Media
Tune to WCOM in at 8:30 on Election night (tomorrow) for a half hour of discussion about the 2008 primary election with me and Carrboro elected officials Mark Chilton and Dan Coleman. Listen on the radio at 103.5 FM if you are in central Carrboro, anywhere else you can catch the Internet stream at http://communityradio.coop.
I will also attempt to stream a live video of us while we're on the air. If that works, you can find the video right here on this page.
Afterward we will either hit the candidate parties (where are they?) or go home and geek out on election data.
Date:
Tuesday, May 6, 2008 - 4:30pm
Independent Weekly endorsements for the 2008 primary have just been posted online at http://www.indyweek.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A256728
They will be in tomorrow's print edition as well. Here's a summary:
- Commissioners, District 2: Leo Allison
- Commissioners, At-large: Bernadette Pelissier
- Orange County Board of Education: Steve Halkiotis, Eddie Eubanks, Tony McKnight
- Transfer Tax: Yes
- District Court Judge: Page Vernon
Bill
Schneider, CNN senior political analyst and one of the country’s
leading political commentators, will deliver the Nelson Benton Lecture
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s School of
Journalism and Mass Communication on March 27 at 6 p.m. in the Carroll
Hall auditorium.
Schneider’s talk, “The Role of Media in
Politics,” is free and open to the public. He joins notable journalists
who have spoken in the series including Walter Cronkite, Charles
Kuralt, Sam Donaldson, Bob Schieffer, Cokie Roberts and Dan Rather.
The
lecture coincides with a major conference being held at the school in
honor of Knight Chair in Journalism Phil Meyer, who retires this year.
Meyer has been at the forefront of applying social-science research
methods to the practice of journalism. The conference brings media
scholars together to consider how research and theory can serve
journalism in the information age. Schneider and Meyer first met in
1968 when Meyer was analyzing a survey for the Miami Herald on race
relations in Miami.
Schneider, who joined CNN in 1991, is a
resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington,
D.C., and a contributing editor to the Los Angeles Times, National
Journal and The Atlantic Monthly.
The Washington Times called
Schneider "the nation's election-meister" and The Boston Globe called
him "the Aristotle of American politics," while Campaigns and Elections
magazine called him "the most consistently intelligent analyst on
television." In 1997, Washingtonian magazine named Schneider one of the
50 most influential Washington journalists.
Schneider
co-authored The Confidence Gap: Business, Labor and Government in the
Public Mind with Seymour Martin Lipset. He also has written extensively
on politics and public opinion for The New Republic, The Atlantic
Monthly, The Washington Post and other publications. Schneider is a
frequent television commentator and featured speaker on public affairs,
both in the United States and abroad.
Schneider has a bachelor’s
degree from Brandeis University and a doctorate in political science
from Harvard University, where he later taught in the Department of
Government. He has held an International Affairs Fellowship from the
Council on Foreign Relations and a National Fellowship from the Hoover
Institution at Stanford University. From 1990-1995, he was the Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. Visiting Professor of American Politics at Boston
College.
The Nelson Benton Lecture Series was established in the school by the CBS newsman’s friends and family after his death in 1988.
Benton
began his broadcasting career at radio station WSOC in Charlotte, N.C.,
after receiving his degree from UNC-Chapel Hill in 1949. The next year,
he established the first television news department in the Southeast at
WBTV in Charlotte. In 1960, he joined CBS News in New York City as an
assignment editor and reporter. He worked in Dallas when President John
F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1963 and became the New Orleans bureau
chief and correspondent for CBS News in 1964. He reported on the civil
rights movement in the South and covered the Vietnam War from Saigon,
Hue and the Vietnamese countryside. He spent the next decade as a
Washington correspondent.
During the early 1970s, he was an
anchor on the "CBS Morning News." He covered Watergate and the
resignation of President Richard Nixon in 1974. He won an Emmy for a
special broadcast about the Watergate tapes. When the country faced an
acute shortage of energy resources in the 1970s, he pioneered the
energy beat for CBS News.
He was a member of the team of CBS
News correspondents who covered the American space program from the
days of the Mercury astronauts through the moon landing on July 20,
1969.
(Will end before basketball game)
Date:
Thursday, March 27, 2008 - 2:00pm to 3:00pm
Location:
UNC Campus - Carroll Hall auditorium
From Peggy Misch:
Orange County Bill of Rights Defense Committee Friends,
In
order to have two speakers talk to us and have a DVD player, I've
called the meeting this month in a public room with equipment when
guests are available. Please come and bring someone else.
The BORDC website (www.bordc.org)
is filled with lots of information on pending legislation. We can make
a difference by contacting David Price, responding to candidates with
questions when they appeal for money, writing letters to the editor.
Below details of the next meeting, I've copied some current activities in Congress, taken from BORDC's website.
You
may support Tamara Tal's arraignment in Chapel Hill Courthouse (enter
from the East Franklin Street Post Office), Feb 18, sometime after 9AM.
The charge is "failure to disperse" from Burger King during the
national campaign to support tomato pickers supplying this chain,
November 30.
"Monitoring Civil Rights on the
Ground": Screening
by local videograher of UNC students supporting citizens of Jena, LA,
during town's commemoration of MLK Day, Jan 21, 2008, and report on
incident of arrest for failure to disperse at Burger King on Elliott
Road Nov 20. All welcome for discussion. Orange County Bill of Rights
Defense Committee, 7 PM, Feb 27, Chapel Hill Town Hall, Training Room.
942-2535.
Date:
Wednesday, February 27, 2008 - 2:00pm
Location:
Chapel Hill Town Hall, Training Room
[I stand corrected! See comments. The border shown is the pre-1967 line. Edits below. -RS]
Thanks to the Chapel Hill News for publishing the Hidden Voices walking tour of downtown Chapel Hill and Carrboro. In today's paper there was also a map, which they seem to have wisely chosen not to publish online, that showed the points of interest on the tour. It also showed a completely made up historic border between Chapel Hill and Carrboro, as if someone just took a ruler and made a nice straight line from North Greensboro & Pleasant to Cameron & Roberson!
Someone needs to let them know that all of Broad Street is in Carrboro, while all of Graham Street and the entire Pine Knolls neighborhood are in Chapel Hill. This is especially relevant in a discussion of the history of the area.
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