts until about 10 p.m.; however, as Francis said, sometimes the dancing lasts deep into the night.
      The Turkish Grill is located at 5044 Yadkin Road. For more information, call 864-6554, or check out the restaurant’s Web site at www.turkishgrill.net.

    Contact Tim Wilkins at tim@upandcomingweekly.com

  •   Spring is right around the corner, which means warmer weather, more time outdoors, spring break and summer vacations not too far away. It may still be a little too cold outside to take a trip to the beach or an amusement park, but it is not too early to start planning the trip. 
      {mosimage}Throughout the winter months, many of us sit bundled up in our living rooms imagining ourselves in a warmer setting. We want to go to the beach, spend the day on the boat, take the kids to the amusement parks and just be out and about. The ultimate questions we often ask ourselves during these cold months are where do we want to go and what do we want to do? The annual Tickets and Tours Travel Extravaganza is the perfect event to get all these questions, and more, answered.
      The fair features vendors from some of the most popular vacation spots and attractions all along the east coast. You can visit booths and talk with the various representatives about what they have to offer. After stopping at a few booths, you are certain to have all the information you need to make the best decision about your upcoming getaways and summer vacation.
      There is more to the 17th Annual Travel Extravaganza than simply information gathering. There will also be prize drawings throughout the event. You can win weekend getaways, tickets to amusement parks, gift bags, discount coupons and much more. The 2009 Travel Extravaganza will be held on Thursday, Feb. 26, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., inside the Officers’ Club at Fort Bragg. 
      If you plan on taking a vacation or even just getting away for a long weekend, stop by the Tickets and Tours Travel Extravaganza to discover the many places you can go and things you can do.
      For more information, please call 396-TRIP/TOUR.


  •   Strange how our urban lifestyle causes us to stereotype the words “farm” and “rural.”  It conjures up images that will not support an adjective like “entrepreneurial” or “innovative.”
      Well, dear friends. Let’s take it a step further and suggest “dirt” farmer may be a future trend. Perhaps the way farmers did it thousands of years ago may be a long forgotten answer that could help us through this economic downtrend and be a formula for survival if climate change, plague and pestilence or terrorist attacks (among other catastrophes) are visited on us. And it is an idea that creates jobs.
      {mosimage}Last September I visited the great ancient agricultural centers of Peru. The Incas had built terraced fields that awed me since it was the cradle of corn and potatoes (apologies to our Native American and Irish ancestors). The terraces demonstrated wonderful erosion control. But it was what those terraced fields contained that amazed me. Terra Preta! It was the top soil (dirt) that was richer and more productive after thousands of years than the soil in the fields surrounding them. Yet it is a simple process that turns unproductive dirt into a rich organic top soil that lasts a thousand years without fertilizer and sequesters carbon. Do not scoff. Top soil is serious infrastructure that we take for granted. There is a new book on the market named Dirt: The Erosion of Civilizations that documents the displacement and fall of civilizations for lack of productive topsoil (i.e. Iraq).
      Yet these ancient Inca “alchemists” knew the secret of “manufacturing” top soil. And it is so simple. The Inca farmers took “char” (wood chips are the feed stock of choice at the N.C. Farm Center) and mixed it with any organic material or waste (I happen to have turkey litter) and put it on dirt. Vuella! Rich, organic topsoil requiring no fertilizer, lasting a thousand years and sequestering carbon. I cannot repeat that enough.
      I have char on the farm that is over 200 years old and is a testament to the kilns built by our predecessors lying in the small cemetery who boiled the pitch out of longleaf pines for the naval stores industry. I would consider making char the old-fashioned way but I was cautioned by my “land whisperer,” John Ray, that young boys tended the kilns because they could run faster if the kiln decided to explode. Since I am not easily discouraged, I have located a magic machine at N.C. State University called a torrefier. Researchers at N.C. State are experimenting with using the baked wood pellets created from heat and pressure as a “green coal.” The pellets do retain 90 percent of their original energy and are a carbon-neutral source of energy. And while I value energy independence, I am acutely aware that the U.S. only has a three-day supply of food. Lately, food security and food safety have also been making the headlines. And if a global financial collapse were to create a terrible depression, urban farming in empty buildings with terra preta or even gardening in formerly barren sandy soil has appeal. I am a child of the bomb shelter age so I would suggest planting vegetables from survival seeds (not genetically altered) as the crop of choice — watered from a well with a solar pump.
      If the N.C. Farm Center is successful in obtaining one of these magical machines and we perfect the formula we will be inviting you, our community, to visit and to sample.  And it will prove my formula — the land is the link to our past and to our future.

