Where’s the beef?
 

Where’s the beef?

Learn all about beef cattle in two upcoming workshops scheduled for Macon County. The first is designed to teach the…
Read More

Comment

Franklin 5K coming to the greenway
 

Franklin 5K coming to the greenway

The Franklin Cross Country team will hold the Grayson Hall Memorial 5K race on Saturday, Nov. 12, at 9 a.m. at…
Read More

Comment

Cataloochee scores new school director
 

Cataloochee scores new school director

Cataloochee is welcoming new Ski and Snowboard School Director Mark Rozof, who was a member of the Cataloochee school last…
Read More

Comment

Mega trail work party at Tsali this weekend
 

Mega trail work party at Tsali this weekend

Get out your work gloves and head over to Tsali Recreation Area this month (Oct. 15-16) to help work on…
Read More

Comment

Taking flight with birds of prey
 

Taking flight with birds of prey

The “Eagle Lady” will be doing a free program with her live birds of prey at the Great Smoky Mountains…
Read More

Comment

‘Roosevelt’ headlining in Highlands, Cashiers
 

‘Roosevelt’ headlining in Highlands, Cashiers

A one-man show will portray the life of Theodore Roosevelt, the Conservation President, in two upcoming performances on Friday, Oct.…
Read More

Comment

New Wildlife Commission website
 

New Wildlife Commission website

The N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission has launched a new, interactive website at www.ncwildlife.org that features reorganized content, streamlined navigation and…
Read More

Comment

Leaf-lookers’ primer
 

Leaf-lookers’ primer

How did it get to be October already? Oh well, it’s here and the deep red sourwoods shinning from the…
Read More

Comment

Mud, Cowbells, and Beer: The Cyclocross Passions
 

Mud, Cowbells, and Beer: The Cyclocross Passions

For a good part of the past decade I have spent a lot of time riding and racing my bike.…
Read More

Comment

Folklorist to tell true ghost stories
 

Folklorist to tell true ghost stories

Folklorist and author Randy Russell will tell true ghost stories and read from new young adult novel at 5:30 p.m.…
Read More

Comment

Dodson to read at Blue Ridge Books
 

Dodson to read at Blue Ridge Books

Stan Dodson will read from his novel, Poor Memory, at 3 p.m. on Oct. 15 at Blue Ridge Books and…
Read More

Comment

Lane to read from newest book of poems
 

Lane to read from newest book of poems

John Lane will be at City Lights at 7 p.m. on Oct. 13 to read from his news book, Abandoned…
Read More

Comment

Norma Watkins to read from memoir
 

Norma Watkins to read from memoir

Norma Watkins will read from her memoir, The Last Resort, at 7 p.m. on Oct. 14 at City Lights Bookstore…
Read More

Comment

WCU’s Rash to receive state’s highest civilian honor
 

WCU’s Rash to receive state’s highest civilian honor

Western Carolina University faculty member and writer Ron Rash is one of six North Carolinians chosen to receive the state’s…
Read More

Comment

The past is not really past
 

The past is not really past

It is no secret that writers are influenced by authors whose work they admire. Though he would later turn his…
Read More

Comment

Box of spring bulbs will light the way through winter
 

Box of spring bulbs will light the way through winter

A box of bulbs arrived Saturday, containing within the cardboard confines all the promises of fall work, winter waiting and…
Read More

Comment

Student housing would benefit Forest Hills
 

Student housing would benefit Forest Hills

To the Editor: In response to the article written by Quintin Ellison published Oct. 5 regarding the developer request to…
Read More

Comment

Cutting food aid right now is deplorable
 

Cutting food aid right now is deplorable

To the Editor: An elderly widow on a fixed-income already cannot afford a healthy diet and her medications, and now…
Read More

Comment

Waynesville town board needs Mary Ann Enloe
 

Waynesville town board needs Mary Ann Enloe

To the Editor: One of America’s greatest statesmen, Thomas Paine, wrote a book called Common Sense. Unfortunately, this trait is…
Read More

