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The Southern Green Living Expo will offer a weekend of solution-based, interactive, family oriented events on a host of environmental topics aimed at sustainable living Sept. 14-16 in Asheville.
Hundreds of exhibitors, workshops and demontrations will show people how to live a greener lifestyle while saving money. Topics include renewable energy, alternative transportation, sustainable agriculture, green building, buying local, recycling, eco-friendly living and reducing your carbon footprint.
Vendors and exhibits at the expo will feature local businesses, nonprofits, artists, and cutting-edge products that are all working for a more sustainable environment. Demonstrations will feature the newest trends on the forefront of the green economy.
Held at the U.S. Cellular Center (Asheville Civic Center) in downtown Asheville. 828.255.2526 or www.southerngreenlivingexpo.com.
Waynesville will have compost and double-ground mulch available for pickup from 8 a.m. to noon at the town yard waste landfill Oct. 15-17.
For compost, prices per load are $10 for a regular pickup or trailer and $60 for a tandem truck. For double-ground mulch, prices per load are $10 for a small pickup, $25 for a regular pickup, $100 for a tandem truck and $200 for a roll-off. Tandem trucks and roll-offs will be allowed Oct. 15-17 only. A limited amount of single-ground mulch will be available for $10 per load regardless of truck size.
Cash or check only. Loads must be covered. The landfill is on Bible Baptist Drive off Russ Avenue, near the bypass on-ramp for U.S. 74. Go straight through the gate at the end of Bible Baptist Drive and see the attendant.
The sale will be canceled in case of wet weather. 828.456.3706.
The Great Smoky Mountains Association will gather for three days of hiking, special programs and camaraderie in Bryson City Sept. 14-16.
Outings will include an early morning bird walk and a fern walk, as well as talks on the Smokies’ elk herd, nature journaling, Horace Kephart’s Camp Cookery and a live birds of prey program. There will also be group hikes.
The annual weekend gathering is for members only.
www.smokiesinformation.org or 865.436.7318.
A new farmer’s market has joined the local food scene in the mountains. The ‘Whee Farmer’s Market in Cullowhee community of Jackson County is open Wednesday night from 5 p.m. until dusk through October. All locally grown and produced plants, vegetable and eggs. It is located beside Cullowhee United Methodist and behind BB&T and Cat’s Nip Cafe in central WCU campus. 828.476.0334
Trail advocates from several states will converge for the Southeastern Foot Trails Coalition annual gathering Sept. 20-23 at Falls Creek Falls State Park outside Chattanooga, Tenn.
The conference features a packed line-up of speakers, group hikes and workshops.
Some of the many program topics include: writing trail guides, serving as a trail ambassador, Leave No Child Inside, maintaining trails in wilderness areas, fixes for poorly designed trails, acquiring land for trails and trail protection.
Several hiking clubs and trail organizations from Western North Carolina will be attending to learn new tools and build camaraderie with like-minded hikers from more than 40 trail groups.
Trail users are invited to share their ideas for a comprehensive regional trail plan at a public workshop from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 13, at the Jackson County Library.
In particular, the regional trail plan will identify trail needs, such as a possible Mountains-to-Sea Trail connection between Bryson City and Sylva, and help tie together the greenway visions of neighboring communities into a regional system.
“There’s always been a lot of interest in hiking, mountain biking and horseback riding in this region,” said Sarah Graham, regional planner for the Southwestern Commission. “We hope to take some of the plans already completed by counties and towns and organize them into a cohesive regional vision for future trails.”
The workshop is being hosted by the Southwestern Commission as part of regional trail plan underway for seven counties in Western North Carolina.
Southwestern Commission, through a grant from the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation and its State Trails Program, is leading the regional trails inventory and concept plan for Cherokee, Clay, Haywood, Graham, Jackson, Macon and Swain Counties. Other workshops will be scheduled in other counties this fall.
The plan will result in a region-wide map of existing hiking trails, greenways, mountain bike trails, and some on-road bicycle routes. It will also include recommendations, based on public input, on where new trails, greenways or routes could go.
828.586.1962, ext. 212.
A guided hike along picturesque cascades of Big Creek in the Haywood County section of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park will be held Thursday, Sept. 20.
Photos of wildlife and special places taken by members of the Highlands Plateau Audubon Society will be shared during a special program at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 10, in Highlands.
The evening will include a presentation of Ed Boos of Scaly Mountain, a nature photographer who currently has work on display at The Bascoms.
Boos and his wife Cindy have traveled extensively throughout the United States and Canada photographing and filming large mammalian predators in some of the iconic Western National Parks as well as nesting behavior and rearing of chicks among birds of prey. Ed’s stunning photos and Cindy’s videos from their trips present memorable images of these special animals in their natural habitats.
They will also share entertaining stories from the extensive time spent photographing these iconic species.
Held at Highlands Civic Center. Refreshments start at 7 p.m. Free.
Go behind the scenes at the Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute during a special program held from 5 to 9 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 14.
Tours of the campus will include the new $1.3 million renovations to the Research Building, StarLab planetarium programs and project demonstrations by students, researchers and PARI staff. The hands-on evening will include the opportunity to talk one-on-one with PARI scientists.
The event, sponsored by the Friends of PARI, includes a keynote presentation by Stephen Saucier, executive director of the NC Grassroots Science Museums Collaborative.
Located in the Pisgah Forest in Transylvania County.
828.862.5554 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Jay Erskine Leutze will discuss his book, Stand Up That Mountain at 6:30 p.m. on Sept. 7 at City Lights Bookstore in Sylva.
Leutze’s book tells of his role in defending a small mountain town on the Appalachian Trail from a large-scale gravel mine operation.
Leutze, has become a leading voice for state and federal conservation funding for investment in public lands. He is a Trustee for Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy, one of the nation’s most established land trusts.
828.587.2233.
By Brent Martin
It is a rare event these days to come across a work of non-fiction dealing with any environmental issue that does not leave one with feelings of despair and loss. Author Jay Leutze, however, has given us a tale of how one little corner of Appalachia, when galvanized to stand up for their homes and natural resources, persevered in the face of despair and overwhelming odds, and won. But Stand Up That Mountain is more than just the story of how the Dog Town community in Avery County, N.C., hung in there for years to ultimately defeat the Putnam rock quarry, it is also a blow by blow account of Leutze’s development as a conservationist — now one of North Carolina’s most valuable and treasured — who had moved to his old family home on Yellow Mountain in the Roan Highlands to withdraw from some such distractions in order to follow his passion to become a writer.
