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Western Carolina University’s School of Music will present “The Film Music of John Williams” in honor of the composer’s 80th birthday. The concert will take place at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 13, in the recital hall of the Coulter Building on the WCU campus.

The concert is free, and the public is invited.

Williams is one of America’s most prolific composers. He has a long history of association with director Steven Spielberg and has won awards for musical pieces in the movies “Jaws” and “Superman.” The concert will include some of Williams’ best-known musical hits from Harry Potter,” Star Wars,” “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” “Schindler’s List,”“Witches of Eastwick” and “E.T.” Visual slides from the movies will be on display to accompany the music.

Bradley Martin, WCU associate professor of piano, will lead the concert on piano along with student chamber musicians. As a solo pianist, chamber musician and accompanist, Martin has performed concerts in the United States, Russia, Europe, Australia and Asia.

828.227.7242.

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Ian Moore and the Second-Hand String Band will perform at 7 p.m. on March 14 in the community room of the Jackson County Public Library in Sylva.

The group will play old-time, traditional blues and jazz. The band consists of Ian Moore on fiddle, Hal Herzog on guitar, and Adam Bigelow on stand-up bass.

This event is free and open to the public.

828.586.2016.

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The Smoky Mountain Community Theatre in Bryson City will present its 4th annual Celtic Concert 7 p.m. on Friday, March 9. Tickets are $5 each.

Bean Sidhe (pronounced banshee) will be performing this year. Bean Sidhe plays traditional Celtic tunes and ballads using acoustic instruments covering a broad range of folk music from Ireland, Scotland, England and Wales.

The group was started out of a desire to study and explore the uplifting traditional music that came to America with our ancestors. Bean Sidhe has been playing together in some fashion for more than 10 years. Band members include David Russell, Amanda Burts, Karin Lyle and Ralph Murphy.

828.488.8227.

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Arts and crafts vendors are being sought to participate in Mountain Heritage Day, Western Carolina University’s annual fall festival of traditional Appalachian culture.

The deadline for submitting arts and crafts applications is March 30.

This year’s Mountain Heritage Day will be held Saturday, Sept. 29, on the WCU campus in Cullowhee. The festival typically attracts more than 20,000 visitors who come to enjoy three stages of continuous music and dance, exhibitions of Cherokee stickball and shape-note singing, and more than 150 booths of food and juried arts and crafts.

Arts and crafts are judged for quality of workmanship, booth display and design. The festival gives out cash awards to artists for “best in show,” first place and second place. Applications for arts and crafts vendors are available at the festival website, www.mountainheritageday.com.

828.227.7129.

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Western Carolina University’s Department of Intercultural Affairs and Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority are co-sponsoring a panel discussion and “No Limits March” in honor of International Women’s Day on March 8.

The event, which is free and open to the public, will begin with a panel of women from the campus community sharing the stories of their professional journeys, challenges, joys and goals at 5 p.m. in the theater of A.K. Hinds University Center.

As attendees enter, they will write their own aspirations and goals on a large banner, which will be carried on the march immediately following the panel discussion and question-and-answer session.

The march will begin about 5:45 p.m. and follow a route from the University Center toward the bookstore, around Scott and Walker Halls, through the fountain area and ending in front of the University Center.

828.227.2617 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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Phyllis Jarvinen will be teaching a Long Stitch bookbinding workshop 5 to 9 p.m. on March 15 at Oaks Gallery in Dillsboro.

Cost of the workshop is $30 and includes materials.

In a long stitch binding, the signatures (groups of folded pages) of the book’s text block are stitched directly to the cover material along the spine. The long binding stitches are exposed and the text pages open fully when the book is finished. The exposed stitches on the spine make an embellishment for the structure.

Jarvinen is currently showing artist’s books, paintings and pinhole photographs in Clemson. Her artistic focus is two-dimensional work and includes artist’s books, pinhole photographs and mixed media.  She is inspired by landscape and experimentation with process and materials.

828.586.6542 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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A show by the Blue Ridge Watermedia Society opened March 7 at Gallery 86 on N. Main Street in Waynesville.

The show runs through March 31, and an artists reception will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. on March 9. The public is invited to attend.

The exhibit at the Haywood County Arts Council’s gallery features work by 18 members of the Blue Ridge Watermedia Society. Participating artists include: Char Avrunin, Vickie Beck, Wendy Cordwell, Nick DePaolo, Mary Jane Ellsworth, Patsy Ferrell, Pam Haddock, Nancy Judge, Lolly Krieder, Patricia McKenney, Ginny Patten, Gertrude Rapp, Mary Reida, Pam Riley, Joyce Schlapkohl, Adele Wilkins, Silvia Cabrera Williams, and Lynne Wortmann.

Meetings of the Blue Ridge Watermedia Society take place at 6:45 p.m. on the second Tuesday of the month at the Haywood Community College’s Continuing Art & Education Building. Members, who paint in a variety of media, share tips and experiences, and local artists provide demonstrations and teach workshops.