    Contact Sharon Valentine at editor@upandcomingweekly.com

  •   Have you ever seen a child, or do you remember from the mists of your own childhood, having literal growing pains?
      I am thinking about the deep ache in their bones that children report feeling and which sometimes reduces them to tears. It can sometimes do the same to their sympathetic mothers. While uncomfortable, even painful, such aches are really positive signs. They mean the child is healthy and developing as he or she should.
      States can have growing pains as well, and North Carolina is in the throes of some deep and serious aches.
      We are now the 10th-largest state in the nation, having recently out-peopled New Jersey, and still growing. I believe without question that our state’s growth is a good thing. It means that our economy and our quality of life are such that people want to make their homes and their livelihoods here, somewhere between the mountains of Murphy and the beaches of Manteo. Estimates are that about 21 people are born or arrive in North Carolina every hour, a growth rate which will bring us about 4 million more people by 2030. This is roughly the equivalent of every blessed soul in South Carolina pulling up stakes and moving here.
     {mosimage} I would not want North Carolina to be a state that is losing population and wondering where its future lies.
      That being said, growth brings challenges — growing pains for our state.
      The Institute for Emerging Issues is a Raleigh think tank associated with North Carolina State University. It considers all sorts of issues each year, and once a year it puts on a two-day forum exploring an issue facing North Carolina. Over the last two decades, IEI has delved into many meaty issues, including the challenge of innovation and competition, investing in our health, the fragile partnership between people and our planet and public schools and higher education. Such topics have drawn national experts to speak, including the likes of Bill Clinton, Newt Gingrich, Marian Wright Edelman, Steve Forbes and Thomas Friedman.
      This year’s forum occurred earlier this month on the topic of “Changing Landscapes: Building the Good Growth State” and included such luminaries as Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd and New York Times columnist David Brooks. The talk was all about growth and infrastructure. How do we meet the needs of a steadily and rapidly growing population at a time when the resources to pay for those needs are dwindling?
    Provocative ideas and stimulating conversation were everywhere, but the most interesting to me by far was Sen. Dodd’s challenge to North Carolina — and really to all of America — to “be bold.”
      The senator reminded us all that our nation has been transformed several times by advances in our infrastructure — advances that fundamentally altered the way we live and the way we develop as a country.
      He reminded us of the importance of the Erie Canal, which in 1825 opened up transportation from New York on the East Coast and the Great Lakes. The Erie Canal took 100 years to build and changed our commerce forever.
      He reminded us of the importance of the 1844 message that Samuel F. B. Morse pecked out in dots and dashes to the office Dodd now occupies in Washington. The coded message said “What hath God wrought,” and it ushered in the era of instant communication which has morphed into what you and I take for granted every day, the Internet.
      He reminded us of driving the final stake at Promontory Point, Utah, in 1861 to create the first intercontinental railroad and, thus, interstate commerce as we know it, and of Franklin Roosevelt’s lighting up of our nation through rural electrification in the 1930s.
      He nudged us once again on a grand plan begun during my own childhood which made us the most mobile nation in the history of the world. President Dwight D. Eisenhower had been mightily impressed by the German Autobahn and wanted roads like that in our country. The result is our Interstate highway system of 46,000 miles of roadways and which took decades and $400 billion to complete.
    Each of these projects was bold. Each was wildly expensive, and each was ridiculed in its time as folly and extravagance. But where would we be without them? Dodd was challenging.
     Why are we who consider ours the greatest nation in the world letting our infrastructure age and decline? Why, when China is spending 9 percent of its gross domestic product and conducting the largest railway system expansion in world history, are we investing only 2 percent of ours in infrastructure? European nations are investing at double our rate.
     Why, Dodd asks, are we thinking small and patching what we have instead of envisioning, as one of Dodd’s constituents does, projects like a freight rail system that would run from California to North Carolina?
     What has happened to our courage, our vision, our innovation and our willingness to take risks? What has happened to our confidence in ourselves and in our nation?
     Where, asked Dodd, are today’s Erie Canals?
     Where, indeed?

    Contact Margaret Dickson at editor@upandcomingweekly.com

  • Editor’s Note: This letter was addressed to Up & Coming Weekly’s Associate Publisher, Janice Burton, in response to her editorial — “Politicians Flunk Out With EOG Test” — from the Feb. 11-17 edition of Up & Coming Weekly.

