Grants total $3.9M for tourism projects – Asheville Citizen

Six projects received about $3.9 million in grants on Wednesday from the Buncombe County Tourism Development Authority.

The authority’s board members unanimously approved the awarding of the grants on Wednesday during its regular monthly meeting.

City of Asheville projects received about 80 percent of the grants. Those included work for greenways, soccer fields and the Western North Carolina Nature Center.

Roughly $1.7 million in grant funding will help pay for a project that includes the Beaucatcher Greenway, the west bank of the French Broad River Greenway and a crosswalk and river access at Amboy Road Park.

“This is exciting,” said Stephanie Monson Dahl, Asheville’s Riverfront Redevelopment Office director. “This is funding the community’s plans and is funding for making this a better place.

“These projects won’t only be helpful to visitors to Asheville,” Monson Dahl continued. “They also improve the quality of life for everyone who lives in Asheville.”

Riverfront-development projects received $1.8 million in tourism grants last year.

The soccer fields at the John B. Lewis complex, which the city owns, received $1.1 million for resurfacing. The Asheville Buncombe Youth Soccer Association submitted the grant application on behalf of the fields.

That award allowed city of Asheville officials to use another $900,000 from the City Improvements Program for work on the fields.

A $313,000 grant for the WNC Nature Center to upgrade its gateway will enable development of a permanent butterfly exhibit, among other improvements. The Friends of the WNC Nature Center submitted the application for those funds.

The Asheville Museum of Science, formerly the Colburn Earth Science Museum, received $400,000 for its planned move to an expanded space in downtown’s Wells Fargo building.

Though The Collider applied for $350,000, the climate-science center received $150,000 in grant funding. That money will pay for technology enhancements that will midweek conference and business meetings. The Collider obtained $150,000 last year.

Riverglass Public Glass Studio School collected $200,000 in grant funding for a River Arts District project that will include classes, demonstrations, exhibitions and glass artist studio space.

Authority board members chose to not provide any money to The Center for Craft, Creativity and Design to pay for a conference facility.

The application process began in January. A total of 16 candidates submitted applications by the June deadline. Seven advanced to the next stage.

Criteria for review of the applications included evaluating whether the projects met the legislative mandate of create overnight visits.

Reviewers, who visited the site of each project, also considered economic impact, feasibility and financial strength.

Applicants gave presentations during a two-day review.

As of October the total fund contained about $3.2 million.

Stephanie Pace Brown, executive director of the Asheville Convention and Visitors Bureau, said Tourism Development Authority board members will vote in February to approve awarding $700,000 for the French Broad River Greenway.

Construction is scheduled to begin in May.

Tourism grant money comes from a portion of the room tax revenues paid by overnight visitors in Buncombe County lodging accommodations.

The grant program began in 2001. Since its inception, the authority has awarded more than $23 million in grants for 27 projects.

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Zoning, ordinance changes would impact Airbnb in Raleigh

RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) –  A proposed ordinance by the Raleigh Planning Commission aims to allow Airbnb to operate in the city.

The current Unified Development Ordinance only allows bed and breakfasts to operate in limited districts.

A new permit would allow the short-term rental of two bedrooms in a home for 30 days or less at a time. A resident manager would be required on premise and the entirety of the dwelling unit can not be rented.

A special permit would be needed for the rental of more bedrooms.

The change would “permit an emerging use of renting out a portion of a residential structure to visitors and travelers,” according to a planning commission agenda.

Without a text change to the city ordinance, short-term rentals would not be permitted outside of a bed and breakfast.

The planning commission agenda said the city would have to enforce its current code as residences are currently being rented out.

“Additional lodging accommodations will be added to the city and help to support tourism growth and business development,” the agenda stated.

Editor’s note: A previous version of this story incorrectly said the rules would make it harder for Airbnb to operate in Raleigh.

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North Carolina official presses Congress to stop domestic violence

One of the top executives in Charlotte, N.C., city government stood in front of new members of Congress on Wednesday to make a deeply personal plea to stop domestic violence.

Charlotte Deputy City Manager Ron Kimble, whose 31-year-old daughter was killed by her ex-boyfriend in 2012, told lawmakers that domestic violence knows no boundaries. It can strike anyone, he said, including a highly educated woman from a financially comfortable family.