828.452.0593 or www.haywoodarts.org.

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To the Editor:

A headline on a Feb. 29 article in The Smoky Mountain News creates a misleading impression of the support the N.C. Education Lottery has provided for Haywood schools.

Through June 30, 2011, Haywood County received more than $8.8 million in lottery funds. Those dollars have meant more than $3.1 million for teachers’ salaries in grades K-3, more than $1 million for need-based college scholarships for Haywood County college students, and more than $1.3 million for at-risk 4-year-olds to attend prekindergarten.

Haywood County also has received more than $3.4 million in funds for school construction that would otherwise have been paid for with property taxes. Since 2007, lottery funds have been approved 16 times for purposes such as classroom additions, repairs, and facilities improvements at Haywood schools.

The lottery has raised more money for education every year, totaling more than $2.2 billion. Keep in mind, though, that last year’s record transfer of $446.9 million was equal to about 4 percent of the $10.9 billion budget for K-12, community colleges and universities.

The Education Lottery is doing the job it was created to do. During these tough times, it is hard to meet all the needs that our schools have, but how much greater would those needs be without lottery money?

As the Education Lottery enters its seventh year, we remain committed to raising as much money as possible for education while protecting the interest of players and ensuring games are operated honestly and fairly.

Alice Garland

Executive Director

N.C. Education Lottery

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To the Editor:

It is interesting that The Smoky Mountain News in its reporting on superintendent of Macon County Schools Dan Brigman both last summer and recently cites the legal opinion of only one organization. That is unfair. Sadly, it indicates that there is either a strong bias on the part of the SMN or a surprising lack of knowledge about other legal advocacy groups that would strongly disagree with that seemingly unchallenged opinion.  

The Freedom from Religion Foundation website makes clear that the organization is a far-left political advocacy group that strongly opposes Christians and their views in the political arena. In fairness, the SMN reporter should have taken the time to make a phone call to an organization like the American Center for Law and Justice or the Christian Legal Defense Fund to ask for an opinion.

If that’s asking too much, then at least include a statement to indicate that there are other legal groups that would support the superintendent’s actions. That’s not asking too much — unless the paper does have a strong bias and supports the views of The Freedom from Religion Foundation. If it does, then very well. I believe in freedom of the press just as I do freedom of (not from) speech and religion.

In its recent story on Superintendent Brigman, the SMN makes reference to the “legally mandated chasm between state and church.” The Constitution, in this case the first part of the First Amendment, actually says: “Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of a religion or prohibit the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press …”

If that somehow mandates a chasm, then it also stipulates that a chasm should exist between the state and the press. In that case maybe someone will start an organization and call it Freedom from the Press to oppose all journalists and news organizations that report on the government. Of course that’s absurd, but no more absurd than the convoluted notion that the Bill of Rights was ever intended to prevent a superintendent of schools from wishing his staff a Merry Christmas. May God help us.

Patrick J. Womack, Pastor

Hazelwood Presbyterian Church (PCA)

Waynesville

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To the Editor:

Somewhere during my school years I was taught about slanted journalism. One of the best examples of slanted journalism is the headline for an article about Sen. Jim Davis on page 5 of the Feb. 29 edition of  The Smoky Mountain News.

The headline reads “Sen. Davis breaks ethics rule by using government email for campaign.” Breaking ethics rules sounds like and is a very serious accusation.

However, upon reading further, we find that Sen. Davis used his legislative email mistakenly, admits it and reported the violation immediately. Doesn’t sound to me like someone who is purposefully unethical, as hinted by the SMN headline. In fact, the legislative ethics rule cites excessive use of legislative email as a violation. Certainly Davis’ single violation does not fulfill the description of “excessive” and therefore does not deserve a highly volatile headline.

The headline selected by the SMN editors was designed to show Davis in a very bad light. A more accurate headline that would more accurately represent the issue might be ”Sen. Davis self-reports wrongly sent email” or “ Sen. Davis learns more about legal campaign email”.

The headline chosen by SMN was obviously chosen to show Davis in a negative way rather than a truthful introduction to the story following the headline. But, the SMN liberal leanings will always win out when it comes to a truthful reporting of conservative and Republican officials.

Shirley Slaughter

Cashiers

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To the Editor:

Over the weekend we heard from our 44-year-old niece. She was fretting over her 401k. She is employed as a teacher in Alaska and has been since she got out of college, so she has around 20 years service. She said her 401k was up just $1,000 over what she has contributed.

All I told her is that she is not alone. All 401k’s are suffering: the stock market is flat since Obama has been in office, and his economic policies of running up $6 trillion in deficits and having the Fed create $7 trillion dollars in a going-nowhere economy have driven interest rates below 1 percent.

As a retiree with 85 percent of my retirement funds in U.S. Treasuries, a 10-year yield of 1 percent is pathetic.  

Obama is on the way to achieving his objectives of redistribution and retribution against my generation. He is redistributing income from the makers to the takers and ruining the economy in the process. In addition, those of us who over the decades have been trying to provide for our retirement have been battered by his distaste of those who strive for independence by lowering interest rates and punishing savings — pure retribution.   

