March 2009

Our Stories, In Focus - A Community Art and History Project

From the Town of Chapel Hill web site:

Share your personal stories and family mementos as part of the Town’s 2009 Community Art and History Project. We invite you to bring your piece of history (a photo, a letter, etc.) to any of our four community workshops listed below, where we will scan or photograph your item to be included in a community “tapestry” created by local artists Leah Sobsey and Lynn Bregman-Blass. Your memento will be returned to you on the spot. Further explore your personal and community history at these workshops by participating in oral history, genealogy, journal writing and story circle sessions.

Date: 

Tuesday, March 3, 2009 - 7:00am to 11:00am

Location: 

UNC Student Union Cabaret, 218 South Road, Chapel Hill

Our Stories, In Focus - A Community Art and History Project

From the Town of Chapel Hill web site:

Share your personal stories and family mementos as part of the Town’s 2009 Community Art and History Project. We invite you to bring your piece of history (a photo, a letter, etc.) to any of our four community workshops listed below, where we will scan or photograph your item to be included in a community “tapestry” created by local artists Leah Sobsey and Lynn Bregman-Blass. Your memento will be returned to you on the spot. Further explore your personal and community history at these workshops by participating in oral history, genealogy, journal writing and story circle sessions.

Date: 

Saturday, March 21, 2009 - 6:00am to 10:00am

Location: 

University Mall, 201 S. Estes Drive, Chapel Hill

Our Stories, In Focus - A Community Art and History Project

From the Chapel Hill Public Arts Commission web site.

Share your personal stories and family mementos as part of the Town’s 2009 Community Art and History Project. We invite you to bring your piece of history (a photo, a letter, etc.) to any of our four community workshops listed below, where we will scan or photograph your item to be included in a community “tapestry” created by local artists Leah Sobsey and Lynn Bregman-Blass. Your memento will be returned to you on the spot. Further explore your personal and community history at these workshops by participating in oral history, genealogy, journal writing and story circle sessions.

Date: 

Saturday, March 28, 2009 - 8:00am to 12:00pm

Location: 

Carrboro Century Center, 100 N. Greensboro St., Carrboro

Snow Day open thread

I'm not off work today (go telecommuting), but it sounds like a lot of you are. What's going on out there?

CAROLINA NORTH INPUT SESSION - WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4

Please share this information
CAROLINA NORTH
Public Input/Information Session
3:00 - 7:00 pm, Wednesday, March 4  * Extraordinary Ventures, 110 Elliott Road, Chapel Hill *
 
A Public Input/Information Session on Carolina North will be held at Extraordinary Ventures, 110 Elliott Road.   Please note that in response to feedback from the public, the times have been modified and the session is now scheduled from 3 pm – 7 pm.
 
Carolina North is expected to be contained within about 250 acres of the Horace Williams Tract’s 1,000 acres and be built in phases over the next 50 years, as proposed. The property lies just to the north of Estes Drive adjacent to Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.   The Town and the University are now engaged in the preparation of a new zoning district and a Development Agreement for the initial phase of Carolina North, expected to be 133 acres to be developed over approximately 20 years.  
 

Preserve Rural Orange meeting on solid waste transfer station

From the OrangeChat blog:

UPDATE: Preserve Rural Orange HAS POSTPONED tonight's meeting on plans for a solid waste transfer station due to the weather.

The meeting is NOW scheduled for 7 p.m. SUNDAY MARCH 15 at the White Cross Recreation Center, 1800 White Cross Road west of Carrboro. 

Speakers include Orange County Solid Waste Director Gayle Wilson. At citizens' urging, the county is now looking at alternatives to a transfer station such as hiring a contractor to haul trash to another area outside the county and possibly exploring waste to energy technology, although offiicals have previously said the county did not generate enough trash to make that feasible.

 

Date: 

Sunday, March 15, 2009 - 3:00pm

Location: 

White Cross Recreation Center, 1800 White Cross Road

Scroggs to lead Chapel Hill High

I admit I don't know much about the inner workings of our schools (just wait about 6 years), but it sure seems like the Chapel Hill-Carboro City Schools have had a hard time keeping principals around in the last few years. This just in from Stephanie Knott, Assistant to the Superintendent for Community Relations:

Former Assistant Superintendent for Support Services Steve Scroggs was appointed interim principal of Chapel Hill High School following a closed session held by the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Board of Education Tuesday afternoon.