Comment

General Assembly puts burden on locals
 

General Assembly puts burden on locals

To the Editor: It has become evident that the principle guideline being used by Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, and the…
Read More

Comment

Pope is pulling the strings in state politics
 

Pope is pulling the strings in state politics

The news media in this country is abuzz with talk about North Carolina. Unfortunately, it’s not flattering. What they’re saying…
Read More

Comment

Business news
 

Business news

Grant helps outfit new Haywood hospice center With help from two Appalachian Regional Commission grants, Haywood Regional Medical Center plans…
Read More

Comment

Connie Haire retires from SCC
 

Connie Haire retires from SCC

Connie Haire, vice president for the Macon Campus Southwestern Community College, has retired after serving 25 years at the college.…
Read More

Comment

Dog park envy grips pooch owners in Sylva, Franklin
 

Dog park envy grips pooch owners in Sylva, Franklin

Efforts are well under way in both Sylva and Franklin to build dog parks, places where folks’ canine companions can…
Read More

Comment

Alcohol vote could bring booze to Cherokee’s doorstep
 

Alcohol vote could bring booze to Cherokee’s doorstep

Ray Bradley Jr. is the talkative type. He’s not shy airing his opinions, whether the discussion is about Cherokee tribal…
Read More

Comment

MaconSense heading Macon league program
 

MaconSense heading Macon league program

A luncheon program at noon Thursday, Oct. 13, at Tartan Hall, located in the First Presbyterian Church in Franklin, will…
Read More

Comment

Get help on maintaining a successful business
 

Get help on maintaining a successful business

The Jackson County Public Library will host a free business seminar on how to create and maintain successful businesses in…
Read More

Comment

Federal settlement claims-filing help
 

Federal settlement claims-filing help

Help filing claims in the $760 million Keepseagle Native American Farmer and Rancher Settlement is set for Oct. 18-20, between…
Read More

Comment

Rape suspects still at large in Macon County
 

Rape suspects still at large in Macon County

Two recent rapes in Macon County involving assailants unknown to the victims, both cases still unsolved, have left many women…
Read More

Comment

Federal authorities wait to alert public of a rapist at large
 

Federal authorities wait to alert public of a rapist at large

It took five days for the U.S. Forest Service to alert the public about a roadside rape in the Wayah…
Read More

Comment

Free vouchers available to spay and neuter cats
 

Free vouchers available to spay and neuter cats

Haywood Animal Welfare Association Spay/Neuter is offering 100 free vouchers for surgery, rabies vaccination and parasite treatment for cats. Vouchers…
Read More

Comment

Recognize those volunteer efforts
 

Recognize those volunteer efforts

Know a volunteer who deserves recognition? The Haywood/Jackson Volunteer Center is now taking nominations for the North Carolina’s Governor’s Award…
Read More

Comment

Care about Canton’s future? Jump on board with StepUp Canton
 

Care about Canton’s future? Jump on board with StepUp Canton

With a paper mill that constantly bellows smoke, Canton will not likely be the next Western North Carolina tourism destination.…
Read More

Comment

Get an early jump on college in Jackson
 

Get an early jump on college in Jackson

Jackson County Early College High School is recruiting for the 2012-2013 school year. Information sessions are scheduled at 6 p.m.…
Read More

Comment

Myron Coulter, WCU chancellor emeritus, loses battle with cancer at 82
 

Myron Coulter, WCU chancellor emeritus, loses battle with cancer at 82

Myron L. Coulter, chancellor of Western Carolina University from 1984 until 1994, died Tuesday, Oct. 4, at the age of…
Read More

Comment

Leaders take on tree-enshrouded vistas on Parkway
 

Leaders take on tree-enshrouded vistas on Parkway

The Haywood County Tourism Development Authority is looking for ways to help the Blue Ridge Parkway trim its chronic overgrowth…
Read More

Comment

Site retooled for growing ranks of smartphone-wielding tourists
 

Site retooled for growing ranks of smartphone-wielding tourists

As early as next week, the Haywood County Tourism Development Authority will launch the latest addition to its “See yourself…
Read More