Thanks for nothing, Barack. Exit 2012 can’t come soon enough.

Pat Denzer

Waynesville

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“Full Disclosure,” a public records workshop, will be held from 1 to 3:30 p.m. Thursday, March 15, in Room 144 of WCU’s Stillwell Building.

The workshop will provide information on the existing laws and advice on drafting a request for information and publishing news stories from the data, Spasovska said.

Trainers include Charles Coble, an attorney with Brooks Pierce, who will discuss the North Carolina Public Records Law and its challenges, changes and application; Jon Elliston, a contributing reporter with Carolina Public Press, who will examine the Freedom of Information Act and case studies, and talk about where, when and how to find information; and Angie Newsome, editor and founder of Carolina Public Press, who will discuss putting the laws into practice, crafting a good request and getting results published.

Seating for the workshop is limited and tickets are required. Admission is free for WCU students and $20 for others.

www.carolinapublicpress.org

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The transportation department will hold a citizens’ informational workshop from 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday, March 15, about a proposed project to improve N.C. 107 from north of Old Cullowhee Road in East LaPorte to N.C. 281 in Tuckaseegee in Jackson County.

The meeting will be in the Cullowhee Valley School cafeteria. Attendees may drop in at any time during these hours. There will not be a formal presentation.

The proposed project would improve safety on this section of N.C. 107 by widening lanes and shoulders, improving intersections and realigning parts of the road. Right-of-way acquisition is scheduled to begin in 2014, and construction is scheduled for 2016.

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Sarge’s Animal Rescue Foundation is accepting pet photographs for its Pet Photography Contest sponsored by Ellen Schattie, owner of Bocelli’s Italian Eatery in Waynesville.

Entry forms are available on Sarge’s website at www.sargeandfriends.org and at the following locations: The Dog House, Mountain Dreams Reality, Country Lane Animal Hospital, Canton Animal Hospital, Balsam Animal Hospital, Maple Tree Animal Hospital, Junaluska Animal Hospital, Animal Hospital of Waynesville and at the Smoky Mountain Dog Bakery.

Deadline for entries is Monday, April 9. Categories for this year’s judging are best in show, dog, cat, puppy, kitten, photographers under the age of 12, a Sarge adopted pet, a pet other than a dog or cat, and “super hooters” who have previously won first place.  

http://sargeandfriends.org/docs/contestentry.pdf

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Kristin Gruner, of the Good Samaritan Clinic, will speak to the Bethel Rural Community Organization at 7 p.m. at the community hall in Bethel. Refreshments will be served at 6:30 p.m. Gruner will be updating the community on the fundraising efforts to keep the clinic open.

www.gschywood.org

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Girl Scouts Carolinas Peaks to Piedmont will host “Information Hours” for new volunteers at the Haywood County Library in Canton from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, March 12. This is also a time for current troop leaders, parents and Girl Scouts to come by to ask questions or pick up materials.

www.girlscoutsp2p.org

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The Waynesville Parks and Recreation Department will offer “Spring Break Camp” from April 16 - 20. This will take place at the Waynesville Recreation Center each day from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

The camp will include games, movies, swim time in the pool, hikes and field trips. The camp is for boys and girls in grades K - 5.

Campers will need to bring a swimsuit, lunch, tennis shoes, a towel and snacks. The cost is $15 per day per camper for members of the Waynesville Recreation Center or $20 for non-members. The weekly rate is $75 for members or $95 for non-members.

Pre-registration is requested.

828.456.2030 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

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Haywood County Democrats will hold a rally to support public funding for pre-K education and to oppose privatizing it.

The event will take place at noon on Friday, March 16 on the Historic Courthouse lawn in Waynesville.

828.452.9607 or haywooddemocrats.org.

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Organizing for America volunteers are hosting the kickoff for the Haywood County campaign to reelect President Barack Obama at 3 p.m. on Saturday, March 10, at Sid’s on Main in Canton.

Food and drink will be available for purchase. The short program, beginning at 3:20 p.m., will provide up-to-date information about the campaign and the volunteer opportunities available.

828.421.1997 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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Joe Cline, executive director of the Tuckaseigee Water and Sewer Authority, has suddenly voluntarily resigned without publicly specifying why.

TWSA board Chairman Randall Turpin said Cline tendered his resignation during a closed session. Turpin is temporarily overseeing the agency until a replacement is hired.

Efforts to reach Cline for comment were unsuccessful. Chairman Jack Debnam and other county leaders said they did not know why Cline had resigned, with Debnam describing those involved as “tight-lipped.”

County Manager Chuck Wooten told Jackson County commissioners this week that the TWSA board would be advertising for a replacement in trade magazines and similar outlets.

“They want to get someone on board as soon as possible,” Wooten said.

TWSA was created in 1992 when the Jackson County and the towns of Dillsboro, Sylva and Webster consolidated their water and wastewater utilities.

