Archive for Events

Dec
26

6th Annual Homecoming Job Fair

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From the Citizen-Times:

ASHEVILLE — Job hunters can target more than 1,200 positions with 80 employers ready to pay good wages at the 6th annual Homecoming Job Fair next week.

The annual event, sponsored by the Asheville Area Chamber of Commerce, the N.C. Division of Employment Security and Mountain JobLink, has grown into the region’s single largest roundup for companies seeking good workers and workers looking for jobs. The fair will be 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Thursday at Biltmore Square Mall.

I won’t be able to attend the job fair this year, but find it a good gauge of which way our local economy is trending. Not just in number of job seekers, but in number of jobs and the quality of available jobs. I look for a healthy manufacturing to call center jobs ratio myself. The year job seeker traffic backed up down the exit ramp onto I-26 was not a good year. Check out the fair yourself on Thursday and report back if you go.

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From NC Policy Watch:

Recently, the Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives went so far as to say that his goal was to pit disabled people against poor people as part of a “divide and conquer” strategy.

Sadly, this was more than an unguarded moment; it was in fact a neat summary of the strategy employed by conservative legislative leaders during the 2011 state legislative session.

So, how “successful” were they? And is there anything a person can do get a handle on this situation (and maybe even speak out about it)?

If these or other similar questions have occurred to you lately, don’t miss a chance to hear some answers from two of the state’s most prominent voices for sane, sound and progressive public policy. Join us at noon on Monday December 12 for a special Crucial Conversation with the staff of the state’s leading progressive policy think tank, N.C. Policy Watch.

Chris Fitzsimon is the Director of N.C. Policy Watch and North Carolina’s leading progressive media personality. Chris is a veteran journalist and nonprofit leader whose daily commentaries are heard on radio and read online throughout North Carolina. His colleague, Rob Schofield is the Director of Research at N.C. Policy Watch. Rob is lawyer, lobbyist and writer with more than 25 years experience fighting for progressive policies at the state level.

Admission includes a box lunch. Space is limited – pre-registration required.
Questions?? Contact Rob Schofield at 919-861-2065 or rob at ncpolicywatch.com.

Register Here.

Location:
Unitarian Universalist Church of Asheville
http://www.uuasheville.org/
One Edwin Place
Asheville, NC 28801
Map and Directions

Start Time: 12:00 p.m.
End Time: 01:30 p.m.
Price: $10.00

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Nov
30

Bill McKibben at UNCA tonight

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From Mountain Xpress:

Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature, The Global Warming Reader, and other defining books on the environment has become a galvanizing force in American politics. On tour, he will be visiting
Asheville on Wednesday, November 30 to speak at Lipinsky Hall, on the campus of UNCA. The program begins at 7:00 PM.

While McKibben is best known for his environmental writing, there’s a non-environmental essay from 2005 I keep going back to: The Christian paradox: How a faithful nation gets Jesus wrong. McKibben examines that bizarre amalgam of Horatio Alger, Ayn Rand and Jesus Christ that for many Americans passes for Christianity, the same faith that informs McKibben’s environmentalism.

Only 40 percent of Americans can name more than four of the Ten Commandments, and a scant half can cite any of the four authors of the Gospels. Twelve percent believe Joan of Arc was Noah’s wife. This failure to recall the specifics of our Christian heritage may be further evidence of our nation’s educational decline, but it probably doesn’t matter all that much in spiritual or political terms. Here is a statistic that does matter: Three quarters of Americans believe the Bible teaches that “God helps those who help themselves.” That is, three out of four Americans believe that this uber-American idea, a notion at the core of our current individualist politics and culture, which was in fact uttered by Ben Franklin, actually appears in Holy Scripture. The thing is, not only is Franklin’s wisdom not biblical; it’s counter-biblical. Few ideas could be further from the gospel message, with its radical summons to love of neighbor. On this essential matter, most Americans—most American Christians—are simply wrong, as if 75 percent of American scientists believed that Newton proved gravity causes apples to fly up.

[...]

And on and on. The power of the Christian right rests largely in the fact that they boldly claim religious authority, and by their very boldness convince the rest of us that they must know what they’re talking about. They’re like the guy who gives you directions with such loud confidence that you drive on even though the road appears to be turning into a faint, rutted track. But their theology is appealing for another reason too: it coincides with what we want to believe. How nice it would be if Jesus had declared that our income was ours to keep, instead of insisting that we had to share. How satisfying it would be if we were supposed to hate our enemies. Religious conservatives will always have a comparatively easy sell.

Categories : Environment, Events, Religion
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Oct
16

Getting better every schmear!