“Her story is one that tells us that domestic violence can happen to anybody,” Kimble told the members. “It doesn’t choose its victims by race, by age, by socioeconomic status. It can choose anyone. Our daughter is proof.”

State and local law enforcement reported 108 domestic violence-related homicides in North Carolina in 2013, according to the N.C. Department of Justice. Mecklenburg County had seven deaths. Wake County had eight.

Jamie is proof that domestic violence and sexual assualt knows no boundaries. Charlotte Deputy City Manager Ron Kimble, whose daughter was killed by her ex-boyfriend in 2012

October is domestic violence awareness month, and U.S. Rep. Alma Adams, who represents parts of Charlotte, invited Kimble to Washington to speak with Democratic members of the freshman class. Adams, who also has experienced domestic violence, is co-sponsoring legislation that would require secondary schools to teach students about having safe relationships.

Sitting around a table with about a half dozen members of Congress, including Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., Kimble shared his tragic family story. His and his wife’s only daughter, Jamie, was a great student with a bright future. She graduated in the top 10 of her class at J.H. Rose High School in Greenville, N.C. She attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She was a rising star at her job, at a subsidiary of Coca-Cola Consolidated based in Charlotte.

But Jamie Kimble also had a long troubled relationship. She suffered years of verbal, emotional and psychological abuse, according to Ron Kimble.

Her ex-boyfriend was controlling, but never physical – at least until that last day, Kimble said.

It was September 2012 – an extremely important time for the city of Charlotte and the deputy city manager.

It was the first day of the Democratic National Conference in Charlotte. Thousands of delegates, visitors and media were beginning to fill the city. President Barack Obama was on his way.

108 domestic violence related homicides reported to law enforcement in North Carolina in 2013

Kimble had just worked an 18-hour day. Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officers knocked on his door around midnight.

The officers told Kimble and his wife that their daughter’s ex-boyfriend had driven from his home in Kansas City to Tampa, Fla., where Jamie Kimble had just arrived after a trip to Europe. He coaxed her into his car.

He shot her on the drive. Twice.

He then drove to downtown Tampa and shot himself.

“That is what the police told us at midnight on Sept. 3, 2012,” Kimble told the members of Congress. “She was a beautiful girl. She didn’t deserve the fate that befell her. But that’s the case with all domestic violence victims.”

EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE

Kimble urged the Democrats to support legislation that’s preventative and combats domestic violence on the front end. He cited the bill Adams is cosponsoring and lead by Maloney that would increase education in the schools.

I took a beating. My children were with me. I was trying to protect them. Rep. Alma Adams

EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM

Adams said her interest in the work is not only professional, but personal. She also was a victim of domestic violence when she was a graduate student in Ohio, she said.

She was around 34. She started dating a man who, at first, she didn’t realize could be so jealous. The signs were subtle at first, then the jealousy turned more serious. He became controlling. He wanted to know where she was at all times. One day he lost his temper.

“And then he attacked me, physically,” she said. “It opened my eyes real fast.”

Adams went to a prosecutor and took out an arrest warrant. She left her apartment; she even purchased a gun. She was worried about protecting her young children. She left the relationship, but not everyone does.

EDITORS: END OPTIONAL TRIM

It’s important to be proactive, Adams said. Behaviors are formed early. Addressing them while people are young could mean the difference later on, she said.

“If we can start early, it gives us hope that by the time young people get to be adults that they’ll be thinking differently about how you solve problems,” Adams said in an interview after the discussion.

Kimble and his wife, Jan, established the Jamie Kimble Foundation for Courage to raise awareness about domestic violence and increase research and education on prevention.

Kimble spoke for about 45 minutes. Maloney asked him whether he would come speak to her constituents in New York.

It’s unclear how successful the bill will be. It already faces a significant challenge and currently has no Republican co-sponsors in a GOP-led House.

Kimble, who understands the slow pace of government, said he’s not under any misconceptions about rapid change – especially in today’s polarized Washington.

“We want to move the needle,” Kimble said. “We want to talk about the evil of domestic violence and sexual assault. If my visit only raises awareness, then it is successful.”