Fall storytimes to get under way at Sylva library
The Jackson County Public Library in Sylva will begin its fall storytime schedule at 11 a.m. on Sept. 10 featuring a volunteer reader from Sylva’s Rotary Club.
The Rotary Readers program is held every Monday at 11 a.m. The theme for the month of September is “harvest time.”
Tuesday storytime at 11 a.m. on Sept. 11 will be devoted to “What grandparents do best.” An afternoon storytime is held on Wednesdays at 1 p.m., with grandparents as the theme on Sept. 12. Fridays will feature two storytimes, one at 11 a.m. (“How to babysit a grandpa” on Sept. 14) and another (“Storytime with Miss Sally”) at 3:30 p.m.
Family night at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 13, will mimic camping with a campfire and s’mores.
There are storytimes on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays, with family night activities on Thursday evenings. The event is free.
The programs are co-sponsored by the Friends of the Jackson County Public Library.
828.586.2016.
PLAYFEST brings prize-winning playwrights’ works to Cashiers
PLAYFEST, a fully staged reading of eight of some of the best short plays from around the country, goes up at the Albert Carlton Cashiers Community Library at 7 p.m. on Sept. 15.
The hilarious and poignant plays, many written by prize-winning playwrights, include “Martin’s Dilemma” by David M. Sirois of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; “Crisis Line” by Dan Borengasser of Springdale, Ariz.; “Change of Plans” by Dennis Jones of Powhatan, Va.; “Missed Connections” by Marj O’Neill Butler of Miami Beach, Fla.; “Scripted” and “Misfortune” by Mark H. Levine of Pasadena, Cali.; “An Answer to Their Prayers” by Hank Kimmel of Atlanta, Ga.: and “Forever Young” by Mary Unterbrink of Deerfield Beach, Fla.
Friends of the Library is sponsoring PLAYFEST. Friends of the Library is the major contributor to the daily operation of the Cashiers Community Library. Funds are provided primarily through membership dues and donations. Membership is open to all.
HCC to offer seminar on marketing for artisans
The Small Business Center of Haywood Community College will offer a free seminar called “Marketing for the Craftsperson & Artist Part I” from 2-5 p.m. on Sept. 13, on the first floor of the student center. Part two will be offered from 9 a.m. to noon on Sept. 14 in the same location.
The program will aid the craftsperson or artist in developing a marketing plan aimed at increasing sales and profit and will emphasize excellence in product as well as efficient ways to broaden public awareness through effective advertising.
The presenter is Linda Rozelle of Greensboro. Rozelle has a diverse background in commercial art, has designed hundreds of corporate identity programs nationwide and has been nationally recognized for excellence in advertising. Audiences have found Roselle’s creativity and humor a captivating vehicle as she delivers a strong message for the small business owner and entrepreneur.
828.627.4512.
Free arts and crafts workshop for kids
Elementary school-aged children and their families are invited to a free “Many Cultures” ARTSaturday workshop from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturday, Sept. 8, in the children’s area of the Macon County Public Library.
Make-and-take projects include Egyptian paper beads and Mexican sunflowers. Daughters of the American Revolution will visit in period costume and share some of our country’s history. Keyboardist Lionel Caynon will provide live music. Ice cream treats also will be served.
There’s no pre-registration; children should wear play clothes. Adults must stay with their children. The library is off Siler Road in Franklin, adjacent to Southwestern Community College.
The Grassroots Arts Program of the North Carolina Arts Council, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources, supports the ARTSaturday series.
www.artscouncilofmacon.org or phone 828-524-7683.
Craft demonstrations at Dogwood Crafters
Craft demonstrations will begin in September at Dogwood Crafters in Dillsboro. Craftsmen will demonstrate their work and discuss their craft at the store through the month of October.
• Betsey Sloan will weave baskets and answer questions from noon to 3 p.m. on Sept. 7. Sloan has written the 2011 book Antler Art for Baskets and Gourds. She hails from New England, where she owned an artisan gallery in Vermont and has been making baskets for 20 years.
• Ron Yount will demonstrate woodcarving from 2-4 p.m. on Sept. 9. A retired educator from Jackson County, Yount has been carving for more than 25 years. He will discuss many types of woodcarving, including relief carving, creative carving, spirit-face carving and “carving in the round.”
• Barbara Spitzer will make scarecrows and share techniques for creating this autumn decoration from 10 a.m. to noon on Sept. 11.
These crafters, along with the future scheduled demonstrators, are Dogwood Crafters and have their works for sale at the shop in Dillsboro. Dogwood Crafters is open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., with evening hours until 9 p.m. in October.
828.586.2248.
Bates Smith to retell ‘quirky lady’ stories
Actress Barbara Bates Smith has cooked up a new program — a preview of “quirky lady” short stories by North Carolina writers, with musical accompaniment by Jeff Sebens.
Smith will perform the stories at 1 p.m. on Sept. 10 at the Senior Resource Center on Elmwood Way in Waynesville.
The stories are “Derva’s Chair” and “Daisy Wars” by Ruth Moose, “It Had Wings” by Allan Gurganus and “Everett as Bacchus” by Joy Bartlett. A discussion will follow the performance.
828.452.2370
“Mother Jones” play comes to Jackson
The one-woman play “Mother Jones” by local playwright and cultural historian Gary Carden will be held at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 15 in the Community Room at the Jackson County Library Complex.
“Mother Jones,” a.k.a. Mary Harris, was a labor and community activist in the late nineteenth century. She organized mill and coal workers, fighting for the rights of women and children who were exposed to unsafe and unhealthy work conditions. “Mother Jones” will be portrayed by Laura Chew, a storyteller, actress, writer and naturalist who resides in Macon County.
Jackson County Arts Council, which is a part of the North Carolina Arts Council, will sponsor the event. Tickets will be available the night of the performance, one hour prior to show time and are $10 for adults, $5 for students and children.
