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May 2008 Archives

May 1, 2008

Greenway boosters make their case

We met with a group of downtown greenway boosters, primarily from Action Greensboro, on Tuesday.

They made an impassioned and reasoned case for the ambitious (and expensive) "bi-ped" path, which has been adopted as the signature project of the city's Bicentennial Commission.

Among the advantages they cited:

1. The availability of "pots" of state money to help finance the $26 million initiative.
2. The health benefits in a community in which obesity is a problem.
3. The relative safety of such paths. They say there has been very little crime on Greensboro's existing paths and that greenways are in general safer than anywhere else.
4. Their belief that the paths will boost real estate values.
5. The paths can help boost development.
6. The greenway provides a safe haven for cyclists and walkers.
7. The paths' potential to connect communities.
8. Greenways' appeal to young people.

They made some good points and eased some of my skepticism.

I'm especially hopeful that such a path dedicated to walking, jogging and biking might help erase the invisible downtown dividing line between the traditional black and white communities.

And cyclists could use a safer place than our streets, which, even with the new painted bike lanes, are not very hospitable to bicycles. There are still hazards from backing cars in driveways and at intersections.

I don't know about property values. I'll have to see more data on that. And there are plenty of opportunities to walk for exercise around here already.

As for the concept in general, I love it. Greensboro's greenways are some of its best assets and I use them regularly.

But $26 million is a lot of money, even if much of it is raised privately.

I'll study this some more and report back.


May 2, 2008

Skip's MOD Squad

We did not endorse Skip Alston for re-election but he is due some props for an initiative he founded, Men of Dudley, which recruits males to mentor and volunteer at Dudley High School.

I met with the group's leadership three weeks ago and plan to join. The MOD Squad, as they call themselves, stage activities for partcipating students and sometimes parents, provide tutoring and sponsor field trips.

Some of the group's leaders say Skip took a teen who was essentially homeless into his own home and helped renite him with a brother.

Good for Skip

Podcast will pontificate on the primary

In addition to next-day editorials, we're planning a midnight (or thereabouts) podcast Election Night on the primary results that will be posted at news-record.com.

On hand tp pontificate about the headlines, national, state and local, will be Doug Clark, Mark Binker, Jeri Rowe (tentatively) and myself.

We hope to be concise and cogent and -- most of all -- awake and coherent.

We'll see you on the cyber-radio.

Moyers on Wright and race

Bill Moyers says in a thoughtful essay that the Jeremiah Wright flap dramatizes a racial double standard.

He then compares Wright to controversial white men of faith.

May 3, 2008

A good friend reaches a milestone

A schoolmate of mine from UNC, Dr. Naurice Frank Woods, director, is stepping down after 13 years as director of the Afircan American Studies program at UNCG.

Frank has done much to build the program he heads, as an engaging, imaginative teacher, as a scholar and as an administrator.

He can speak with equal fluency about the Harlem Renaissance and the cultural significance of P-Funk, and he has consistently challenged and excited his students.

It surprised me a little bit that Frank wound up being so popular and comfortable in the classroom. He was more than a little bit shy when we were in Chapel Hill.

I remember him then as an art major who created extraterrestrial dioramas and Plexiglas sculptures. He'd amaze the rest of us with matter-of-fact tales of having to paint live nude models in class (we were young and silly back then).

He could draw and paint with such grace and ease.

He also had a black belt in Taekwondo .

Most importantly, he gave us rides home to Greensboro in his little brown and yellow Toyota Celica so we could have home-cooked meals and get our laundry done.

In return, I helped him make long drives to Alligator, N.C., to see his girlfriend, Sadie, who became his wife. (OK, it was not purely a selfless act; she had a sister.)

At UNCG, Frank clearly loves what he does.

Fortunately for the students and the university, Frank will continue to teach.

I wish him only the very best.


May 4, 2008

Downtown greenway will cover a lot of ground -- and take a lot of green

This week's column.

If you haven’t used one of Greensboro’s myriad walking and jogging trails, you really ought to.
One trail threads its way from North Elm Street at Moses Cone Hospital to Wesley Long Hospital … and beyond.