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Thompson, Manitoba: Wolf Capital of the World

Wolves were reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park in 1995 after their elimination in the early twentieth century. Image: Steve Jurvetson/Flickr

With breathless enthusiasm, Marion Morberg recalled a summer encounter with wild wolves.

In her truck, as she crested a hill near Thompson, Manitoba, she saw a lone wolf walking next to the road. She pulled to a stop. The sleek predator looked at her, walked toward the truck and crossed the road. Then another appeared in her rearview mirror.

“I grew up in the north, but I’m still in awe [of the wildlife],” Morberg said. Thompsonites “had no idea that people are really scared of wolves, because we’re not.”

Morberg is the president of a local volunteer organization called Spirit Way. As British Columbia culls wolves in hopes of saving declining caribou herds, Idaho hosts an annual wolf-killing contest, and Europe struggles to reverse centuries-long persecution of wolves, Morberg wants the world to know that Thompson not only likes its wolves, but is aiming to become the Wolf Capital of the World—a world-class centre for wolf-positive research, education and eco-tourism.

With a population estimated up to 6,000, Manitoba is likely home to more wolves than all the contiguous United States, which has roughly 5,600, according to the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Locals speculate the acceptance of wolves may be because northern Manitoba is not farm country, so wolves are not in conflict with livestock owners, an issue that reinforces negative feelings toward wolves in other places. Moreover, local indigenous traditions promote respect for the wolf, which is regarded as an equal or brother.

Thompson’s 10-storey high wolf mural is the largest lighted mural in the world. Image: Travel Manitoba/Flickr

Morberg’s team was in Winnipeg in late October to present their Wolf Capital of the World project to some of the 1,500 wildlife students and professionals attending The Wildlife Society’s annual conference. Spirit Way is seeking partners and sponsors for a $4.5 million Boreal Discovery Centre and a wolf centre of excellence that would promote wolves as an economic and ecologic asset, and demonstrate best practices in everything from wolf science to policy. It also hopes that Thompson, roughly 700km north of Winnipeg and deep in the Boreal forest, can shed its image as a 1960s mining town and stimulate a robust tourist economy.

The idea to become the wolf capital hatched unexpectedly in 2005. Spirit Way had been founded as a finite three-year project to simply “give the community some bragging rights,” said project coordinator Volker Beckmann. The group commissioned a 10-storey high mural based on “Wolf Sketch,” a painting by Canada’s premier wildlife artist Robert Bateman. The largest lighted mural in the world, it evoked an outpouring of positive public response.

“You can see it a mile away across the river at night, this glowing wolf,” said Beckmann, who is a graphic design consultant by day.

Spirit Way then produced another public-art project, a series of 53 sponsored, artist-painted wolf sculptures. One thing led to another, and the group found itself invited to a 2009 carnivore conference in Denver, Colorado, where the group started to receive invitations for education and research partnerships. In 2011, Spirit Way started the Wolves Without Borders education program that teaches conservation and unpacks myths about wolves for school kids in Canada, the US and Mexico. It hopes to take the program global.

“We began to see the potential for what we could do with wolves,” said Beckmann.

Wolves draw an estimated 94,000 people annually to Yellowstone National Park, contributing $35.5 million to local economies

In 2012, Spirit Way presented Manitoba Conservation with a discussion paper on its plans for a “wolf economy” and hosted its own international wolf and carnivore conference in Thompson, attracting 100 attendees, including top wolf biologists. It is also working on a four-year study with Memorial University’s Dr. Alistair Bath, a human dimensions expert who has worked on human-wolf controversies around the world, to determine what a “wolf centre of excellence” should be from the perspective of all community stakeholders.

So far the group has raised nearly $1 million for its projects, and work on the Boreal Discovery Centre—an overhaul of the Thompson zoo that will focus on flora and fauna of the Boreal forest—is underway.

Because of the thick forest cover, viewing wolves for research or tourism could be challenging, but technology is helping overcome that. Research methods are changing “at a rapid pace,” said Rob Schultz, executive director of the International Wolf Center in Minnesota.

“Researchers can be sitting in an office and be watching what’s happening on Ellesmere [Island] with GPS collars. There is talk of using drones,” Schultz said. “Technology changes the way researchers can look at a species, and it means that you don’t necessarily need a barren landscape.”