828.507.9820 or 828.507.9531.
The Great Smoky Mountain Railroad’s 11th Annual RailFest will be held the weekend of Sept. 15 and 16 in Bryson City. The festival offers guests a taste of railroading, food, memorabilia, storytelling, dance, music, special excursions and events.
“Steam” will be returning to the Bryson City Depot for the festivities. Also making a return is “The Little Engine That Could” and Lehigh Valley Coal Co. #126. The two engines will be partnering up to provide Caboose train rides throughout the weekend. All trains depart from Bryson City to Whittier on Saturday at 12:15 p.m. and 2:30 p.m., and on Sunday at 1:45 p.m.
A small selection of historical motorcars will be featured. The track cars were formerly used on railroads to inspect track and carry track gangs and their tools to work zones.
The festival will include an authentic mountain craft fair with 30 area crafters and artists displaying and selling their handmade crafts, pottery and artwork. Catch the Spirit of Appalachia will present local entertainment featuring singing, dancing and mountain folk music. There will be vendors, a children’s talent contest and winner’s jamboree, with luegrass, old time mountain music and folk performed by various local bands
Festivites downtown are free but to ride the train adult tickets start at $35 and $17.50 for Children (2-12).
828.488.7024 or www.GSMR.com.
Flutist Kate Steinback and guitarist Amy Brucksch will play in concert at 3 p.m. on Sept. 16 at the Canton library.
Don Williams, a highly acclaimed country music singer and songwriter, will perform at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 15 at the Smoky Mountain Center for the Performing Arts.
Williams is back on the road after almost five years of retirement, playing to sold-out houses all across the country. Charting 17 number one songs and more than 40 Top Ten singles, Williams is a true American classic. His hits include “Good Ole Boys Like Me,” “Amanda,” and “Tulsa Time.” Williams has earned many awards throughout his career. In 2010, he received country music’s highest honor when he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.
Williams has been referred to as country music’s “gentle giant.” His soft tone and connection to his music is friendly and inviting. Fans often find themselves able to relate to the message in his songs.
Tickets are $29 and can be purchased online or at the theatre’s box office located at 1028 Georgia Road in Franklin.
www.GreatMountainMusic.com or 866.273.4615.
The sounds of Frank Sinatra will arrive at Western Carolina University on Sept. 16 for the first installment of the 2012-13 Galaxy of Stars Series.
Disc jockey Alan Price will be hosting a “Golden Oldies Sock Hop Extravaganza” at the Lake Junaluska Conference and Retreat Center from 2-11 p.m.on Tuesday, Sept. 18.
The event will feature Price, The Dovells (“Bristol Stomp) and Jimmy Clanton (“Venus in Blue Jeans”). There will be a meet and greet from 2-5 p.m., with the show starting in the auditorium at 7 p.m. Besides music and dancing, there will also be prizes given out to the best ‘50s and ‘60s attire.
Tickets available at www.LakeJunaluska.com or 800.222.4930.
The next Second Sunday Contra Dance will be held from 2:30-5 p.m. on Sept. 9 in the community room on the second floor of the old courthouse in the Jackson County Library Complex in Sylva.
Ron Arps will call the dance to the music of “Out of the Woodwork.” There will also be a potluck dinner following the contra dance, starting at 5:30 p.m. Please bring a covered dish, plate, cup and cutlery and a water bottle.
All dances are done to live music. Local musicians are invited to sit in with the band, to jam and learn how to play music for dancing. No previous experience with contra dancing is necessary. All dances will be taught and walked through before dancing. No partner is required.
Contra dancing is a form of English country dancing and uses many of the same figures as square dancing such as circles, stars and swings.
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Trumpet player Brandon Craswell will perform a free recital at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 7 in the Coulter Building recital hall on the campus of Western Carolina University.
Craswell is an assistant professor of trumpet at the University of Georgia. Accompanying him will be P. Bradley Ulrich, a professor of trumpet at WCU, and Douglas Jurs, an assistant professor of piano and music theory at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College in Tifton, Ga.
The program will include works by Igor Stravinsky, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, John Hennecken, Isaac Albéniz, Francis Poulenc, George Gershwin, Jules Levy and Johannes Brahms.
Adept at classical and jazz, Craswell holds a doctoral degree in musical arts from the University of Kentucky. He played Carnegie Hall with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and has played abroad in Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Chile, Germany, Italy and Russia.
The next community music jam at the library in Bryson City will be from 6-7:30 p.m. on Sept. 6 in the library auditorium or, weather permitting, on the library’s front lawn.
Anyone with a guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle or dulcimer (anything unplugged) is invited to join. The jam is facilitated by Larry Barnett of Grampa’s Music in Bryson City. Barnett starts by calling out a tune, and its key signature, and the group plays it together. Then, everyone in the circle gets a chance to choose a song for the group to play together.
The music jams are offered to the public each first and third Thursday of the month at Marianna Black Library, located at the corner of Academy and Rector
828.488.3030.
Accordion stars to appear in Maggie Valley
The second annual Smoky Mountain Accordion Festival will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 15, at the Maggie Valley Club. The event will showcase regional accordionists from Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina and South Carolina, with an evening concert featuring Tony Lovello and Walter Kasprzyk.
Tickets for the event are $20. 828.734.2975.
Community Band to play free show in Maggie
Haywood Community Band will present its fourth installment of the Maggie Valley Concert Series at 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 16. The band will play “Sounds from the Silver Screen,” which includes themes from “Mission Impossible,” “Schindler’s List,” “A Tribute to Mancini,” and other themes from popular movies of the past.
Sponsored by the Maggie Valley Civic Association, the free performance will be at the pavilion adjacent to the Maggie Valley Town Hall on Soco Road. Bring a picnic dinner. The next scheduled concert thereafter is Sunday, Oct. 21.
828.456.4880 or www.HaywoodCommunityBand.org.
Karen Peck and New River, an award-winning Southern gospel group from Gainesville, Ga., and The Kingsmen Quartet, a Southern gospel quartet out of Asheville, will be in concert at 7:30 p.m. on Sept. 7 at the Smoky Mountain Center for the Performing Arts.