Along the way is a shady apple tree, grassy fields where children play soccer and a meandering creek with fish in it.

Past Latham Park the paved trail stretches past tennis courts and the chain-link outfield walls of two ball fields where youthful sluggers in bright uniforms swing away and parents cheer from the bleachers. You could get lucky and catch a homer.

Then you pass the edge of Green Hill Cemetery, which can be a little spooky after nightfall.
Further on the trail crosses Battleground Avenue and winds along the edges of the Westerwood neighborhood. On a not-too-hot Saturday afternoon you’ll see pickup basketball games on a concrete court to your right, volleyball games on open fields to your left. And more tennis courts.

Even the ominous power lines strung between massive towers seem to blend into trees and bird song.

Finally, the trail ends at a bench and a water fountain off Friendly Avenue.

It’s long enough for a good, brisk jog and but not too long for middle-aged knees.

The biggest allure of the urban setting is that it provides so much interesting stuff to see.
That’s why the idea of an ambitious new downtown greenway plan sounds so captivating even as it also sounds extravagant.

Twenty-six million dollars?

Continue reading "Downtown greenway will cover a lot of ground -- and take a lot of green" »

May 5, 2008

Bonds take a hit from black school board members

I'm not sure I understand the rationale for black school board members opposing Tuesday's school bonds. Or their strategy of coming forward on the eve of the election to say so.

That certainly doesn't allow much opportunity for dialogue.

They cite concerns over the classroom performance of black students and the lack of business for minority contractors.

While I understand their concerns, I question their timing. And while I hold the school district accountable for the performance of all students, I also hold the larger communitiy even more accountable.

Maybe these school board members have got a point ... maybe they haven't. It's hard to tell at the 11th hour.

Right now this feels wrong, like a political sucker punch.

May 7, 2008

Voters defy predictions, support bonds

I am (pleasantly) shocked and flabbergasted.

The school construction bonds passed.

The GTCC bonds passed.

The jail bonds passed.

The Eastern Guilford bonds passed.

This, despite opposition from a number of quarters in the county, including the Simkins PAC, three African American school board members, and a number of other candidates and elected officials.

In fact, according to unofficial results, the general school bonds even slightly outperformed bonds for the reconstruction of fire-ravaged Eastern High School.

The school bonds won 54.8 percent to 45.2 percent. The Eastern bonds won 53.94 percent to 46.06 percent.

Eastern was expected to pass fairly easily and the other school bonds not at all.

Go figure ... later. I'm going to bed.


May 9, 2008

Memo to Hillary: Enough already

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Hillary Clinton has a run a good, hard race and now she needs to pack it in.

But she remains not only uninterested in the facts, which show her with absolutely no chance to win the Democratic presidential nomination, she is downright defiant, in her words and her deeds -- and apparently determined to take the rest of her party down with her as the Good Ship Clinton slips into the abyss.

Even a former Reagan speechwriter, Peggy Noonan, can see that.

"The Democratic Party can't celebrate the triumph of Barack Obama because the Democratic Party is busy having a breakdown," Noonan writes today in The Wall Street Journal.

"You could call it a breakdown over the issues of race and gender, but its real source is simply Hillary Clinton. Whose entire campaign at this point is about exploiting race and gender."

Noonan cited Hillary's desperation ploy to use race as a wedge issue to salvage her candidacy, most recently her USA Today interview.

Clinton said in part, reports USA Today: "I have a much broader base to build a winning coalition on." She then cited an Associated Press article "that found how Sen. Obama's support among working, hard-working Americans, white Americans, is weakening again, and how whites in both states who had not completed college were supporting me."

"There's a pattern emerging here," she added.

Noonan's response:

"White Americans? Hard-working white Americans? 'Even Richard Nixon didn't say white,' an Obama supporter said, 'even with the Southern strategy.'

"If John McCain said, 'I got the white vote, baby!' his candidacy would be over. And rising in highest indignation against him would be the old Democratic Party.