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Derreck Kayongo, a former child refugee who now serves as the senior advocacy coordinator in the Southeast for the CARE International relief organization, will deliver the keynote address at Western Carolina University’s the 11th annual Gender Research Conference on Thursday, March 15.

The conference, themed “Women and Poverty in the Global Economy,” will be held at WCU’s A.K. Hinds University Center. Registration begins at 9 a.m.

Kayongo will speak on “The Role of Women in the Fight against Global Poverty” during his address, set for 9:30 to 10:45 a.m. in Grandroom A of the University Center.

Kayongo’s family fled Uganda during the tyranny of Idi Amin in 1979, and he has gone on to become a voice for marginalized and vulnerable people around the globe. Now a naturalized U.S. citizen, he has worked with the American Friends Service Committee as program director for the Southeast Peace Education program and has been director of the Southeast region for Amnesty International.

Following Kayongo’s address, a series of presentations will be offered by WCU faculty members and students from 11 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. The conference will also offer lunch for $10 from 12:15 to 1:30 p.m. in Illusions, and Mary Jean Ronan Herzog, professor in WCU’s School of Teaching and Learning, will present the lunchtime address “Faculty Women and the Glass Ceiling at WCU: Differences in Salary and Position in Academia.”

Lunch will be followed by more presentations and discussion from 2 to 4:50 p.m.

828.227.3839 or www.wcu.edu/25228.asp or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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The American Legion will observe its 93rd anniversary March 15-17, and Legionnaires of Jackson and Swain counties will celebrate that milestone at their regular 7 p.m. meeting at William E. Dillard Post 104, Sylva, on Monday, March 12.

Founded in Paris, France, at the close of World War I, the organization now includes men and women veterans of World War II, the Korean and Vietnam Wars, the Lebanon/Grenada periods, Operation Just Cause in Panama, Desert Storm, Iraq and the ongoing conflicts in Afghanistan and elsewhere.

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Aikido, a form of martial arts that means “the Way of Spirit Harmony,” will be offered in Sylva from 7:30 till 9 p.m. on Monday and Wednesday evenings at the White Dragon Academy. An initial meeting and free introductory class will be held at 7:30 p.m. on March 5.

Unlike karate and other “hard” arts, aikido allows someone to protect themselves against an attack without necessarily harming the other person. When presented with an attack, an aikido practitioner uses gravity, momentum, and a variety of throws, wristlocks, and other unbalancing techniques to blend with an attacker, bring them under control, and resolve the situation. This strategy is not only effective against physical attacks, but can be used to diffuse a verbal attack or calm a heated argument as well.

Since aikido relies on timing and blending, more than on strength or size, it is well-suited for both men and women of all ages and sizes. Aikido, a modern Japanese martial art, was created in the 1940’s after the end of WWII.

Class size will be limited to a maximum of eight students. Previous martial arts experience is helpful, but certainly not required. Past experience with dance, gymnastics, or other activities that emphasize circular movement will prove helpful in learning aikido. Students must be at least 16 years old, and in reasonably good physical condition.

Aikido classes will be taught by Sensei Timm Muth, who trained for 14 years under Sensei Ned Danieley and the late Shihan Fumio Toyoda.

828.269.8144 or call Muth at 828.507.1800 after 5 p.m.

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Runners will have a chance to mix running and chicken-wing-eating as a Western Carolina University student organization, the Western Athletic Training Association, hosts the Zaxby’s Finger Lickin’ Fun Run at 11 a.m. Saturday, March 10.

Runners who register for the two-mile race have the option of signing up to eat six wings at the halfway mark. The event is sponsored by Zaxby’s Sylva location and is a fundraiser for the athletic trainers’ group, with proceeds to be used to help students attend conferences.

Registration is available at active.com. Fees are $5 for the run only, $10 for the run and wing-eating, $15 for the run and a T-shirt, and $20 for the run, wings and T-shirt. Online registration closes at 5 p.m. Friday, March 9. Registration also will be available at the start area the morning of the race.

Packet pickup will begin at 10 a.m. race day at the fountain in the center of campus. The race will start from the corner of Central Drive and Killian Building Lane.

Other sponsors include Carolina West Sports Medicine and RoadID.

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 828.227.3530.

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Runners still have time to register for Western Carolina University’s Valley of the Lilies Half Marathon and 5-K at early registration rates before March 1.

The half marathon held Sunday, March 25, and take runners on a 13.1-mile journey through the WCU campus and along the Tuckaseigee River. The 5K run-walk is a new addition this year.

The inaugural half marathon at WCU last year proved to be very popular with runners around the region, with a total of 188 athletes registering for the race. Registrations for this year’s half marathon are already well ahead of numbers from last year, with nearly 100 half marathoners having signed up by mid-February.

Online registration is available at active.com. Fees are $40 for the half marathon and $20 for the 5-K through Wednesday, Feb. 29. Beginning March 1, the fees increase to $60 for the half marathon and $25 for the 5-K. No registrations will be accepted after Wednesday, March 21, including on race day.