Scroggs will finish out the school year until a permanent replacement is selected.  The principalship is vacant as a result of the resignation of Jacqueline Boyd Ellis.  Ellis will leave Chapel Hill High March 20 to become the Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources for the Durham Public Schools.  Scroggs and Ellis will work collaboratively from Monday, March 9, through Friday, March 20.

23rd Annual CROP Walk

From IFC:

23rd ANNUAL CROP WALK

Date:  Sunday, March 22
Registration: 1:30 PM at Carrboro Town Commons
Step off starting time: 2:30 PM

Please consider joining with others in the community for a four- or two-mile walk through Chapel Hill and Carrboro.  Funds raised will help to end hunger in our community as well as throughout the world through the Inter-Faith Council and Church World Service.  Invite your friends, co-workers, or neighbors to walk with you or sponsor you.  Especially during these rough economic times, your support is urgently needed!

WHAT'S NEW:
1) Shorter route option--to allow for more individuals and families to participate
2) Lighter "Environmental Footprint"--T-Shirts are all organic and we are encouraging folks to bring their own water bottle if you have one to reduce waste at water stations
3) CROP Walk Benefit Concert--two great performances at The Station at Southern Rail (by Weaver St. Market)
                                                       March 15, 7 PM (see attached flyer)

T-Shirts are $8 in advance and $10 the day of the Walk.

A CROP Walk Benefit Concert is the Sunday before the Walk-- see attached flyer!

Please contact Shannon Gigliotti for more information or to purchase a T-Shirt in advance.

Date: 

Sunday, March 22, 2009 - 9:30am

Location: 

Carrboro Town Commons

Healthy Youth Act North Carolina

If you have not already heard about the proposed legislation called the Healthy Youth Act, which would mandate a two-track system for sexuality education in North Carolina, you should look it up to read all the details. The two tracks would be abstinence-only until marriage (the current standard) and abstinence-based comprehensive sex education. This program would allow parents to decide which track their children will take. I think this legislation, if passed, will be an important step towards  reducing the high amont of disease and unwanted pregnency among youth in North Carolina.

OC3 Yes We Cans food drive

YES WE CANS Food drive sponsored by Orange County Campaign for Change-OC3

OC3 is continuing community service through regular food drives to benefit our local InterFaith Council and Orange Congregations in Mission.I encourage you to visit their websites to learn the many ways they address hunger, homelessness and the crisis that confronts the working poor.The recent economic condition has added to their rolls in staggering numbers.Since January we have collected 5,500 lbs for non-perishables for our local food banks. Be part of the solution in Orange County.

Please consider conducting a food drive in your neighborhood, place of business, book club or civic group.
Yes We Cans volunteers will be at the Carrboro Farmer's Market on March 21st, 9 am-12 pm to collect your non-perishable donations.

Date: 

Saturday, March 21, 2009 - 5:00am to 8:00am

Location: 

Carrboro Farmer's Market-free speech zone

More on the Bain & Company Study

There's a new Chapel Hill News article on this study, reporting on some questions asked of Holden Thorpe about it:  http://www.chapelhillnews.com/news/story/43803.html.  He does acknowledge that there are issues regarding taking anonymous monies for such an effort.  

Some other questions, in addition to the comments posted above, are coming to mind.  Will the raw data be in the public domain?  Will meetings held in pursuing this study be open meetings, legally speaking?

Lessons Learned in Chatham's Supporting Immigrant Rights: Past and Future

Notice via e-mail from Peggy Misch:

Lessons Learned in Chatham's Supporting Immigrant Rights: Past and Future --
Marisol McGee and Martin Spritzer, Chatham County Human Relations Commission, speakers at meeting of Orange County Bill of Rights Defense Committee. 7 pm,  Orange Water and Sewer Authority Meeting Room (off lower driveway), 400 Jones Ferry Road, Carrboro. All welcome. Info: 942-2535.

Date: 

Thursday, March 19, 2009 - 3:00pm

Location: 

OWASA community meeting room, 400 Jones Ferry Road, Carrboro

NAACP Freedom Banquet

Via e-mail from Mae McClendon:

Mark your calendars.
 