"To play the race card as Mrs. Clinton has, to highlight and encourage a sense that we are crudely divided as a nation, to make your argument a brute and cynical 'the black guy can't win but the white girl can' is -- well, so vulgar, so cynical, so cold, that once again a Clinton is making us turn off the television in case the children walk by."

Indeed. Clinton has had her chance. She has moved the goal post in her bid for the nomination several times. Her Hail Mary pass, it appears, is her whiteness.

As for how the most loyal bloc of Democratic voters, African Americans, must be feeling right now, I agree with The Washington Psot's Eugene Robinson.

Robinson writes: "As a rationale for why Democratic Party superdelegates should pick her over Obama, it's a slap in the face to the party's most loyal constituency -- African Americans -- and a repudiation of principles the party claims to stand for. Here's what she's really saying to party leaders: There's no way that white people are going to vote for the black guy. Come November, you'll be sorry.

"How silly of me. I thought the Democratic Party believed in a colorblind America."

Clinton defends her comments by saying they merely state the obvious.

"These are the people you have to win if you're a Democrat in sufficient numbers to actually win the election," she said. "Everybody knows that."

And she knows that her choice of words seems calculated to divide and conquer.

Only there is no conquest to be had. Not for her at this point.

"This nomination fight is over," says ABC's George Stephanopoulos, a former member of the Bill Clinton administration.

Obama has overtaken her in superdelegates.

Obama has won the most pledged delegates.

He leads in the popular vote.

But Clinton soldiers on. Now, apparently, Obama isn't white enough in her book.

The Clintons traditionally have occupied a special place among African Americans. That's in jeopardy now, if not totally eroded already.

She is hardly endearing herself to to the Democratic Party at large right now, either.

What can she be hoping for?

That the Rev. Jeremiah Wright will say something else?

That Obama will be revealed to be as space alien?

That a lost cache of uncommitted superdelegates will be uncovered in Al Capone's vault?

Hillary is like a basketball team that's 20 points down with 15 seconds left but still keeps calling timeouts.

Give it up, Hillary

Let the clock run out.

Obama has won by the rules. Let him win or lose in November on the merits of his message and his campaign.


May 10, 2008

Cosby ... for a cause

Bill Cosby settled comfortably into an easy chair at the Koury Center Friday night and spun a thread of very funny tales about the foibles of family life.

Wearing a blue and gold Aggies sweatshirt, the legendary comedian and actor was appearing --for free -- to benefit the Cosby Kids initiative at N.C. A&T that will prepare children as early as fourth grade for college careers.

Cosby has caused a stir now and again for a being a grumpy elder statesmen who isn't hesitant to tell it like it is about the state of black folk in the country. Even when the truth hurts.

But the only pain he dispensed Friday to a packed ballroom containing people of all races, ages and walks of life, was from them possibly laughing too hard.

The humor was gentle but hilarious, told in such a natural, effortless way, that even a malfunctionuing mike didn't knock Cosby off his stride. He'd just pause and jiggle the switch, and continue with stories about playing Spin the Bottle as a kid and getting beatings (in the North) and "whuppins" (in the South) and going to the dentist.

Once in while, he'd move out of the chair onto all fours on the floor, to dramatize a particular narrative.

He displayed the same kind of rare comic genius that Richard Pryor and only a few others could achieve, and he didn't cuss even once.

Some who may have been hoping for one of his patented, headline-making social diatribes may have been disappointed. He may have been saving that for today's commencement address for A&T.

But if they were, I couldn't tell. Everyone seemed to leave smiling and entertained.

May 11, 2008

Low-key Carroll has high-rise hopes for downtown's rebirth

This week's column.

The yellow construction elevator that climbs the face of the new Center Pointe tower creaks and groans as it rises high above the trees and fountains of Center City Park.

It jerks defiantly when it gets to the top, as if it wants to keep going. Then it quivers before finally settling down.

So does your stomach.

You stand there, still shaking and looking for something to grab as Roy Carroll II grins from underneath his hard hat, cool and sure-footed.

You wouldn’t know that the gleaming, black 17-story reclamation project is Carroll’s first high-rise development ever unless he told you.