Race hosts are WCU’s School of Health Sciences and Department of Campus Recreation and Wellness. Proceeds will be used to support professional development opportunities for students.

halfmarathon.wcu.edu.

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The historic Cherokee trails in Jackson County and the surrounding areas will be highlighted during program held at 7 p.m., Tuesday, March 6 at the Jackson County Public Library.

Lamar Marshall, cultural heritage director of Wild South, will be the presenter. Marshall has researched and mapped historic trails in the Southeast for more than 40 years, and the Cherokee Preservation Foundation has funded the Cherokee trails research in Western North Carolina for the last two years.

The early Indian trails evolved as the result of thousands of years of Native Americans’ interactions with animals, tribal migration, relocations, population shifts and lifestyle changes due to European contact and trade.

Geographical features were the key factors that led to the establishment and development of village sites and trail locations. Dividing ridges, passes and gaps, springs, river shoals, shallows, waterfalls, fords, and valleys all determined ultimately where trails were established.

“Where these trails remain visible today, old beech trees with carvings and trail marker trees might still be found nearby,” Marshall said. “Abandoned segments meander through fields and forests, and loops that followed the natural contours of the land can be found veering off of paved highways.”

828.586.2016.

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Thanks to an $8,000 grant from WNC Agricultural Options, the Jackson County Farmers Market in Sylva will open a community commercial kitchen for farmers to process, preserve and package foods.

Classes in cooking, nutrition and food safety and sanitation will also be offered at the venue.

Other farm groups and 23 farmers throughout Western North Carolina were awarded a total of $150,000 through the grants, intended to increase profitability of diverse farms. Other grants of $6,000 include:

• Lambert Farms on the Cherokee Reservation to assist with a grass-fed beef grazing operation and pastured poultry processing.

• Water quality improvements at Sunburst Trout Farm in Haywood County.

• A truffle project at Tri-Lynn Plantation in Jackson County.

• Hydroponic greenhouse operations at  Nantahala Farms and Nursery in Macon County.

• High Mountain Meadows farm certified creamery and kitchen in Clay County.

The grant program has been funded exclusively by the N.C. Tobacco Trust Fund Commission since 2003.

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The Jackson-Macon Conservation Alliance will hold a workshop on shiitake and oyster mushroom cultivation at 2 p.m., March 24, at the Bascom Art Center in Highlands. The event will take place in the adult studio room downstairs.  

Rodney Webb, member of the N.C. Mountain Mushroom Cooperative, will present tools and tips for growing edible mushrooms. Following the presentation, Webb will help attendees inoculate their own log. Logs, tools and supplies will be provided by the alliance and be available for sale during the event. Participants will be able to purchase additional logs that have been pre-inoculated. Each log, if properly cared for over time, will produce several pounds of mushrooms.

The hands on portion of the workshop will entail drilling the mushroom logs, plugging the holes with mushroom spawn and sealing them with hot wax. 828.526.0890, ext. 320.

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The N.C. Cooperative Extension Service will hold free fruit tree workshops that will cover the basic needs of apple, pear and peach trees.  

Learn about site selection, the differences between dwarf, semi-dwarf and seedling trees, proper soil conditions, pollination requirements, yearly fertility needs and tree spacing. Common diseases, insect problems and possible control options will be discussed.  

• 6 to 8 p.m. Monday, Feb. 27, at the Swain Extension Center on Almond School Road in Swain County.

• 2 to 4 p.m. Monday, March 5 at the Jackson Extension Center on Scotts Creek Road in Sylva.

Additionally, a workshop on how to train and prune is set to take place from 10 a.m. until noon on Friday, March 2, in Swain County at an orchard location. Meet at 9:30 a.m. in the parking lot in Bryson City on Main Street behind the old courthouse.

828.586.4009 in Sylva or 828.488.3848 in Bryson City.

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A bass tournament hosted by Fontana Village Resort will be held on Fontana Lake March 17 and March 18.

With water temperatures and lake levels already rising, local anglers are reporting an increase already in the action on the lake. Fontana Marina and Dock manager Ronnie Crisp said that he expects quite a turnout this year.

“Local anglers and folks from neighboring states have already been calling to register for this year’s tournament,” he said.

This year’s purse is $5,000 with first place garnering $2,000 in prize money and $1,000 for second place. Prize money will be awarded for third through eighth places and $100 each for the biggest smallmouth, large mouth and spot bass.

Fontana Village Marina will be hosting the event on their docks located at the west end of Fontana Lake.

828.498.2211 or www.fontanavillage.com/marina/springtournament.pdf

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A special StarLab Planetarium presentation will be held at 7 p.m. Friday, March 9, at the Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute (PARI) in Pisgah Forest.  

PARI Science Educator Stephen Hawk will share stories of the spring constellations. The evening’s activities will include a tour of the PARI campus and celestial observations using PARI’s optical or radio telescopes.