Speaking at the conference, Keith MacDonald, president of the Thompson Chamber of Commerce said he also hoped wolves “could be an untapped economic engine” for the city. Wolves draw an estimated 94,000 people annually to Yellowstone National Park, contributing $35.5 million to the economies of Wyoming, Idaho and Montana, according to a 2008 study. Other studies have found that wolves have a positive economic impact in North Carolina and parts of Arizona and New Mexico.

Boreal forest in Thompson, Manitoba. Image: Travel Manitoba/Flickr

But creating a product around an animal that really doesn’t want contact with people is an inherent challenge.

For starters, Thompson will need mom-and-pop tour operators, such as those that operate in Churchill, Thompson’s northern neighbour, Beckmann said. They take visitors on northern safaris to see polar bears and beluga whales. Already Manitoba’s northern region attracts upwards of 400,000 visitors annually, according to Travel Manitoba. “We’re looking for someone to tell you the stories, take you into the forest, show you some wolf tracks,” he said.

Morberg is already organizing tours for August 2016. A wolf-behaviour expert will guide participants in the Paint Lake-Ospwagon Lake area to hear, if not see, wolves by performing wolf calls.

“I think images from that community, when they’re seen by people in other parts of the world, they truly do inspire people,” said Rob Schultz, noting that the International Wolf Center has been sharing Thompson’s wolf-project updates to its worldwide membership. He’s impressed by the city’s “real, true acceptance of wolves, of their being part of the environment, that we’re not seeing in other parts of the world.”

If Spirit Way can keep its momentum, Thompson may not only become synonymous with wolves—it may also do a loved and loathed creature a lot of good.

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Golden Corral Restaurants Salute America’s Heroes with 15th Annual Free Dinner …








RALEIGH, N.C., Oct. 26, 2015 /PRNewswire/ –On Wednesday, November 11, for the 15th consecutive year Golden Corral will once again thank thousands of active duty and retired United States military personnel for their service with a free dinner buffet and beverage, while also raising donations for the DAV (Disabled American Veterans). A tradition started 14 years ago to celebrate our nation’s heroes, Golden Corral’s Military Appreciation Night has served more than 4.4 million complimentary meals to military personnel and generated more than $10.2 million dollars in guest contributions to support community-based service initiatives for veterans.

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RALEIGH, N.C., Oct. 26, 2015 /PRNewswire/ –On Wednesday, November 11, for the 15th consecutive year Golden Corral will once again thank thousands of active duty and retired United States military personnel for their service with a free dinner buffet and beverage, while also raising donations for the DAV (Disabled American Veterans). A tradition started 14 years ago to celebrate our nation’s heroes, Golden Corral’s Military Appreciation Night has served more than 4.4 million complimentary meals to military personnel and generated more than $10.2 million dollars in guest contributions to support community-based service initiatives for veterans.

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RALEIGH, N.C., Oct. 26, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — On Wednesday, November 11, for the 15th consecutive year Golden Corral will once again thank thousands of active duty and retired United States military personnel for their service with a free dinner buffet and beverage, while also raising donations for the DAV (Disabled American Veterans). A tradition started 14 years ago to celebrate our nation’s heroes, Golden Corral’s Military Appreciation Night has served more than 4.4 million complimentary meals to military personnel and generated more than $10.2 million dollars in guest contributions to support community-based service initiatives for veterans.

Golden Corral system is very passionate about supporting our military service men and women, and we believe thanking them with a free dinner buffet is one way to show our immense appreciation for their service to our country,” said Lance Trenary, president and chief executive officer of Golden Corral. “We are very honored to have raised more than $10.2 million for the DAV over the years and look forward to adding to that total again this year.”

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Golden Corral system is very passionate about supporting our military service men and women, and we believe thanking them with a free dinner buffet is one way to show our immense appreciation for their service to our country,” said Lance Trenary, president and chief executive officer of Golden Corral. “We are very honored to have raised more than $10.2 million for the DAV over the years and look forward to adding to that total again this year.”