In 1991, Peck and her sister, Susan, along with her husband, Rickey, formed the group Karen Peck and New River. They have received many awards, including two Dove Awards, and have been nominated for three Grammys.
The Kingsmen have won multiple Singing News Fan Awards and have received many Grammy and Dove Award nominations. In 2000, they were inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame.
Tickets start at $15. Reserve tickets online or at the theater’s box office located at 1028 Georgia Road in Franklin.
www.GreatMountainMusic.com or 866.273.4615.
The Highlands Performing Arts Center will present the Bluegrass Duel 8 p.m. on Sept. 15. The event will feature Asheville’s Nitrograss (pictured) and Athen’s Packway Handle.
Kids can enjoy a wide range of youth art classes at The Bascom this September and October.
• Creation Station, a make-and-take, make-your-own-masterpiece class, will run from 10 a.m. to noon, Saturdays, Sept. 1 through Oct. 27. The class is open to ages 5-9. Cost is $5. No pre-registration is required.
• After-School Art Adventure will take place from 3:15-4:30 p.m., Tuesdays, Sept. 18 through Oct. 23. The course, for ages 5-9, will include individual and collaborative projects and experiment with everything from painting, ceramics and sculpture to printmaking and collage. Snacks are provided. Class size is limited; pre-registration is required. The cost is $30 for a six-week session.
• Friends Around the Globe will allow students, ages 8-12, to explore different cultures through various art projects. The program, which will occur from 3:15-4:30 p.m. Sept. 15 and 29 and Oct. 13 and 27, is presented in partnership with the International Friendship Center. No pre-registration required. Cost is $5 per class.
Scholarship opportunities are available.
www.TheBascom.org or 828.526.4949.
ColorFest’s “Art & Taste of Appalachia Artist’s Reception” will be held at the historical Jarrott House in Dillsboro at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 6.
Locally selected fine artists representing Jackson, Swain, Macon, Graham and Haywood counties are bringing their artwork to the reception and will be handed over to the merchants of Dillsboro to display in their shops for the month of September. The Dillsboro merchants will be bringing their favorite recipes. Catch the Spirit of Appalachia board members will be present to help handle the artwork.
The reception kicks off ColorFest, “Art & Taste of Appalachia” coming up on Oct. 6. Selected artists will be demonstrating their art on the streets of Dillsboro with local musicians and North Carolina food on hand.
Preview the artist’s works at www.yurtstudiocom/myblog/blog6.php.
The Waynesville Gallery Association presents Art After Dark from 6–9 p.m. on Sept. 7 and a Saturday Stroll from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sept. 8.
Working studios and galleries on Main Street, Depot Street and in historic Frog Level will feature demonstrating artists Friday evening and Saturday.
Festive Art After Dark and Saturday Stroll flags mark participating galleries like Burr Studio and Gallery, Earthworks Frame Shop, Earthworks Gallery, Gallery Two Six Two, Grace Cathey Sculpture Garden and Gallery, Haywood County Arts Council’s Gallery 86, the Jeweler’s Workbench, Lone Backpacker Gallery of World Photography, TPennington Art Gallery and Twigs and Leaves Gallery.
The Art After Dark and Saturday Stroll take place the first Friday/Saturday weekend of each month through December.
www.waynesvillegalleryassociation.com or 828.452.9284.
Textile historian Suzanne Hill McDowell will host a luncheon program from noon to 2 p.m. on Sept. 15 and tell the stories of a selection of quilts ay the Museum of North Carolina Handicrafts housed in historic Shelton House in Waynesville.
McDowell has spent the winter studying eight quilts from the historic Shelton House collection and will incorporate detailed analysis and historical knowledge.
The event is limited to 50 people, with catered lunch provided by Kanini’s, Herron House and the Olde Brick House. Tickets are $20 and should be purchased by Sept. 8 at the Olde Brick House and Blue Ridge Books.
Sponsors for the event are Blue Ridge Books, Christmas is Everyday, Clyde Ray’s Flower Shop, Herron House, Olde Brick House, Polly’s Florist and Quilters’ Quarters.
828.452.1551.
Silvia Williams will instruct a workshop on experimental art from 1-3 p.m. on Sept. 14 at Leapin’ Frog Gallery.
Williams is an abstract experimental artist interested in expressing herself through color, texture and line. Students will be doing a collage applied with exciting colors and shapes. Various techniques will be shown, and students may choose which technique is most suited for them.
Cost is $25. Leapin’ Frog Gallery is located at 58 Commerce Street in Waynesville. 828.456.8441.
To the Editor:
Believing in the power of women’s votes, here are some facts that we are facing in November.
We have heard the GOP war on women dominate the news while delaying action that is imperative to the quickly vanishing middle class. GOP congressional members have been relentless in trying to restrict women’s health care rights and economic equality.
• It costs $4.8 million to keep the House of Representatives open for one day.
• 52 days of House business was sidelined by their War On Women.
• $4.8 million times 52 days = $249.60 million of taxpayers money wasted.
• In 2011, the GOP House attacked women’s rights 19 of the 25 weeks they were in session.
• In 2012, GOP House attacked women’s rights 19 of the 21 weeks they were in session.
In the past, a women’s place for the most part was to stay home, barefoot and pregnant. Do we really want our daughters, granddaughters and generations to come to lose the rights we have worked so hard to give them? No, we want them to be recognized as valuable assets to themselves, their family, their community and their country?
On the Mother Jones website, Nick Baumann reports, “Under a GOP-backed bill expected to sail through the House, the Internal Revenue Service would be forced to police how American women have paid for their abortion. To ensure that taxpayers comply with the law, IRS agents would have to investigate whether certain terminated pregnancies were the result of rape or incest.” Remember illegal abortions that use to be done, frequently with very bad or fatal results?
The House Republicans have already voted on a bill that said some rapes are “legitimate.” Over 200 House Republicans co-sponsored H.R. 3 at the beginning of 2011. The truth is, Missouri Rep. Todd Akin is totally in line with today’s Republican Party. They also voted for a Republican amendment to cut all federal funding for Planned Parenthood. Do our young people who may have made a mistake really deserve that?
Some attacks of the GOP’s War on Women are:
• Reducing women’s access to abortion care.
• Redefining rape.