The presentation is part of PARI’s monthly Evening at PARI series and will be conducted inside PARI’s StarLab Planetarium.  

“We’ll be celebrating the Vernal Equinox, the first day of spring,” Hawk said. “I’ll share stories of several prominent springtime constellations around Leo the Lion and also point out where to locate Ursa Major and Minor, as well as Hydra the water snake, the longest constellation in the sky.”

Afterward and outside, weather permitting, PARI staff and volunteers will share observations of visible objects.

Reservations are required and will be accepted until 3 p.m. the day of the event. The cost is $20 per adult, $15 for seniors/military and $10 for children under 14.

www.pari.edu or 828.862.5554.

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The Highlands-Cashiers Land Trust was awarded an honorable mention in “eco-preservation” category of Southern Living magazine’s “Heroes of the New South” edition because of the group’s efforts to preserve the region’s heritage.

Highlands-Cashiers Land Trust currently protects 2,400 acres of land in Macon and Jackson Counties.

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Asheville resident, Trey Carland will read from and discuss his book A Seeker’s Guide to Inner Peace at 2 p.m. on March 3 at City Lights Bookstore.

The book is a collection of blogs written about his experiences and is intended to bring the life lessons he learned to a broader audience and offer insights to happiness and spiritual enlightenment.

828.586.9499.

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Jane Grahl, a Waynesville resident, has published a new book, Just One Won’t Hurt, about the demands of high school and peer pressure.

The story focuses on 15-year-old Kellie Jamison, the perfect daughter who found the transition from middle school to high school a greater undertaking than she’d anticipated. Already stressed, she falls prey to peer pressure and makes decisions that will affect the rest of her life.

Grahl graduated of UNC at Charlotte with a degree in business and is currently working on three other novels. She has already penned and published Is Having a Boyfriend Really Necessary?

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Bob Plott will revisit City Lights to present his newest book Colorful Characters of the Great Smoky Mountains at 7 p.m. on Friday, March 2.

The Smoky Mountains have been the home of many fascinating individuals, and this book details the legendary lives of a few of those people. Whether it is French and Indian War hero Captain Kennedy or the author’s relative Von Plott, Bob Plott crafts each narrative to honor the legacy of some of the area’s most interesting and influential people. Plott has also written Story of the Plott Hound, History of Hunting in the Great Smoky Mountains and Legendary Hunters of the Southern Appalachians.

828.586.9499.

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The King’s Messengers, a Southern Gospel music quartet who will soon celebrate 48 years singing, will perform at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 3, at the Smoky Mountain Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets are $10 each.

Based out of Gainesville, Ga., The King’s Messengers have performed throughout the Southeast. They are a non-profit ministry made up of four singers and four band members.

To reserve tickets, stop by the theatre’s box office on Georgia Road in Franklin.

866.273.4615 or greatmountainmusic.com.

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Aaron Tippin, Sammy Kershaw and Joe Diffie — all platinum-certified country music recording artists — will come together for a country music super show March 9 at the Smoky Mountain Center for the Performing Arts.

The show, a part of their Roots and Boots tour, is set for 7:30 p.m., and tickets start at $27 each.  

Aaron Tippin is best known for great hits such as “You’ve Got to Stand for Something” and “Workin’ Man’s PHD.” Sammy Kershaw is famous for such songs as “She Don’t Know She’s Beautiful” and “Queen of My Double Wide Trailer.”  And, Joe Diffie holds claim to great songs such as “Prop Me Up Beside the Jukebox” and “John Deere Green.”

These three county music sensations will unite to sing their timeless hit songs together on one stage.

866.273.4615 or www.GreatMountainMusic.com

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The Vienna Boys Choir, one of the most celebrated choirs of all time, will perform at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 6, at the John W. Bardo Fine and Performing Arts Center at Western Carolina University.

The choir, founded in 1498, has a repertoire that includes medieval, contemporary and experimental music. Long a fixture in Austrian musical life, the choir performed only for imperial courts, in church and at private functions until 1918. Now, four choirs of 24 schoolboys between the ages 10 and 14 from Austria and neighboring European countries perform hundreds of times a year worldwide.

The performance is part of WCU’s seventh annual Galaxy of Stars Series.

Tickets for the Vienna Boys Choir are $20 for adults and seniors; $15 for WCU faculty and staff; $10 for groups of 20 or more; and $5 for children and students.

828.227.2479 or bardoartscenter.wcu.edu.

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City Lights Bookstore will host an evening of music and storytelling with local performer Lee Knight at 7 p.m. on March 3.

Knight lives in Cashiers and currently works as a folk singer, storyteller and outdoor activities leader. He leads hikes, canoe trips and guides whitewater rafts. He also plays various instruments, including the five-string banjo, guitar, the Appalachian dulcimer, the mouth bow, the Cherokee flute and the Cherokee rattle.

828.586.9499.

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Haywood Community College’s Continuing Education Department will hold a Great Smoky Mountain Bladesmithing Symposium “Spring Hammer In” on campus from March 8-11.