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Today from 11:00 to 4:00, Asheville’s Jewish Food and Heritage Festival, HardLox will be held in Pack Square Park. Come down and enjoy delicious Jewish food, meet Asheville’s Jewish community, and listen to fabulous entertainment.

From the organizers:

There’s lots to do at this year’s HardLox Festival. At this year’s HardLox Festival there will be lots of great traditional Jewish food, Israeli dancing, crafts, a Kids Zone, klezmer music and lots more.

Have your name written in Hebrew, discover the Torah, learn about Jewish holidays and festivals, and join in the singing and dancing.

Every Jewish organization in the Asheville area will be represented with many providing interactive educational opportunities to learn about our people and our Jewish heritage and culture.

The HardLox Jewish Food and Heritage Festival is hosted by Congregation Beth HaTephila and co-sponsored by the City of Asheville.

Mechayeh!

Categories : Events, Local
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So first thing you need to know is that there is no Internet access here, so my promised live tweet of this Buncombe YD meet and greet/forum is coming to you not instantaneously as you have perhaps become accustomed. Also, I’m no court stenographer, but I did the best I could in transcribing the candidates answers to the various questions…

  • 9:39 Gordon Smith enters the theatre wearing a fancy hat.

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RAM volunteer dentists and student assistants provide free treatment - first come, first served

WISE, VA: A pregnant woman’s water broke as she awaited free dental care at the Wise County, VA fairgrounds on Saturday. She had stood in line in hot and muggy weather with over a thousand others to get a numbered ticket at the 12th annual Remote Area Medical (RAM) Health Expedition. According to RAM staffer, Jean Jolly, she didn’t want to leave and lose her place in line.

An ambulance standing by eventually took her to town in time to have her child in a hospital instead of an animal stall. The child might have been the first ever born at a RAM free clinic. But not without a number, joked one of RAM’s 1,700 volunteers.

Far from Washington’s “debt crisis” abstractions is another crisis, an American reality one cannot describe in words nor experience secondhand.

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Jul
07

Redistricting Brouhaha Today

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If there’s one thing this community does as well as brew beer it’s brouhaha. Comment over the NCGOP’s redistricting plan to snatch Asheville’s mountains out of the 11th Congressional District and move them into the piedmont’s 10th District should be a doozy. Today is your chance to brew up a storm. This via Mountain Xpress:

The Joint House and Senate Redistricting Committee will hold a public hearing on Thursday, July 7, 2011, 3:00 – 9:00 p.m. at various locations across the state. WNC locations are listed below.

Each speaker is limited to five (5) minutes. Speakers are encouraged to submit their oral comments in writing. Persons proposing plans are encouraged to provide maps and any supporting data.

Questions about the public hearings may be directed to Erika Churchill or Kelly Quick at 919-733-2578. Persons desiring to submit written comments to be included in the public record may send those comments to:

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Jun
24

Support Your Local All Volunteer “Radio” Station…

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Hey all you greasers and peasers, daddy-o’s & dollies. There’s a joint with a point ready to anoint. This Saturday June 25th, the coolest of the cool will be downtown at Broadways for Asheville Free Media’s Saturday Sock Hop Special. That jukebox will start rocking at 8 o’clock. And its only a mere 5 Washingtons to appear. 50’s & 60’s music to cut a rug to. Crazy, man! Plus great raffle prizes to lay on you and prizes for the best dressed, so make sure your threads knock ‘em dead. You’re gonna wanna make this scene. So tell your cousin what’s buzzin’ next Saturday is the Asheville Free Media Saturday Sock Hop Special June 25th at Broadways. It’s the most, to say the least! Ya dig?

Also, I’ll be spinning the tunes from 8:30 ish to 10:30ish

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Jun
20

Netroots 11, Day 3

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Too much going on to post from the last day. Travel day Sunday. But Van Jones’ Power Point strategy brief was the high point of the conference. He concluded with this.

“It’s time for the deep patriots to stand up to the cheap patriots.”
 

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Jun
18

Netroots 11, Day 2

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DNC Chair Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz at Netroots 11

The day started out with a public grilling of White House Communications Director, Dan Pfeiffer. Salon’s War Room described it this way, quoting Dave Weigel,

 

Pfeiffer was only booed (lightly) once. That was when he was asked why Obama had filled out a survey in 1996 stating his approval of gay marriage, but had moved right on the issue as president.

“First of all,” said Pfeiffer, “someone else filled out that questionnaire.”

That’s a very good point. Also Obama had his fingers crossed, and no one said “no backsies.”

That was the most egregious example of communications directorese from Pfeiffer, but it did have competition. Angry Mouse (or, OK, Kaili Joy Gray) repeatedly questioned him on what the White House is doing about unemployment, and Pfeiffer was rather unwilling to admit that the answer is “nothing.”

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