He seems perfectly at home at Center Pointe, which soon will be his home, at least the top two floors.

This was not supposed to be doable. Conventional wisdom was that it was too risky and expensive. Better to blow it up than try to save what once had been the old Wachovia tower.
But Carroll, 45, had help from Jefferson Pilot, now Lincoln Financial, which sold him the building cheap, and from the city and county governments, which offered incentives that made the tower’s makeover into shops, offices and high-end condos financially feasible. Now more than 50 percent of the units are sold, and “we’re still selling,” Carroll said Thursday.

On a clear day, the 14th floor of the building offers a faint view of the Winston-Salem skyline and a bird’s-eye vista of NewBridge Bank Park (only from this height, the team that plays there really does look like Grasshoppers).

Slightly to the north, you also can see 4.5 acres of bare land that once was part of the old North State Chevrolet dealership.

Now it belongs to Roy Carroll, too.

Carroll has the land under contract and plans to develop it for “high-end” residences that either will be sold or rented. The details are still sketchy, Carroll said, but he does know for sure what he won’t do there. “We are not envisioning student housing,” he said.

Continue reading "Low-key Carroll has high-rise hopes for downtown's rebirth" »

May 12, 2008

I thought that I should never see ...

... But I have ... graffiti plastered on a tree.

In blue paint, at Cone Boulevard and Summit Avenue.

I keep telling myself to stop ranting about local vandalism (for all the good it does).

But it's hard not to be angry ... and exasperated.

May 14, 2008

'Lasting Impressions'


As Greensboro’s bicentennial celebration winds down, I’ve heard little about the historical play, “Lasting Impressions,” which raised its share of skepticism when the project was announced several months ago by the Greensboro Historical Museum.

I was one of the skeptics.

I questioned whether such a production could be interesting (I envisioned suffering through a Clara Edwards-directed pageant on the founding of Mayberry. Or watching paint dry. Or some combination thereof).

And I questioned whether it could be honest about less-savory chapters in the city’s history, such as the Klan-Nazi killings on Nov. 3, 1979.

But having attended the play two weeks ago, I was pleasantly surprised. It is packed with facts and dates and compresses 300 years into an hour and 25 minutes ... and it succeeds.

Further, it is funny and entertaining, and does not gloss over the good, the bad and the ugly in Greensboro’s history.

For instance, it touches upon the 1960 sit-ins, the 1979, Klan-Nazi killings and the vision, philanthropy and compassion of the Cone family -- as well as the unhealthy conditions in some of their plants and their sometimes cruel responses to labor organizers.

It also presents a powerful portrait of Josephine Boyd Bradley, the black girl who integrated what is now Grimsley High School.

The play was commissioned by the Historical Museum, “ and was written by Brenda P. Schleunes, producer and artistic director of the Touring Theatre of North Carolina.

She cobbled her script from diaries, newspaper clippings, letters and other documents from the museum’s archives.

And she confronted me before I could enter the building and politely but firmly challenged me to tell what I honestly thought after seeing the production.

The Greensboro Historical Museum people tell me that the play may make return for encore performances throughout the community.

That would be a good thing. More people could benefit from this entertaining and informative production.

Meanwhile another Bicentennial-related play, “Periphery,” debuts tonight and runs through May 18 at the Historical Museum. Tickets and reservations are available at www.ctg.org


May 16, 2008

Race and the race for the presidency

Say what you will about this being 2008 and us being beyond all that, race still matters in politics.

Eighteen percent of white voters in Pennsylvania admitted that race was a factor in their decision.

Eight percent in an Associated Press poll said they "would be uncomfortable voting for a black for president."

And these were only the ones who admitted it.

But, frankly, I'm a realist.

I can only imagine what those numbers would have been even a decade ago.

Remember, Barack Obama is close to doing the unthinkable. He is a hair's breadth from the Democratic nomination.

Remember, not that long ago, he wasn't even leading Hillary Clinton among black voters.

Now he is running out the clock on the heavy favorite, whose formidable name and massive political machine were supposed to cruise to the nomination.