• Cutting nearly a billion dollars of food and other aid to low-income pregnant women and babies. Yes, there are some women who abuse this benefit but think of the ones that don’t, who have no other choice.
• Women should be home with the kids, not out working. In this Republican-caused recession, what would happen if women didn’t work?
• Cutting Head Start by $1 billion, which means over 200,000 kids could lose their preschool spot. That can’t be what any middle- or low-income class mother would want.
Republicans are taking particular aim at low-income elderly in the form of cutting or eliminating funding for meals, heating assistance, transportation and housing subsidies. Do we really want to see poor elderly and disabled people walking the streets?
We need to speak out with loud, outraged voices and show the GOP:
• No to taking away the rights and freedom of American women.
• No to threatening the health of millions of women and their families.
• No to attacks on women’s right to choose.
We have heard a lot about GOP candidates and their views. This information is just a preview of the tragic plans they have for women. The future of our younger generations of girls is in our hands and votes. We must protect them and their futures.
I believe in the strength and moral compass of American women.
Valerie Harrison
Dillsboro
To the Editor:
I find nothing wrong with your article, “Confederates in the attic” (Aug. 29 edition, www.smokymountainnews.com/opinion) unlike certain others. It seems, however, that those who make the most noise about their rights not being respected are the very ones who come to Haywood County to tell our good elected officials and our fine people how to act and what to think. Why can’t these outsiders stay away and leave our fair county alone?
That man praying for you was wrong. He ignores the log in his eye to suppose there is a mote in yours, and in Proverbs it says, “There is a way that seems right to a man but in the end it is the way of death.” Shame on him!
As to these unenlightened and their “history lessons,” don’t they know history repeats itself? In 1865 Gen. Sherman and others thought they had sorted out the foolishness of the day but they were wrong. It evolved into the Sons of the Confederate Veterans, which is now tagged a hate group because of their words and deeds, not to mention their close associations with the Ku Klux Klan and the Aryan Nation. It is only a matter of time until they are sorted out again.
These who don’t understand claim their beloved battle flag was stolen from them by the Klan and the Nazis, but someone should tell them the truth. Who do they think founded the Klan in the first place? It was our very own Confederate ancestors along with male descendants using the battle flag as a symbol of hatred and terror to murder and subdue any who opposed them in their bigoted views. This is why Gen. Forrest and others of good will turned their back on it then. That was not what they planned.
I revere my ancestors and stand by them in what they did at the time of that unjust war that wrecked the world they sought to defend. My ancestors rebuilt that world with roads, bridges, schools, churches, farms, businesses, and sound government. They didn’t have the need to stand idly by flying a flag of a lost cause while the world moved forward without them. I need no one to tell me how to honor my ancestors! Those who do are of a lower class of people who need to grow up and seek wisdom.
It is unseemly to contend with fools, but those of sound mind must stand up to these petty tyrants and drive them back into the dark corner they crawled from.
Bill McEntire
Canton
To the Editor:
In regards to your column last week, let me make some points.
You wrote: “If someone gets pissed off because a flag used by a country — the Confederacy — that wanted to keep people in slavery on public property offends them, then take it down and celebrate your heritage elsewhere. In this country no one can take away your heritage, and losing this battle is not the start down a slippery slope that will lead to that happening.”
You do know the cemetery in Mexico City that contains the graves of American soldiers who fought in the wars against Mexico pisses off the Mexicans. More so because of the U.S. flag that flies over the graves of American Veterans. We should just tear down our flag and dig up the graves so Mexicans can sleep easier at night, right?
You do know the huge Muslim population in France is pissed off at the U.S. flag that flies over the American soldiers in Normandy. They are really pissed off cause they are just Americans — the infidels, and that U.S. flag really pisses them off.
Reckon we just allow the Muslims to tear down the flag and pave over the graves so they can chant to Allah a little less loudly, right?
I understand progressive means to spit on American veterans, and yes, Confederate soldiers are American veterans. How cool was it to harass Vietnam Veterans, to spit on them and call them baby killers? Well, the Confederate veterans have taken their place in our society’s mentality.
This whole sad affair was the doing of lawyer Bob Clark. He was just so offended. He had to repeatedly return to the little granite marker for Confederate veterans to get his daily dose of “pissed off.” He even managed to get 19 others in all of North Carolina to sign his petition of hate and discrimination. He too is a progressive! Keeping that fix of “pissed off” replaced his regular life routine for almost two years. Addicted to being a hater of American veterans. I bet Mr. McLeod was signer No. 2 on his petition!
If you and lawyer Bob would just stop with the hate and social engineering, life would return to normal real quick.
I will pray for your soul.
Billy Bearden
Carrollton, Ga
Since I was old enough to talk, I’ve been told that being an American was something special, something I could take great pride and assurances in, and that my dreams and aspirations were indeed possible here in the land of the free and the home of the brave.
This notion seemed logical as a child since our family always had shoes to wear and plenty to eat, a warm house in winter and presents under the tree every Christmas. We were never shot at, our town was never attacked by enemy forces, nor had anyone I knew ever been imprisoned without just cause and due process. I grew up respecting and honoring our public officials, knowing that they were working hard to protect our national interests, our individual rights and our position as a world leader promoting liberty and justice for all.
Southwestern Community College will hold a dedication ceremony for the newly constructed Conrad G. Burrell building at 2 p.m. Sept. 14 on the Jackson campus in Sylva.
The three-story, 38,000-square-foot building cost $8.8 million and was funded two-thirds by the state of North Carolina and one-third by Jackson County. It is named in honor of SCC Trustee Conrad Burrell.
Visitors to the building are greeted by a modern, open area floor plan. Located on the first level are the campus bookstore, administrative offices and a 400-person conference center. The second and third levels will serve as the hub for SCC’s English and business programs as well as a variety of arts and sciences courses.
The building includes a geothermal heating and cooling system and energy-efficient windows and lighting.
Republican gubernatorial candidate Pat McCrory stopped in Sylva Thursday, Aug. 30, to meet with area supporters and planned to attend a fundraising event on Friday, Aug. 31, with U.S. congressional candidate Mark Meadows of Cashiers.