Comment

Haywood tourism leaders leave no stone unturned in hunt for room tax money
 

Haywood tourism leaders leave no stone unturned in hunt for room tax money

The Haywood County Tourism Development Authority may outsource its search for vacation home renters who are evading the county’s 4…
Read More

Comment

Canned goods needed to support Haywood Meals on Wheels
 

Canned goods needed to support Haywood Meals on Wheels

The Altrusa Club of Waynesville is collecting one-serving pop-top canned goods for the Haywood County Meals on Wheels program, to…
Read More

Comment

Town’s public art celebrates history, heritage
 

Town’s public art celebrates history, heritage

Public art can be a tricky business for a town, given the wide range of public tastes. For years, Waynesville…
Read More

Comment

Smokies arch to join Waynesville’s growing parade of public art
 

Smokies arch to join Waynesville’s growing parade of public art

It doesn’t take much of an artist’s eye to appreciate the newest piece of public art planned for the streets…
Read More

Comment

Call to Arms!
 

Call to Arms!

Western North Carolina boasts several clubs for Civil War enthusiasts, from scholarly programs to reliving the experience. • Western North…
Read More

Comment

Poignant, touching, revealing: WCU collection of Civil War letters helps mark anniversary of war’s start
 

Poignant, touching, revealing: WCU collection of Civil War letters helps mark anniversary of war’s start

Next to Hunter Library at Western Carolina University is a Baptist church with a 190-year-old graveyard. George Frizzell, head of…
Read More

Comment

150 years later, Civil War still mesmerizes many
 

150 years later, Civil War still mesmerizes many

Buffs, enthusiasts, aficionados, nuts: call them what you will, but remember the saying about strength in numbers. American’s fascination with…
Read More

Comment

Playing the part: Re-enactor honors heritage by walking in Civil War soldier’s footsteps
 

Playing the part: Re-enactor honors heritage by walking in Civil War soldier’s footsteps

Jule Morrow isn’t a rebel; Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama” isn’t his personal mantra. He doesn’t relive the Civil War,…
Read More

Comment

Perdue gives leaders pep talk to nurture ideas
 

Perdue gives leaders pep talk to nurture ideas

A town doesn’t have to be big to have big ideas, according to North Carolina Gov. Bev Perdue. “What is…
Read More

Comment

Revisit the Ingalls family with SMCT play
 

Revisit the Ingalls family with SMCT play

Smoky Mountain Community Theatre in Bryson City will stage “Little House: By The Shores of Silver Lake” at 7:30 p.m.…
Read More

Comment

Fariello to speak as part of Craft Week
 

Fariello to speak as part of Craft Week

Anna Fariello, associate research professor at Hunter Library at Western Carolina University, will speak about the identity of American craft…
Read More

Comment

‘Liars Bench’ Halloween show to be presented Oct. 20
 

‘Liars Bench’ Halloween show to be presented Oct. 20

Western Carolina University’s Mountain Heritage Center will host a free Halloween-flavored performance of “The Liars Bench” Southern Appalachian variety show…
Read More

Comment

Stecoah welcomes Harvest Festival
 

Stecoah welcomes Harvest Festival

Mountain traditions come alive at the annual Harvest Festival on Oct. 14-16 at the Stecoah Valley Cultural Arts Center on…
Read More

Comment

Smokey Mountain News Logo
SUPPORT THE SMOKY MOUNTAIN NEWS AND
INDEPENDENT, AWARD-WINNING JOURNALISM
Go to top
Payment Information

/

At our inception 20 years ago, we chose to be different. Unlike other news organizations, we made the decision to provide in-depth, regional reporting free to anyone who wanted access to it. We don’t plan to change that model. Support from our readers will help us maintain and strengthen the editorial independence that is crucial to our mission to help make Western North Carolina a better place to call home. If you are able, please support The Smoky Mountain News.

The Smoky Mountain News is a wholly private corporation. Reader contributions support the journalistic mission of SMN to remain independent. Your support of SMN does not constitute a charitable donation. If you have a question about contributing to SMN, please contact us.