ANNUAL CHAPEL HILL - CARRBORO BRANCH OF THE NAACP's
ANNUAL FREEDOM BANQUET
 
SATURDAY, MAY 30, 2009
 
7:00PM
 
CARRBORO CENTURY CENTER
 
TICKET PRICE $35 PER PERSON
 
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
REV. BRIAN WRIGHT
TERRELL'S CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
PRESIDENT OF THE MINISTERIAL ALLIANCE
 
MC - BUSTER BROWN, RADIO PERSONALITY
 
ENTERTAINMENT: KINGS OF HARMONY
 
SEMI FORMAL - DRESS TO IMPRESS
 
MORE DETAILS  TO COME

Date: 

Saturday, May 30, 2009 - 3:00pm

Location: 

Century Hall, Carrboro Century Center, 100 N. Greensboro St.

A Visual Guide to the End of Civilization

aka my wedding pictures!

The anti-gay groups don't like that NC is the only southern state without a marriage discrimination amendment to their constitution because they are worried someone could get married out of state, then come back home and sue to have their marriage recognized.  Well as of Friday I am one more person for them to be afraid of because I got married in Boston Friday.

 

Approaching March Madness by air

Was there a major basketball game this weekend?  Did it mean heavier use of Horace Williams Airport? This graph from flightaware.com covers the most recent weeks' air traffic per hour. 

HWA usage 3/09

This is old news for most people, but thought it might be interesting to see it represented this way.  Still convinced that this airport will remain open indefinitely - because the RDU project may be suspended indefinitely, because funding for CN continues to be a major issue, and because even if closing it might save the University (and taxpayers) some money, users will never allow closure. Not as long as UNC is in the running for March Madness, anyway.

County Manager Quits

Laura Blackmon gave notice to the BoCC.  Her last day is 30 June.

NC Environmental Justice Network's Quarterly meeting hosted by RENA & CEER

Via e-mail:

    I wanted to send a reminder for you to reach out to your groups/organizations to invite them to come to the NC Environmental Justice Network's Quarterly meeting hosted by the Rogers-Eubanks Neighborhood Association (RENA) and the Coalition to End Environmental Racism (CEER) at the Faith Tabernacle Oasis of Love International Church (located at 8005 Rogers Road, Chapel Hill, NC 27516).
    
    The meeting program will begin at 9:30am with a light breakfast and finish up at 1:30pm.  Lunch will also be provided.  Please RSVP as soon as possible so we can get a head count for meals.

    We will send more information including an agenda soon.

    Best wishes,
    Min. Campbell.
    President RENA
    Co-Chair CEER
    W: 919-960-3455
    H: 919-933-6210
    rplcampbell@gmail.com
    www.rogersroad.wordpress.com



 

Date: 

Saturday, March 21, 2009 - 5:30am to 9:30am

Location: 

Faith Tabernacle Oasis Of Love International Church, 8005 Rogers Road, Chapel Hill, NC, 27516

Blue - A Benefit for Chapel Hill's Murals

Via Facebook:

Host:
Ernest Dollar
Type:
Network:
Global
Date:
Friday, March 27, 2009
Time:
6:00pm - 9:00pm
Location:
Horace Williams House
Street:
610 E. Rosemary Street
City/Town:
Chapel Hill, NC
   
Phone:
9199427818
Email:

Description

Come to the Horace Williams House for a fun night. Food, music, auction of original artworks - all going to benefit the restoration of Chapel Hill's murals. The theme is blue. Blue drinks, blue food, blues music. We're hoping to raise funds to restore the first mural painted in Chapel Hill, the "Starry Night" a pointillism interpretation of Franklin Street at night.

http://www.chapelhillpreservation.com/blue.htm

It is part of the ongoing Painted Walls Project that seeks to save Chapel Hill's unique landmarks.

Date: 

Friday, March 27, 2009 - 2:00pm

Location: 

Horace Williams House, 610 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel Hill

Taking an interest in a local restaurant, literally

Anyone else get the all-call email calling for help for the owners of The Barbecue Joint? They've been caught short by the economic collapse as they try to move from Weaver Dairy to Elliott Road.  They offer $1000 shares to be credited against future meals, catering, etc.  I'm very fond of their food, used them for an "office party" once, and hope they will not disappear from the Chapel Hill scene, whatever happens.