Hillary paints herself as the underdog, but she really isn't. She is the favorite losing to the underdog.

And once the smoke settles and Obama takes on McCain in a campaign in which the differences in the candidates' positions on key issues are dramatic, this could really get good.

One footnote. For anyone who suggests that racism, in its rawest, meanest form, does not persist, The Washngton Post reports otherwise:

"For all the hope and excitement Obama's candidacy is generatingsome of his field workers, phone-bank volunteers and campaign surrogates are encountering a raw racism and hostility that have gone largely unnoticed — and unreported — this election season. Doors have been slammed in their faces. They've been called racially derogatory names (including the white volunteers). And they've endured malicious rants and ugly stereotyping from people who can't fathom that the senator from Illinois could become the first African American president."

Click here for some sobering snapshots from West Virginia and Indiana, not to mention that paragon of forward thinking, Pat Buchanan.

The Columbia Journalism Review weighs in here.

We're making hopeful progress, but we're definitely not there yet.

May 18, 2008

If Hillary had packed it in, bonds would've been doomed

An expanded version of this week's column.

County bond proponents should thank Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama for a happy ending on primary night.

In an outcome that shocked just about everybody, four of five bond issues passed on May 6, despite bad pre-election vibes and an even worse economy.

So, say what you will about Hillary’s quest for an unreachable goal. For the school bonds in Guilford County, it was manna from Heaven.

Had the Democrats’ fierce race for the White House not lasted until now, you almost certainly could have kissed nearly every one of those bonds goodbye.

Voters said yes to a total of $651 million in bonds to pay for school construction repairs and upgrades; a new campus and new classrooms at GTCC; a new Eastern Guilford High School; and a new Guilford County jail.

Even during a bad economy, voters saw a need to invest in education. More significantly, the huge turnout, including a wave of new, younger voters, made a difference.

Despite the expected surge in voters, absolutely no one predicted the bonds would do this well.

And anyone who tells you otherwise isn’t telling you the truth.

Other lessons from May 6:

Continue reading "If Hillary had packed it in, bonds would've been doomed" »

May 19, 2008

Are election letters slanted?

A recent letter from a reader:

The News and Record has been consistently fair in its election primary coverage of both the Democrat and the Republican parties, based on the coverage I‘ve seen.

Except for the editorial page.

Are Obama supporters the only constituents who write letters to the News and Record? “Obama’s Sold Record is There for All to See,” follows yesterday’s letter,“Critics overstate Wright’s Inflammatory Abilities.”

I find it hard to believe that McCain and Clinton backers write letters any less frequently than Barack Obama endorsers.

My reply:

Thanks for your note.

We publish nearly all of the election-related letters we receive. We also take care to ensure that they fully represent various points of view. That makes our editorial pages not only more balanced but more interesting and stimulating to our readers.

But we can’t publish letters we don’t receive.

Are you aware of any letters from friends or acquaintances that have endorsed Republicans or Hillary Clinton but have not been published? Have you written such a letter yourself and not had it published? If so, please let me know.

My guess is that we received so many more letters from Democrats during the primary campaign because of the Obama-Clinton race. That’s also probably why more Democrats than Republicans turned out to vote on May 6. The scenario should be very different in November.

As for pro-Clinton letters, I haven’t counted them individually but I know, from having screened most letters and proofed many of them, that we’ve run plenty.

Again, if you or someone you know has had trouble having an election letter published in our newspaper, please let me know. We keep careful files and records of all letters we receive and can look up a letter by the writer’s name and the date it arrived, whether it was published or not.

Please don’t hesitate to contact me if you have additional questions or concerns. We appreciate you reading the News & Record.


May 21, 2008

John votes yes. Elizabeth abstains.

Husband John may have cast his lot with Barack Obama. But Elizabeth Edwards will not follow suit, reports the News & Observer.

She will, instead, lend her support to ... no one.

A disturbing trend

Sound familiar?

This, from this morning's Charlotte Observer:

"A Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officer shot and killed a man on a quiet residential street a mile north of uptown Tuesday, the third time in seven months a suspect has died during a confrontation with CMPD."