McCrory, the former mayor of Charlotte, spoke to a small crowd of Republican supporters at the Jackson County GOP headquarters, saying he was ready to get rid of the “good ole boy, good ole girl system” that has dominated North Carolina.
McCrory is running against current Lt. Gov. Walter Dalton to replace current Democratic Gov. Beverly Perdue, who decided not to run for re-election.
His speech focused mostly on education and jobs. McCrory said too many jobs are moving across the border to Tennessee and Georgia.
“You have to make things. You have to grow things,” McCrory said.
He also emphasized that colleges and universities need to teach skills that meet the demands of the market, like mechanics.
“You are incentivized to teach what students want, not what the market needs,” McCrory said, giving examples such as political science, sociology and journalism. McCrory added that he measures a college or university’s success by the number of their graduates who are employed.
Rogers receives key endorsements
Hayden Rogers, the Democratic candidate in North Carolina’s 11th Congressional District, was endorsed by the bipartisan Sportsmen’s and Animal Owners’ Voting Alliance (SAOVA) for his support of sportsmen’s and animal owners’ rights.
SAOVA has endorsed both Democrats and Republicans in North Carolina and states across the country since 2002. Rogers, a lifelong sportsman and former chief of staff to Congressman Heath Shuler, has earned a reputation in North Carolina and in Washington for being a champion on issues facing hunters and farmers, according to the SAOVA’s endorsement.
Rogers received the endorsement of the National Rifle Association (NRA) during the primary.
Macon Democrats to hold convention wrap-up
Mark Gilbert, the deputy national finance chair for the Democratic Party, will be the featured speaker at a post convention wrap-up at 5:30 p.m. Sept. 7 at the Macon County Democratic headquarters in the Peggy Crosby Center on Fifth Street in Highlands.
Gilbert currently chairs the Swing State Victory Fund for President Obama’s re-election campaign.
828.349.9966.
GOP candidates to honor first responders
GOP candidates Mike Clampitt and Marty Jones are holding a “Remembrance and Dedication to First Responders” at 5:30 p.m. until dark on Sept. 11 at Cullowhee Park.
Clampitt, a candidate for 119th N.C. House race, and Jones, a GOP candidate for Jackson County commissioner, will host the ceremony, dinner (for a donation) and hot air balloon lifts.
Meadows, Rogers to speak at Sept. 13 forum
Mark Meadows and Hayden Rogers, candidates for U.S. House of Representatives for North Carolina’s District 11, will participate in a forum at noon on Sept. 13 at the Tartan Hall in Franklin.
Meadows, the Republican candidate, is from Cashiers; Rogers, the Democratic candidate, is from Brasstown. The candidates will be asked to discuss significant issues, positions, and plans including education, health care and the economy.
The League of Women Voters, which is hosting the event, is a nonpartisan political organization that encourages informed and active participation in government, works to increase understanding of public policy issues and influences public policy through education and advocacy.
In keeping with tradition, it is preferred that there be no display of campaign paraphernalia. Signs and banners are prohibited on the premises.
The public is invited to attend and to bring bag lunches and drinks.
GOP women host breakfast for Clampitt
The Smoky Mountain Republican Women will sponsor a pancake breakfast fundraiser for Mike Clampitt, candidate for N.C. House District 119, from 8-11 a.m. Sept. 8 at the Swain County GOP headquarters on Main Street in Bryson City near the fire department.
Clampitt will meet diners and answer questions from 8-9 a.m. Breakfast is $5 and includes pancakes, bacon or sausage, fruit and beverages.
House District 119 includes Swain, Jackson, and part of Haywood counties.
828.488.9488 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Western Carolina University will open its doors to prospective college students, their families and friends for its first open house of the fall semester on Sept. 15 beginning at 8:30 a.m.
The open house gives visitors a chance to tour the campus, learn about the university’s academic programs and extracurricular opportunities and find out the important details of topics such as financial aid.
Tours of campus will be given in late morning and followed by an information fair, where visitors will be able to find out about the activities, student organizations and services available to students.
Lunch will be available at university dining facilities, and prospective students can redeem their free lunch voucher at Courtyard Dining Hall or the A.K. Hinds University Center food court.
Register at openhouse.wcu.edu or 828.227.7317 or 877.928.4968.
MedWest Health System is hosting two receptions, one at MedWest-Harris and another on the campus of MedWest-Haywood, to allow members of the community to meet several new area doctors who have recently joined MedWest.
MedWest-Harris reception is from 5-7 p.m. Sept. 18 in the front lobby of MedWest-Harris in Sylva. MedWest-Haywood reception is from 4:30-6:30 p.m. Sept. 20 in the classroom at the MedWest Health & Fitness Center in Clyde.
Smoky Mountain Knitting Guild is sponsoring an “Afternoon Extravaganza” at 2 p.m. Sept. 15 at the Haywood Arts Regional Theater on Pigeon Street in Waynesville to support the Good Samaritan Clinic of Haywood County.
The event will feature the “Sound of Music” ballet performed by MusicWorks and a “Four Seasons” fashion show. A dessert buffet and wine bar will also be available. A raffle will feature an array of items, including a hot air balloon ride and dinner certificates.
The event is open to the public. Tickets are $25.
828.246.4651 or 828.691.8409 or www.gschaywood.org or www.smkguild.com.
Area high school students and residents will have a chance to talk with college representatives from more than 55 Southeastern universities, colleges and trade schools at the 2012 College Night from 6-7:30 p.m. Sept. 10 at the Haywood Community College auditorium.
All juniors and seniors in Haywood County, including private and home school students are invited. High school teachers and counselors are also encouraged to attend.
828-565-4095.
The board of directors for MedWest-Harris and Med-West Swain hospitals met Tuesday, Sept. 4, to discuss whether to dissolve its ties with MedWest-Haywood.
The board met a month ago on the same subject but decided to continue studying the issue and reconvene in another month to make a more conclusive decision.
Harris and Swain partnered with Haywood Regional Medical Center two and half years ago under the MedWest banner. However, doctors and hospital staff in Jackson County, and to some extent Swain County as well, have been unhappy with the affiliation.
Hospital leadership has been listening to their concerns with an open mind and this summer also began questioning whether WestCare would be better off pulling out of MedWest.