2009 NCAA Pool

OK, here it is: the Official OrangePolitics NCAA Men's Basketball Pool. No money is at stake, only bragging rights. (Sorry, Facebook membership is required to play.)  Some of you will remember that last year's pool was won by Chapel Hill Town Council Member Mark Kleinschmidt and Orange County Transportation Board Member Robert Peterson. Think you can beat them?

This year we also have an Official OP Women's Pool over on the ESPN web site (where you have to register yet again, ugh) because Facebook doesn't do the women's tournament (boo).  Participation from all genders welcome. ;-) 

I'll post a reminder here when the men's and women's brackets are available. Start getting your stats warmed up...

Ready for a county income tax?

I've been writing about local government funding and the relationship of the state to the locals for a couple of decades now. Given that we saw a serious 'no' vote on the real estate transfer tax and are in the midst of another discussion over property taxes, I thought I'd get another revenue source that's not talked about all that much on the table.

Time for comprehensive sex education in NC!

**Cross posted on Amplify** (http://www.amplifyyourvoice.org/u/dandaman6007/2009/1/27/Its-time-for-comprehensive-sex-education-in-North-Carolina--NCYLC-blog)

Healthy Youth Act (HB 88)

**Cross posted on Amplify** (http://www.amplifyyourvoice.org/u/dandaman6007/2009/2/9/Healthy-Youth-Act)

Thursday, February 5th, the Healthy Youth Act (House Bill 88) was officially filed in the North Carolina House of Representatives. The Healthy Youth Act would require schools to offer a two-track system for teaching sex education in North Carolina- one for abstinence-only education and another for comprehensive sex education. Parents decide which track their child will take.

200 youth activists storm the North Carolina capitol, the Healthy Youth Act PASSES in committee!

**Originally posted on Amplify** (http://www.amplifyyourvoice.org/u/dandaman6007/2009/3/14/200-youth-activists-storm-the-North-Carolina-capitol-the-Healthy-Youth-Act-PASSES-in-committee)

Last Tuesday, March 10th, was Adolescent Health Advocacy Day in NC.  Over 200 youth activists and state officials gathered at the NC capitol to learn about effective advocacy and important issues like comprehensive sex education, teen pregnancy, mental health, and physical health.  The morning featured youth speakers and state senators and representatives speaking about why we needed to make our voices heard. 

N&O cutting pay, eliminating 78 jobs

The News & Observer in Raleigh is cutting salaries of all employees earning $25,000 or more per year and also eliminating 78 jobs in the latest series of cost-cutting measures.

- http://www.wral.com/business/story/4748286/

While this was not unexpected it is nevertheless disappointing news.  It is especially sad to think not only of the 78 employees who will lose their jobs but also of all the remaining employees who are taking significant cuts in pay and forced furloughs.  Boy, McClatchy has certainly made a mess of things with their desire to be bigger (and better?).

I think the town vehicle tax is misnamed.

I got my vehicle tax in the mail recently.  It was $155 for an 8 year old car.  Okay, let's not dwell on that.  The reason I mention it is that it is a "vehicle" tax.  However, I suspect it's not truly a vehicle tax.  Bicycles are vehicles and since there's essentially no regulation on bikes around here I assume the town doesn't have records of who owns one and therefore doesn't send out tax bills for them.

 If that's the case, shouldn't the tax be a "motor vehicle" tax instead of a "vehicle" tax?  Or, just keep it a "vehicle" tax and tax all vehicles.  Or best of all, get rid of it and then you won't have to call it anything, but I'm not holding my breath on that one.

 In a separate note, I went to the state DMV website to make sure that bikes were indeed considered to be vehicles and while there I saw that it wasn't a state law for bikers over 16 to wear helmets in NC but that local places can pass their own law.  That makes me wonder if it is a law in this area.  If it's not it should be IMO considering biking is so strongly encouraged while so many people are simultaneously forced to drive.

Time-Warner, revisited

Time-Warner, its relationship with the town of Chapel Hill, and cable TV agreements are the subject of two CH Herald stories this morning.