You have to wonder about a trend here and whether the increasingly dangerous nature of policing -- contributes to these types of incidents.

Charlotte lost two policemen in a shooting incident last year.

May 22, 2008

Good Billy makes an appearance

I wrote this a few weeks ago in an endorsment editorial about one of our more beloved commissioners:

So, which Billy Yow are we discussing today: the Good Billy Yow or the Bad Billy Yow?

The Good Billy Yow is a lot smarter than he lets on and capable of prudent votes on key issues such as the downtown property swap that paved the way for a new downtown ballpark in Greensboro. The Bad Billy Yow can be caustic and divisive, even when you’re convinced he knows better.

Yow’s a Hatfield to fellow County Commissioner Skip Alston’s McCoy when it comes to racial politics, and both have played starring roles in "The County Commissioners’ Most Forgettable Moments."

Good Billy seems sincere when he says he regrets past transgressions. Then, oops, Bad Billy goes and does it again.

Yow and Alston often lock horns in name-calling and petty childishness that embarrass the whole county and tarnish its image statewide and arguably beyond.

Well, you get the picture.

But I'll have to give credit to Good Billy this week.

As a conservative Republican, he doesn't stand to gain a lot by suggesting (egads!) a 1-cent sales tax increase for the November ballot.

But he knows the county budget desperately needs it and he knows it can provide a little relief to those who pay property taxes, by spreading the burden.

Even though Guilford legislators rebuffed his request, at least he tried.

Way to go, Good Billy.

May 23, 2008

Hillary as VP? Forgedaboutit

I agree with Doug: The idea of Hillary Clinton as Barrack Obama's running mate makes absolutely no sense for any number of reasons.

1. With Hillary would come Bill as well. Two vice presidents for the price of one. Two second-guessers and potential headaches for the price of one as well.
2. Hillary and Bill represent a part of the Washington establishment Obama says he is trying to change.
3. The two don't personally care very much for each other. Why knowingly try to mix oil with water?
4. The "Dream Team" might energize the Democratic base but both are liberals (one from Chicago, the other from New York). How would that play to independents and voters in other parts of the country.

This is a worse idea than New Coke.

May 24, 2008

Bad Billy's back in town

Just when we thought it was safe to praise Billy Yow, here he goes again.

Even if Yow was joking (and I remember the earlier exchange involving Linda Shaw and Bruce Davis) Yow's ill-considered joke was bad timing and poor judgment ... at the least.

.

May 25, 2008

Protest petitions: DOA?

This week's column.

They nuked it with silence.

A proposed bill that would have restored to Greensboro citizens what others already have in the state’s other major cities went before it came on May 15.

The bill in question would have restored the right to use protest petitions in Greensboro.
A protest petition would require a two-thirds super majority (at least a 7-2 vote in favor) for the City Council to approve a disputed rezoning. To force such a vote, opponents would have to produce signatures from owners of at least 5 percent of the adjoining land.

Greensboro asked for and received an exemption to that state law that allows protest petitions in 1971. Despite the sheer reasonableness of the law, we as a citizenry have been without that right ever since, even as Charlotte, Raleigh, Winston-Salem and High Point seem to have gotten along just fine with protest petitions all those years.

They’re without it still.

The new bill already had a willing sponsor in state Rep. Pricey Harrison. If the county’s legislative delegation simply had asked, it likely would have been a shoo-in to pass in Raleigh. All it lacked was an official request from the City Council — which never came.

When the local legislators convened to take up the matter on May 15, it still hadn’t heard from the council. As it turns out, the council didn’t say yes or no to the idea. In fact, it didn’t say anything. It just sucked the life out of the bill — at least for now — by sealing its collective lips.
“We should have had an open dialogue on the dais about this,” Councilwoman Sandra Anderson Groat said last week.

Groat questioned why the council heard a briefing on the protest petition bill but never actually discussed it. When asked why legislation that works elsewhere won’t work here, Groat, who is a builder by trade, shrugged. “I don’t know. I absolutely don’t know.”

Continue reading "Protest petitions: DOA?" »

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