All events are tailored to the knife enthusiast, knife collectors and knife makers from beginner to master.

Demonstrators will include Jerry Fisk, forging, heat treating, and grinding; Greg Neely, hand finishing blades, finishing Damascus, and ABS judging standards; Burt Foster, knife photography and laminated blades; and B.R. Hughes, presentation on Jim Bowie and ABS judging standards.

From 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. March 9, there will be blade forging and demonstrations. Battle of the Bladesmiths will be held from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m. Blade forging and demonstrations will be held from 8 a.m. until 12 p.m. on March 10 A free knife show will be open to the public from 1 p.m. until 3 p.m. Auction will be from 3 p.m. until 5 p.m.  A cutting demonstration will be held from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m. On March 11, blade forging and demonstrations will be held from 8 a.m. until 12 p.m.

Cost of the Great Smoky Mountain Bladesmithing Symposium is $65.

828.565.4244 or www.americanbladesmith.com.

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Western Carolina University will offer a course on creating stained glass from 6-9 p.m. Thursdays from March 8 through April 12 in the Cordelia Camp Building’s south lobby.

Course instructor Moya O’Neal is an active member of the International Guild of Glass Artists and has worked with stained glass for more than 20 years. O’Neal teaches the “Tiffany method” of stained glass where each piece of glass is wrapped in copper foils and then soldered.

Students will learn important safety precautions, proper cutting techniques, foiling methods, soldering techniques and simple metal framing.

The cost for the course is $85, and registration is required. Students will be required to bring safety glasses, pens, pencils, a felt-tipped pen, paper for notes, 12-inch-by-12-inch box to carry glass, adhesive bandages and cotton garden gloves. Other tools will be provided.

828.227.7397 or learn.wcu.edu.

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Cook Smart, Eat Smart Cooking School is hosting a four-part class on preparing simple, healthy and delicious food during March and April in Sylva.

The event will be held from 10 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. on Wednesdays — March 14 and 28, and April 11 and 25 — at the Disabilities Partners Office on Mineral Springs Drive.

“Cook Smart, Eat Smart” is designed for adults and older teens, and the curriculum emphasizes healthy preparation techniques, simple ingredients and limited use of prepared foods. In addition, information will be presented to help participants plan, shop and stock a pantry that encourages simple meal preparation.

Participants will be involved in hands-on food preparation and get to taste the variety of foods created at each session.

Interested people are encouraged to pre-register by March 9 as space is limited.

828.586.4009.

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Bethel Rural Community Organization’s Historic Preservation Committee will be entertaining bids from Haywood County artists who are interested in painting historic sites and rural scenes of Bethel. The project is an ongoing program for BRCO each year, with the historic or agricultural subject selected by BRCO’s Historic Preservation Committee.

Artists may select watercolor, oil, acrylic or pencil medium. Canvas size will be 20-by-15 inches so the paintings can be displayed on the walls of the community hall between the windows. The first painting will be a rendering of Bethel Presbyterian Church as it when built in 1885 by the Rev. Jesse Stalcup.

Email inquiries must have the word “painting” as the subject line. Artists will be asked to complete an application and include their resumes and photos of their work. Finalists will be asked to meet with the Committee and bring samples of their artwork.  

828.646.0303 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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The next contra dancing event in Sylva will be from 2:30 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, March 11.

The dance will be held on the second floor of the old courthouse in the Jackson County Library. Frederick Park will call the dance to the music of Out of the Woodwork.

There will also be a potluck dinner following the dance, starting at 5:30. Attendees are asked to bring a covered dish, plate, cup and cutlery and a water bottle. All dances are done to live music and 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 and 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.

Pam Garrett at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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The Macon County Library will display paintings, drawings, furniture and photographs by Justin Moe in its meeting room throughout the month of March.

“I have always felt compelled to create. It was not until 2002 though that I started painting and realized creating is something I must do,” Moe said. “For me, art reinforces my humanity. It is my mirror and a filter for how I experience and interpret reality.”

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The Cherokee Language Program at Western Carolina University is collaborating with EarlyLight Books of Waynesville to publish a bilingual and Cherokee-only version of a book titled “Animal Colors,” which is designed to teach early readers about colors and animals.

The book has already been translated into the Cherokee syllabary and should be available to the public in July, said Dawn Cusick, owner of EarlyLight.

The publisher, who graduated from WCU in 2008 with a master’s degree in biology, also envisions an audience for the book beyond schoolchildren.

“The book seems like a great souvenir,” said Cusick. “The Cherokee syllabary is absolutely beautiful in its printed form.”

The Cherokee Language Program helps produce materials for a Cherokee language immersion program on the Qualla Boundary for children from 6 months old through second grade. The program is an effort to keep the Cherokee language alive.

The program has produced two books in the Cherokee language, “Grouchy Old Woman” and “Spearfinger,” both based on Cherokee legend.

828.227.2303 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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Author and inspirational speaker Kim May will lead a workshop from 1 to 4 p.m., March 3, at The Creative Thought Center on Pigeon Street in Waynesville.