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“The entire Golden Corral system is very passionate about supporting our military service men and women, and we believe thanking them with a free dinner buffet is one way to show our immense appreciation for their service to our country,” said Lance Trenary, president and chief executive officer of Golden Corral.  “We are very honored to have raised more than $10.2 million for the DAV over the years and look forward to adding to that total again this year.”

Golden Corral has enlisted Gary Sinise, celebrated actor/humanitarian, and Collective Soul, the platinum award-winning band, to record public service announcements for Military Appreciation Night. Sinise and Collective Soul are all actively involved in supporting active duty and retired military personnel through a variety of organizations and initiatives including tours to military installations overseas.

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Golden Corral has enlisted Gary Sinise, celebrated actor/humanitarian, and Collective Soul, the platinum award-winning band, to record public service announcements for Military Appreciation Night. Sinise and Collective Soul are all actively involved in supporting active duty and retired military personnel through a variety of organizations and initiatives including tours to military installations overseas.

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Golden Corral has enlisted Gary Sinise, celebrated actor/humanitarian, and Collective Soul, the platinum award-winning band, to record public service announcements for Military Appreciation Night. Sinise and Collective Soul are all actively involved in supporting active duty and retired military personnel through a variety of organizations and initiatives including tours to military installations overseas.

Golden Corral in supporting our troops, past and present, through Military Appreciation Night,” said Sinise. “The number of meals given away and amount of money donated in the past 14 years really distinguishes Golden Corral’s commitment to the military. I’m proud and happy to help raise awareness for Golden Corral Military Appreciation Night.”

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Golden Corral in supporting our troops, past and present, through Military Appreciation Night,” said Sinise. “The number of meals given away and amount of money donated in the past 14 years really distinguishes Golden Corral’s commitment to the military. I’m proud and happy to help raise awareness for Golden Corral Military Appreciation Night.”

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“This is the 11th year I’ve had the pleasure to partner with Golden Corral in supporting our troops, past and present, through Military Appreciation Night,” said Sinise. “The number of meals given away and amount of money donated in the past 14 years really distinguishes Golden Corral’s commitment to the military. I’m proud and happy to help raise awareness for Golden Corral Military Appreciation Night.”

Golden Corral will serve free dinner buffets with beverage from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. on November 11 to any person who is or has served in a United States Military branch, including the National Guard and Reserves. State and local DAV representatives will be on-site at all Golden Corral locations coordinating the collection of donations from customers. While only current and former military qualify for the free meal, everyone is encouraged to come out and show support for our veterans. For more information on Military Appreciation Night, please visit http://www.goldencorral.com/military/.

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Golden Corral will serve free dinner buffets with beverage from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. on November 11 to any person who is or has served in a United States Military branch, including the National Guard and Reserves. State and local DAV representatives will be on-site at all Golden Corral locations coordinating the collection of donations from customers. While only current and former military qualify for the free meal, everyone is encouraged to come out and show support for our veterans. For more information on Military Appreciation Night, please visit http://www.goldencorral.com/military/.

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Golden Corral will serve free dinner buffets with beverage from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. on November 11 to any person who is or has served in a United States Military branch, including the National Guard and Reserves. State and local DAV representatives will be on-site at all Golden Corral locations coordinating the collection of donations from customers. While only current and former military qualify for the free meal, everyone is encouraged to come out and show support for our veterans. For more information on Military Appreciation Night, please visit http://www.goldencorral.com/military/.

About Golden Corral Corporation:

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About Golden Corral Corporation:

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About Golden Corral Corporation:

Raleigh, N.C. Lance Trenary serves as its president and chief executive officer. Golden Corral currently has 491 restaurants in 41 states. The company’s vision is to be the leader in the family restaurant segment bymaking pleasurable dining affordable for every guest, at every restaurant, every day. Golden Corral restaurants nationwide have long been strong supporters of the U.S. Military and the Disabled American Veterans (DAV). Golden Corral helped raise more than $1.4 million dollars for the DAV in 2014 as part of its annual “Military Appreciation” initiative.Golden Corral is the founding sponsor of Camp Corral,a free “week of a lifetime” summer camp for children of wounded, disabled or fallen military families (www.campcorral.org). For more information on Golden Corral, visit www.goldencorral.com.