 1. "Time Warner Cable, town to break ties March 31" Daniel Goldberg:  "Time Warner Cable has notified the town that a local franchise agreement between the two entities will be terminated effective March 31 . . . [Under] the Video Service Competition Act ... all cable franchise agreements instituted after Jan. 1, 2007, will be licensed by the N.C. secretary of state and agreements like the one between Time Warner and the town of Chapel Hill could be terminated if a competing cable provider were authorized to offer services in the same area."  http://heraldsun.southernheadlines.com/orange/10-1124138.cfm (regis. needed)

 2. "Town opposed cable service legislation" Daniel Goldberg - a history of town opposition to the legislation.  http://heraldsun.southernheadlines.com/orange/10-1124120.cfm (regis. needed).

FREEDOM WORKS


I am a volunteer and the spokesman for Orange County FreedomWorks.  I was contacted by a citizen concerned about inaccuracies on this site about Tax Revolt and FreedomWorks.  I thought it might be a good idea to attempt to correct some of the inaccuracies by providing information.

Project Pledge Canvass to Support President Obama's budget

OC3 and Organizing for America Team up to Canvass!

President Obama has asked us take grass roots action this week and canvass our community, friends and neighbors for the important budget changes we voted for in November- sustainable energy; affordable health care for all and investment in education.

OC3 will launch a canvass after training from the Carrboro Farmers Market, Saturday 21. at 11 am.Come to the free speech zone for information, training and materials.Check http://MY.Barackobama.com for a canvass that suits your schedule.

 

Date: 

Saturday, March 21, 2009 - 7:00am

Location: 

Carrboro Farmers Market, Main St. Carrboro,NC

ReCYCLEry Moving to a New Home

Everything is confirmed and the final details are being smoothed out for moving the ReCYCLEry from our wonderful Bolin Creek home of the past several years to 103 Padgette Lane, Carrboro. Padgette Lane is the small road that comes off of Main Street in between the recently vacated Performance Bike Shop and the Carrboro Arts Center parking lot.

Third grade WHAT?

This isn't front-page material, but a passing reaction and 'statement of concern' for the town's 9-year-olds:

The billboard on Estes Dr. in front of Estes Hills Elementary School is currently announcing "Third-Grade College and Career Night."

Community Book Forum: Small is Possible: Life in a Local Economy

The Carrboro Cybrary and Carrboro Recreation & Parks invite the community to read Small is Possible: Life in a Local Economy by Lyle Estill. Lyle is a founder of Piedmont Biofuels and he will be leading this discussion along with Michael Tiemann, a founder of the Open Source movement, and William (B.J.) Lawson, PLENTY Revitalization Board Member. This book is focused on the local economy in Chatham County, and will be valuable to anyone interested in sustainability, co-ops, biodiesel, whole foods, slow food, technology, small business, and more. Copies of the book can be borrowed from the Cybrary.

Book Description:

In an era when incomprehensibly complex issues like Peak Oil and climate change dominate headlines, practical solutions at a local level can seem somehow inadequate.

In response, Lyle Estill’s Small is Possible introduces us to “hometown security,” with this chronicle of a community-powered response to resource depletion in a fickle global economy. True stories, springing from the soils of Chatham County, North Carolina, offer a positive counterbalance to the bleakness of our age.

This is the story of how one small southern US town found actual solutions to actual problems. Unwilling to rely on the government and wary of large corporations, these residents discovered it is possible for a community to feed itself, fuel itself, heal itself, and govern itself.

This book is filled with newspaper columns, blog entries, letters, and essays that have appeared on the margins of small-town economies. Tough subjects are handled with humor and finesse. Compelling stories of successful small businesses, from the grocery co-op to the biodiesel co-op, describe a town and its people on a genuine quest for sustainability.

Review:

One of my favorite ideas in this book is the idea of open source. Once you let go of this idea that everything must be copyrighted, everything must be owned and protected in order to make money, you become free. Open source ideas quickly foster a more open community, a more open and honest society. A gropu of people or organizaitons all start working toward a common goal rather than all working against one another. Beautiful, isn't it?

Another beautiful idea is that a community needs a variety of people and businesses to thrive. And that as you begin living locally- and begin working toward a healthy community - people and businesses find their niches. And when you find your own niche within the local economy, your own happiness rises. Your sense of well-being increases when you realize your positive and necessary contribution to society.

As we go further into debt and economic security throughout the world, nurturing our small, local, sustainable businesses and infrastructure will become increasingly important. I recommend this book.
~ Melinda from The Blogging Bookworm

More reviews are linked from:
http://lyleestill.com/blog/?p=9#more-9

Date: 

Friday, June 5, 2009 - 2:30pm to 4:00pm

Location: 

Carrboro Century Center, 100 N. Greensboro St.