The event, titled “Tools for Change,” is free and open to the public.

May, a personal fitness trainer and wellness coach, will highlight six tools for change, including breathing techniques, meditation, EFT/Tapping, and quantum touch. The workshop will focus on ways to alleviate stress, cope with difficult changes and to optimize one’s overall wellbeing.

RSVP by Feb. 29.

828.734.0305.

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The Haywood Arts Regional Theatre will hold auditions for its spring production of the Thomas Wolfe classic “Look Homeward Angel” at 6:30 p.m. on March 4-5.

The production is being directed by Steve Lloyd and will have a two-week run, starting on April 27.

“Look Homeward Angel” was adapted for the stage by Ketti Frings and won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama when it opened on Broadway. The story, set in the fictional Altamont, is actually a loose biography of Wolfe’s youth in Asheville. The names may be different but the characters and places are recognizable. The play has 19 roles for men and women of various ages, and the lead is a young teenager.

Community theater actors will be given scenes to read from the script. Anyone auditioning as a professional actor is expected to have a headshot, resume and prepared monologue. Anyone interested in working backstage on the production is also encouraged to come by during auditions to sign up.

Auditions will be held at the Performing Arts Center on Pigeon Street in Waynesville.

www.harttheatre.com.

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Tuscola High School’s show choir will put on a country western performance, titled “Thirty Years and Counting,” to celebrate its 30-year existence March 8-11.

Summit, which was created in 1982 by former director David Traynham, performs to sell-out crowds year after year.

Since it is a 30-year celebration, director Fritzi Wise is involving former Summit members as emcees and has asked that photos from past shows be shared in a display in the lobby. This year, the Chamber Choir will also accompany Summit.

Performances are in the Tuscola High School auditorium at 7 p.m. Thursday thru Saturday and at 2p.m. on Sunday. Tickets are $8 and may be purchased from Summit and Chamber members or at the door

The event will include door prizes, concessions and a raffle.

Proceeds from the show assist the choir members with expenses for their annual trip to Epcot Center in December where they participate in the “Candlelight Processional.”

The choirs are also asking those attending to bring non-perishable foods that will be donated to “The Open Door.”

828.456.2408.

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To the Editor:

Back in the 1990s, I was privileged to serve several years on the Macon County Planning Board, six of those years as chairman. During that time I served with a good number of persons, some of whom had personal agendas but most of whom were caring people who only wanted to help maintain some of the characteristics which make Macon County such a great place to live.

It would be very surprising to any person who never served on an advisory board how much research, study and learning about other places and other ways, and attempting to adapt plans and regulations which serve well in other places to local problems, goes into any suggested ordinance which is presented to the commissioners. The best and most complete information which can be assembled concerning any potential project is sifted, sorted, studied, reviewed and digested by a group of dedicated board members before any suggestion is presented to commissioners. Examples of consequences arising around the subject under study are gathered from sources far and near.  Experts are consulted and questioned and the knowledge and experience of many people are considered.  And the board members spend their own money to serve.

When I was on the planning board, we were stopped in the middle of a project hoping to promote better, safer design for housing developments being constructed in the county – stopped by an organized group of realtors and developers who descended on a commissioner meeting protesting our actions, although no suggested ordinance had been completed. At the recommendation of the county manager at that time, the commissioners ordered that our fledgling plans be dropped. This was about the time the developers of Wildflower appeared at a commissioners meeting to tell us what wonderful advantages they could bring to Macon County if only we had no construction regulations or restriction on housing developments.

The rest of that story is history. And there are several homes built in this county to which no fire truck or emergency vehicle can be driven. A couple of those homes have already burned to the ground.

Serving on any voluntary advisory board is a thankless, sometimes frustrating undertaking. Contrary to recently published charges that planning board members wish to dictate to their fellow citizens, no planning board — nor any other advisory board — has that power. To paraphrase an old saying, an advisory board proposes actions, the county commissioners dispose of such actions, either accepting or discarding. The board on which I served was at least lucky enough not to be attacked in the public press by name and in such a personal and hurtful manner as has been endured by the present planning board members.

To disband the planning board, or to cripple the effectiveness of the members with term limits, can be likened to the situation of an ancient king who was riding into his castle one day when he saw one of his knights, wounded and bleeding, his armor dented and his horse falling with exhaustion. The knight throws himself from his dying horse and falls to his knees before his king.  “Oh, my king,” he cries.  “The battle is lost, your army destroyed upon the field, and only I am left to bring you the word that the enemy comes fast behind me, planning to storm your castle, kill you and your family, and lay waste your lands.” The king, in fear and anger, draws his sword and strikes off the head of the messenger who brought the terrible news before the king can learn the strength and position of the oncoming enemy, leaving himself no chance to protect himself and his people. How useless and foolish to kill the messenger.

One last well worn but apt cliché: to fail to plan is to plan to fail.

Sue Waldroop

Franklin

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