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Raleigh, N.C. Lance Trenary serves as its president and chief executive officer. Golden Corral currently has 491 restaurants in 41 states. The company’s vision is to be the leader in the family restaurant segment bymaking pleasurable dining affordable for every guest, at every restaurant, every day. Golden Corral restaurants nationwide have long been strong supporters of the U.S. Military and the Disabled American Veterans (DAV). Golden Corral helped raise more than $1.4 million dollars for the DAV in 2014 as part of its annual “Military Appreciation” initiative.Golden Corral is the founding sponsor of Camp Corral,a free “week of a lifetime” summer camp for children of wounded, disabled or fallen military families (www.campcorral.org). For more information on Golden Corral, visit www.goldencorral.com.

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Founded in 1973, privately held Golden Corral Corp. is headquartered in Raleigh, N.C. Lance Trenary serves as its president and chief executive officer.  Golden Corral currently has 491 restaurants in 41 states.  The company’s vision is to be the leader in the family restaurant segment by making pleasurable dining affordable for every guest, at every restaurant, every day.  Golden Corral restaurants nationwide have long been strong supporters of the U.S. Military and the Disabled American Veterans (DAV).  Golden Corral helped raise more than $1.4 million dollars for the DAV in 2014 as part of its annual “Military Appreciation” initiative. Golden Corral is the founding sponsor of Camp Corral, a free “week of a lifetime” summer camp for children of wounded, disabled or fallen military families (www.campcorral.org).  For more information on Golden Corral, visit www.goldencorral.com.

About DAV (Disabled Veteran Americans):

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About DAV (Disabled Veteran Americans):

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About DAV (Disabled Veteran Americans):

www.dav.org.

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www.dav.org.

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DAV empowers veterans to lead high-quality lives with respect and dignity.  It is dedicated to a single purpose: fulfilling our promises to the men and women who served.  DAV does this by ensuring that veterans and their families can access the full range of benefits available to them; fighting for the interests of America’s injured heroes on Capitol Hill; connecting veterans and their families with employment resources and educating the public about the great sacrifices and needs of veterans transitioning back to civilian life.  DAV, a non–profit organization with 1.2 million members, was founded in 1920 and chartered by the U.S. Congress in 1932. For more information, visit the organization’s website at www.dav.org.

Media Contacts:

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Media Contacts:

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Media Contacts:

Sue Yannello syannello@919marketing.com 919.459.8162
Kevin Behan kbehan@919marketing.com 919.459.3595

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Sue Yannello syannello@919marketing.com 919.459.8162
Kevin Behan kbehan@919marketing.com 919.459.3595

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Sue Yannello syannello@919marketing.com 919.459.8162 
Kevin Behan kbehan@919marketing.com 919.459.3595

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/golden-corral-restaurants-salute-americas-heroes-with-15th-annual-free-dinner-on-military-appreciation-night-300165459.html

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/golden-corral-restaurants-salute-americas-heroes-with-15th-annual-free-dinner-on-military-appreciation-night-300165459.html

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SOURCE Golden Corral

RELATED LINKS
http://www.goldencorral.com

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Final Weekend for Cheval’s Charity Home Tour and Online Art and Furniture Auction








MINT HILL, N.C., Oct. 27, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — A Charity Home Tour benefitting Big Brothers Big Sisters is currently underway at Cheval, the luxury equestrian new home community located in South Charlotte in the town of Mint Hill.

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MINT HILL, N.C., Oct. 27, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — A Charity Home Tour benefitting Big Brothers Big Sisters is currently underway at Cheval, the luxury equestrian new home community located in South Charlotte in the town of Mint Hill.

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MINT HILL, N.C., Oct. 27, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — A Charity Home Tour benefitting Big Brothers Big Sisters is currently underway at Cheval, the luxury equestrian new home community located in South Charlotte in the town of Mint Hill.

Friday, October 30th through closing day, Sunday, Nov. 1st. Visitors will delight in the home’s many unique architectural features and its exquisite interior design. The $10 per family entry fee will be donated to help the children of this worthy charity that currently serves over 1,500 “at risk” children in Greater Charlotte.