The 14-member WestCare board, which oversees Harris and Swain hospitals, met Tuesday evening but had not come to a decision as of press time. Check www.smokymountainnews.com for any news coming out of the meeting.
Young professionals can network and learn more about the Haywood County Chamber of Commerce at a special event from 5-7 p.m. Sept. 6. at Headwaters Brewing Co. in Waynesville.
The Chamber’s Young Professionals of Haywood program was established in an effort to connect area business professionals between the ages of 22 and 40 through the core values of professional development, networking and community service. Hors d’ oeuvres and a cash bar will be available.
RSVP. 828.456.3021 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or www.haywood-nc.com.
Western North Carolina’s “Out of the Darkness” community walk will be held from 3-6 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 22, at the Jackson County Recreation Complex in Cullowhee.
The goal of the event is to raise awareness about suicide, honor lost loved ones and raise funds for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. Anyone is welcome to walk, and donations of any amount are accepted. The walk will be a three-mile circuit.
Pre-registration is requested. 314.703.8611.
To the Editor:
This letter is in defense of the work and research done at the Bent Creek Southeastern Forest Experiment Station in Asheville, work that is largely sustained by funding from the federal government.
As a small woodlot owner in Jackson County, I recently attended one of a series of woodland steward workshops offered at the Bent Creek station. Woodland stewardship is about preserving the diversity of forestland and managing it for fully stocked stands of oaks, American chestnut, hickories, yellow poplar, black walnut, white ash, basswood, pitch and shortleaf pine, etc.
The one-day public workshop was well organized and informative, including a tour of an experimental forest, talks on soil types and invasive species, and numerous handouts. The publications alone were well worth the price of admission — $50 dollars for the day. One of publications, Profitable Farms and Woodlands: A Practical Guide in Agroforestry for Landowners, Farmers and Ranchers, was a collaborative effort by several state universities, the U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, N.C. Cooperative Extension, and the Natural Resources Conservation Service.
It is now clear the Romney-Ryan “vision” and budget proposals for America will virtually eliminate funding for the hundreds of collaborative research and development projects that are exemplified by the work at Bent Creek. The battle lines are now clearly drawn as voters struggle with the debate over the proper role and size of the federal government.
Paul Ryan defines himself as a pragmatist. I see him (and now Mr. Romney) more as ideologues on behalf of the radical wing of the Republican Party. Ryan has been clear about his proposals to privatize Social Security and Medicare, which becomes a defined contribution, rather than a defined-benefit plan.
He has been much less clear about the overall and future impacts of his budget cuts, which would radically shrink the federal government, effectively making it impossible for the government to function in the 21st century, other than wage war and offer some support for health care (through vouchers) and retirement. The only way for Ryan’s numbers to work in balancing the budget would be to eliminate nearly all non-defense discretionary spending, much of the social safety net including Medicaid and deep cuts to spending on infrastructure, public education and public safety, and decreased investment in research and development, for example, the Bent Creek Experimental Station.
I do not share in Ryan’s vision for America and am deeply offended by his bait and switch language, defining cuts to Medicaid as “strengthening the social safety net.” The Republican Party is no longer recognizable. It has become a bridge to the 19th century, the days of private toll roads, a second “guilded age” where only the wealthy have access to the White House, and a person is essentially on his or her own.
We cannot let this radical vision prevail in November.
Roger Turner
Sylva
To the Editor:
I acknowledge Martin Dyckman’s well-written letter in the Aug. 15 issue. He challenged my letter (8/8/12) by bringing up several points against the Republican Party worth investigating further.
The letter motivated me to research the points made and helped me to see more fully how important it is for us to check out things for ourselves, especially since there is little room for full explanations in a letter to the editor. For example, the idea that the Bush-era tax cuts were for “the wealthiest Americans” sounds like they were the only ones to get a tax cut. The truth is that they were across the board cuts so that every class had some tax relief.
As for teacher job elimination, it was aimed at “low-performing” personnel and it was part of an effort to cut budget expenses and therefore not raise taxes, yet it sounds like an assault on teachers in general if that additional fact is not known.
As far as Obama’s jobs bill, according to Wikipedia, there were reservations on both sides of the aisle and questions about its actual cost as well as its effectiveness, so it wasn’t just that the Republicans killed the bill to stand in the way of Democrats.
There was also a comment about Mitt Romney and foreign investments. Many Americans diversify their investments in this way, and I found out that some prominent Democrats also have benefited by such investments, such as Nancy Pelosi. What I was really trying to say in my letter, besides the idea that the Republican Party can seriously impact jobs and benefit working America, is that the basic philosophy of governing is what should help guide us as we choose in the next election
My understanding is as follows:
• Conservatives (i.e., Republicans), in general, favor less government spending and regulation in our lives, more personal responsibility, free enterprise, lower taxes, a pro-life, traditional family values platform and believe our rights come from God, which makes them unalienable.
• Liberals, (i.e., Democrats) in general, favor more government involvement and regulation in our lives, more entitlement programs, more spending, a pro-choice stand and believe our rights come from the government (which means the government can control them as well).
Our country is desperate for some positive change. We face a massive deficit, record high unemployment levels, record numbers of foreclosures, and rising costs in every area of our lives and a destructive breakdown of the family. We are on the precipice of complete economic ruin. This is what we have to show for 3.5 years and all the Obama stimulus money spent and the $1.1 trillion deficit we now have. I’m no political expert, but we all can agree on this one thing, I think: if what is being done is not working, we need to do something different.
Besides doing our own research and not believing everything we read or hear, we also have to be ready to make some sacrifices. We each have to decide which party can best accomplish our goals. I personally believe it’s time for new, conservative leadership close to the original plan of our founding fathers.
Loretta Hastings
Franklin
To the Editor:
For many years, it has been the tradition in Haywood County and other Western North Carolina counties to allow organizations such as the Sons of Confederate Veterans to place Confederate flags at monuments and memorials to recognize the sacrifices of the soldiers that served during the War Between the States. And over the past several years, there have been minor issues relating to this time-honored tradition. The point of contention in this issue has been the flying of the Confederate Battle flag.