Zoning Limits on Agricultural Activities in Orange County?

Lately I have read many articles on the success and development of small farms and agri-businesses across the country.  Key to the success of these operations is on-site processing of the agricultural products to add value. For example, rather than simply raising goats, the farmer would collect the milk, process to cheese and potentially retail on site.  Another example was a farmer growing hops and barley for an on-site microbrewery.

A nearby example would include grape growing and wine production in the Yadkin Valley.

Gross Funding Inequality for Carrboro High School

According to the latest available figures from the CHCCS budget ...

If Carrboro High School was funded at the same level PER STUDENT as the other two district high schools, Carrboro High would receive $2 million more a year.

Carrboro High students are budgeted 52% less PER STUDENT than the larger high schools.

Carolina North Fiscal Impact Analysis Presentation

On Tuesday evening, March 31, at 7 :00 p.m.  the consultants who prepared the fiscal impact analysis for Carolina North will present their final report.  You can see the report at http://research.unc.edu/cn/specifics.php . 

The meeting will be held in the Wicker Classroom (Room 2603) of the School of Government.  You can park after 5:00 p.m. in the SOG parking deck or at metered spaces on South Road.  The paid parking in the NC 54 visitor's lot and the Rams Head deck.  The SOG is served by CH transit routes RU, G, S and V.  

 

Date: 

Tuesday, March 31, 2009 - 3:00pm

Location: 

School of Government, Wicker Classroom

Carolina North Public Input/Information Session

Via e-mail from the Town Chapel Hill:
Please share this information

CAROLINA NORTH
Public Input/Information Session
Advisory Board Review
7:00 – 9:00 pm, Wednesday, April 1  * Chapel Hill Town Hall * 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

A Public Input/Information Session on Carolina North will be held in the Chapel Hill Town Council Chambers at 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.  At the meeting, Town Advisory Boards will be presented information about the University proposal as well as the regulatory mechanism that has been endorsed by the Town Council and University representatives as the preferred tool for guiding development at Carolina North:  establishment of a Development Agreement with a base zoning district.   Public Comment will be accepted.     
Carolina North is expected to be contained within about 250 acres of the Horace Williams Tract’s 1,000 acres and be built in phases over the next 50 years, as proposed. The property lies just to the north of Estes Drive adjacent to Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.   The Town and the University are now engaged in the preparation of a new zoning district and a Development Agreement for the initial phase of Carolina North, expected to be 133 acres to be developed over approximately 20 years.

 
For more information, contact the Town of Chapel Hill Planning Department at (919) 968-2728 or

carolinanorth@townofchapelhill.org.  Additional material is posted online at www.townofchapelhill.org/carolinanorth.

 

Date: 

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 - 3:00pm

Location: 

Chapel Hill Town Hall, 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd

Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! to speak in Durham!

Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! comes to Durham to benefit The Peoples Channel, WCOM, WNCU and Balance and Accuracy in Journalism!

April 8th, 7-9pm at the Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship 4907 Garrett Road, Durham, NC 27707 


Please support local community media by coming to this wonderful event! The event will sell out quickly, so make a donation for your ticket now!

www.thepeopleschannel.org

Standing Up to the Madness: Ordinary Heroes in Extraordinary Times by Amy Goodman, host of Democracy Now!, and David Goodman

Standing Up to the Madness not only is a timely, inspiring, and even revolutionary look at who wields the greatest power in America--everyday people who take a chance and stand up for what they believe in--but also offers advice on what you can do to help. Where are the millions marching in the streets to defend human rights, civil liberties, and racial justice? Where is the mass revulsion against the killing and torture being carried out in our name? Where are the environmentalists? Where is the peace movement? The answer: They are everywhere. The award-winning sister-brother team of Amy Goodman, host of Democracy Now!, and investigative journalist David Goodman traveled the country to detail the ways in which grassroots activists have taken politics out of the hands of politicians. Standing Up to the Madness tells the stories of everyday citizens who have challenged the government and prevailed.
ISBN: 1401322883

http://tour.democracynow.org/

 

Date: 

Wednesday, April 8, 2009 - 2:00pm

Location: 

Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship 4907 Garrett Road, Durham, NC 27707
 

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