    Dear Ms. Burton:
      I am sure thousands of parents in our state relate to your feelings concerning the end-of-course test your son will be subjected to later this academic year. Many teachers and their students become fearful and apprehensive regarding end-of-course tests every year.
      The history of the end-of-course is complicated. I was fortunate to work for the Department of Public Instruction from 1970 until 1979 and then for the next 19 years as the science curriculum specialist for the Cumberland County Schools. In those two positions I was actively involved in the development for the state science curriculum and peripherally in the development of the end-of-course and end-of grade tests during those years.
      The process leading to the imposition of the state curriculum and testing program began in the early 1970s when members of the legislature compared notes related to visits in classrooms across the state. They concluded there was no pattern to instruction and asked the state superintendent to develop and publish a curriculum guide for teachers to follow in their classrooms. After some wrangling, the department published a short curriculum guide and distributed the guide to the schools in the mid-70s. The legislators hoped teachers would teach the topics in the guide at the grade level or in the junior high or high school course as they were listed in the guide. While some schools followed the suggestions, most continued teaching the way they had prior to the guide’s publication.
    Several years later, after more classroom visits, members of the legislature pushed for a more detailed guide for teachers. As a result, an expanded version of the curriculum, entitled Performance Goals and Indicators, was distributed to the schools. The hope was that teachers and administrators would use the goals to design their instruction and use the indicators to design assessments. Unfortunately, as before, there was little change in what happened in classrooms across the state.
      The frustration of legislators continued growing with the result that in 1985 they passed legislation requiring a significantly more detailed curriculum for all grade levels (K-12) and implementing a statewide testing program. The North Carolina Standard Course of Study, which provided detailed lists of concepts, objectives, and performance indicators in each discipline at every grade level from Kindergarten to the 12th-grade, was published as a result. An indication of the curriculum’s scope is provided by the fact that one copy of the document for grades K-12 occupied 12 feet of book shelf space. The present K-12 curriculum is essentially a modified version of the one developed in 1985 and the testing program has developed from its start to its present form by means of nearly continuous modification.
      {mosimage}North Carolina wasn’t the only state to implement such a detailed curricula and assessment program. Indeed, legislatures across the nation have followed one another in trying to “stamp” out graduates in a production line type of program. The culmination of this kind of instructional program was No Child Left Behind. The result has been incredibly high levels of frustration on the part of administrators, teachers, parents and pupils. These programs have also led to the perception that our public schools are doing a poor job of educating students. In fact, the United States is the only country in the world which offers complete educational opportunities to every child regardless of ability. Hundreds of children graduate in our state each year and move on to pursue university degrees in a variety of highly technical fields. For example, five of our astronauts graduated from high schools in Bladen, Carteret, Duplin, Moore and Robeson counties.
      Obviously, students who wish to study and are supported by their family can acquire an excellent education in our schools.
      The majority of parent’s across the country would agree with you that the pressure of testing is totally unwarranted. The most unfortunate aspect of the testing program, as it exists in our state, is that it does virtually nothing to improve instruction. The tests do provide information concerning the overall performance of students, teachers, and schools; however, they provide no information which can be used to improve classroom instruction. The problem exists for two reasons:
      First, the assessment program is required to test the entire curriculum. Teachers must teach the entire curriculum for a grade or course if their students can perform well on the end-of-grade or end-of-course tests.
    So  teachers are not “teaching to the test” — they, in fact, do so by simply teaching the curriculum. The size of the curriculum has continued to grow and the resulting growth of the material to be taught has made it basically impossible for a teacher to cover what he or she is supposed to teach in a semester or an academic year. This is particularly true in the case of high school courses. In every tested course there are too many concepts to be covered in the time allotted. As a result much of the instruction has reverted to a mode many of us think of as read the chapter, answer the questions, take the test. In essence, the middle and high school curricula are best suited to students who are most proficient at memorizing and regurgitating information. This problem is reflected by the constantly increasing size of textbooks which now weigh so much that they present back injury hazard to students who attempt to take more than two home at one time.
      The problems are different in elementary grades where teachers are supposed to be able to teach reading, writing, mathematics, science and  social studies with equal facility. On its face such a challenge is impossible to accomplish. At the same time, our teachers have become recipients of students with all the problems in our society. There is no way one teacher, even with an aide, can provide all the individualized help today’s students require and teach them the skills they must master to succeed on end-of-grade tests.
      Second: the present end-of-grade and end-of-course tests are required to test every concept listed in the curriculum for a specific subject at a given grade level or a specific course. As a result on any given test there can be no more that three to five questions on each major concept.
      In most cases only two or three questions address a specific concept. The number of questions related to one specific concept is too small to provide a statistically valid measure of the student’s understanding of that concept . Without such information, teachers and administrators cannot use the test results to find and correct instructional problems.
    In spite of a number of efforts to change the kinds of questions on the tests, virtually all the questions are specific problems in mathematics or content-recall questions in science and social studies. Even if teachers desire to teach students by having them explore an idea or investigate a phenomenon, the nature of the questions on the tests require that they have their students memorize information.
      The students we are graduating lack the reasoning and teamwork skills industry is seeking because there simply isn’t time to teach those skills while covering an “overstuffed” curriculum. Across our state many educators are struggling to find ways to prepare students for success in the adult world while trying to deal with a curriculum and assessment program which work against their best efforts.
      Parents across our state need to do more than simply worry about how their students will do and react to the state testing program — they need to write their legislators and demand that:
      • The curriculum be reduced to a size that can be taught by inquiry and exploration in the present school year.
      • That both the curriculum and assessments be revamped in ways which recognize the impossibility of using memorization to cope with the knowledge explosion by promoting reasoning, problem solving, and teamwork.
      • The assessment program be changed to provide information primarily designed to help teachers and schools improve instruction rather than simply making legislators and board members feel that they have succeeded in evaluating each individual school’s performance.
    Fred L. Beyer Jr., Fayetteville

Latest Articles

  • Publisher's Pen: Eastover Community “Shines” for Sullivan
  • Lessons in mythology: Father's Day can be complicated
  • Troy's perspective: Downtown Crown Event Center
  • Health & Wellness: Easy steps: Patient doubles down after knee surgery
  • ASOM, Cool Spring District partner for 18th annual Field of Honor, flags now for sale
  • Colvin announces he will not run for mayor in 2025
Up & Coming Weekly Calendar
  

Login/Subscribe