The Confederate Battle flag has been the most hated, debated, misrepresented and the most beloved of all symbols of the Confederacy. This flag came to exist as a result of confusion created by the First National flag at First Manassas. A decision was made to design a distinguished flag that could be carried into battle. In late 1861, the Southern Cross was created and flew over battles until the end at Appomattox. Southern patriots later carried this flag to such places as Beirut, Korea, Vietnam, Grenada and even Afghanistan. It was and is a soldier’s flag. As a matter of fact, the Federal government recognizes soldiers who fought for the South as “veterans” who are entitled to the same benefits that other veterans share: US Code, Title 38-Veteran’s Benefits, Part 2, Chapter 15, subchapter 1: Definition of “Civil War veteran” includes a person who served in the military or naval forces of the Confederate States of America and the term “active military or naval service” includes active service in those forces. This definition strongly reinforces that the men designated as Confederate soldiers are American veterans and not the traitors that some might suggest.
The honor of the Southern Cross has been tarnished by individuals who forget what it represents: a call to duty. Its intent was never to be a politician’s flag nor used as a symbol of racial division. It has been decided in court cases throughout the nation that this flag and its history does not deprive any citizen of some privilege that is secured by the Constitution or by law as a result flying it. Justice John Paul Stevens in Washington v Davis wrote: “The best evidence of intentional discrimination is objective evidence of what happened, rather than the subjective state of mind of the state as an actor.” In other words, flying the Confederate Battle Flag does not interfere with the rights of any person. History of the War Between the States has been based on half-truths and revisionism by self-serving individuals and groups that have hidden the complexity of the causes that led to the War. The Confederate Battle flag has been the symbol of revisionist history since 1865. It is time for Americans to be educated about the correct history surrounding this symbol and the epic struggle it was a part of.
Honoring these soldiers by flying Confederate flags should not be the duty of just North Carolinians, but the duty of a nation.
Kip Rollins
Waynesville
To the Editor:
I can’t hardly stand to read the letters to the editor anymore. Civil discourse, the backbone of any democracy, has sunk to a new low here and across the country. Name-calling, overgeneralization, and denigration have become the new norm. Whatever happened to researched facts, sound reasoning and fair play?
Yes, the stakes in this election are high. But do the ends truly justify the means? We are on the verge of national disintegration and balkanization. Is this the best we can do?
In a nation as large and diverse as ours, there will always be many viewpoints, so to believe that the “solution” to our problems is to convert everyone to a certain point of view is ludicrous. Rather than attacking each other, we need to focus on our common needs and work together on those.
We need to have an honest discussion of the issues, not attack personalities. We need to be open to the views and experiences of others without labeling and dismissing them. Obstructionism and gotcha techniques are sabotaging our future.
The labeling, character assassination and venomous attacks have got to stop. How many good and capable women and men avoid entering politics because it is too caustic? Some of the most aggressive, power-hungry, money-hungry and/or ideological choose to put themselves on the national ballot and make our policies. How scary is that?
When in doubt, what would Jesus do (WWJD)?
Dan Kowal
Franklin
Poet John York, whose latest work, Cold Spring Rising, was reviewed in The Smoky Mountain New two months ago, will be reading from his poetry at City Lights Bookstore in Sylva at 6:30 p.m. on Sept. 1.
Robert Morgan, author of Gap Creek and Boone, has called York the “Yadkin Bard,” and his work has appeared in many journals. In 2011 York received the first James Applewhite Poetry Prize.
828.586.9499.
Ginger Shinn, owner of Smokey Shadows Lodge in Maggie Valley, released a new cookbook A Taste of Smokey Shadows Lodge. The book features more than 150 recipes for tasty dishes from appetizers to desserts.
Shinn’s family has passed down many of the recipes in the collection for generations. They reflect regional specialties. The book’s pages are sprinkled with comments by the author offering insight into her passion for cooking and hospitality as well as the history of Smokey Shadows.
“(Guests) especially want to know how to make the tomato pie that’s served at nearly every dinner,” Shinn said. “With the help of my daughters, Amie and Tracy, members of the lodge staff, and friends, we finally got it all together. It’s been a labor of love.”
Copies of the 147-page A Taste of Smokey Shadows Lodge are available from the author for $18. 828.926.0001 or mail: Ginger Shinn, 323 Smokey Shadows Lane, Maggie Valley, N.C., 28751.
It’s ginseng time in the mountains of Western North Carolina, and the U.S. Forest Service is reminding visitors to national forest land that permits are required for harvesting these rare and valuable plants.
Forest Service officials estimate that up to 10,000 dried pounds are harvested annually in the WNC region. Harvesting is not allowed in Wilderness or Natural areas of Forest Service land.
A permitting system was implemented several years ago as a means of protecting these rare plants.
“Over the years, we’ve seen a decline in populations of ginseng and other forest products such as ramps,” said Gary Kauffman, a botanist with the national forests in North Carolina. “If their numbers get too low, the Forest Service may have to change the way we manage certain forest products in the future. This could include shortening the harvest season, reducing the amount of plants that can be harvested or banning the harvest altogether.”
Ginseng is a long-lived perennial whose multi-forked taproot is sold as a medicinal root primarily in East Asia.
Harvesting permits are issued from Sept. 1-30. The cost for the permit is $40 per wet pound of ginseng harvested. The minimum permit is for one wet pound and the maximum allowable collection is 3 pounds annually.
For more information on harvesting ginseng in the national forests in North Carolina, visit: www.fs.usda.gov/internet/fse_documents/stelprdb5188148.pdf.
The Blue Ridge Parkway is increasing enforcement efforts against the illegal use of radio tracking equipment by hunters.
The only legal use of radio telemetry on the Blue Ridge Parkway is to assist hunters in retrieving dogs that are no longer actively engaged in a hunt. Using telemetry or other tracking devices to track dogs that are actively hunting or to monitor the progress of a hunt is considered a hunting activity and prohibited on Blue Ridge Parkway lands.
Blue Ridge Parkway regulations state: The open display and/or use of radio telemetry equipment or similar electronic tracking devices that are commonly used to track wildlife and hunting dogs is prohibited in the park without the prior permission of the Blue Ridge Parkway … and may only be used to expedite the retrieval of a dog that is believed to be running loose in the park.