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Friday, October 30th through closing day, Sunday, Nov. 1st. Visitors will delight in the home’s many unique architectural features and its exquisite interior design. The $10 per family entry fee will be donated to help the children of this worthy charity that currently serves over 1,500 “at risk” children in Greater Charlotte.

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The tour home, The Welch House, is a fully furnished, professionally decorated new home built by New Old Luxury Custom Homes and is open to the public to tour for the final weekend on Friday, October 30th through closing day, Sunday, Nov. 1st. Visitors will delight in the home’s many unique architectural features and its exquisite interior design. The $10 per family entry fee will be donated to help the children of this worthy charity that currently serves over 1,500 “at risk” children in Greater Charlotte.

Anne Neilson Fine Art and 57 pieces of furniture from the 2015 HomeArama home built by New Old Luxury Custom Home are available for purchase at http://bbbs.auction-bid.org/micro2.php thru 6 pm on November 1st.

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Anne Neilson Fine Art and 57 pieces of furniture from the 2015 HomeArama home built by New Old Luxury Custom Home are available for purchase at http://bbbs.auction-bid.org/micro2.php thru 6 pm on November 1st.

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An online auction consisting of 31 pieces of fine art sponsored by Anne Neilson Fine Art and 57 pieces of furniture from the 2015 HomeArama home built by New Old Luxury Custom Home are available for purchase at http://bbbs.auction-bid.org/micro2.php thru 6 pm on November 1st.

Anne Neilson Fine Art, Monarch Mortgage, Beasley Broadcast Group, Inc., Superior School of Real Estate, Adams Outdoor, GraphiCal, Vintner’s Hill, Griffin Masonry, Best Impressions Caterers, Aga Thyme, and BlackFinn Ameripub.

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Anne Neilson Fine Art, Monarch Mortgage, Beasley Broadcast Group, Inc., Superior School of Real Estate, Adams Outdoor, GraphiCal, Vintner’s Hill, Griffin Masonry, Best Impressions Caterers, Aga Thyme, and BlackFinn Ameripub.

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Sponsors for the Cheval Home Tour Event include Paris Projects, Builder Developer Advisors, New Old Luxury Custom Homes, Anne Neilson Fine Art, Monarch Mortgage, Beasley Broadcast Group, Inc., Superior School of Real Estate, Adams Outdoor, GraphiCal, Vintner’s Hill, Griffin Masonry, Best Impressions Caterers, Aga Thyme, and BlackFinn Ameripub.

Mint Hill, in South Charlotte.

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Mint Hill, in South Charlotte.

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Cheval features six distinct neighborhoods offering a variety of new homes from the low $500’s to $2.5+million. Cheval offers a unique feel of a countryside estate in a pastoral, serene setting in the bedroom community of Mint Hill, in South Charlotte.

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To visit Cheval driving South on I-485 S: From Interstate 485 Inner, take Exit 47 for Lawyers Road. Turn Right onto Lawyers Road and go .9 miles. Turn Left at Thompson Road, and then drive .6 miles to the main entrance of Cheval. Turn Right.

10 am to 5 pm. Saturday hours are 11 am to 5 pm, and Sunday hours are 1 pm to 5 pm.

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10 am to 5 pm. Saturday hours are 11 am to 5 pm, and Sunday hours are 1 pm to 5 pm.

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The Cheval Sales and Information Center is open seven days a week, with hours Monday through Friday 10 am to 5 pm. Saturday hours are 11 am to 5 pm, and Sunday hours are 1 pm to 5 pm.

Diane Austin, President of Builder Developer Advisors at 704.573.2932 or visit the website at www.chevalnc.com.

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Diane Austin, President of Builder Developer Advisors at 704.573.2932 or visit the website at www.chevalnc.com.

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For more information contact Diane Austin, President of Builder Developer Advisors at 704.573.2932 or visit the website at www.chevalnc.com.

Joan Barnes, MIRM
Marketing Specifics, Inc.
Direct: 678.520.8724
joanb@marketingspecifics.com

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Joan Barnes, MIRM
Marketing Specifics, Inc.
Direct: 678.520.8724
joanb@marketingspecifics.com

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Media Contact:
Joan Barnes, MIRM
Marketing Specifics, Inc.
Direct: 678.520.8724
joanb@marketingspecifics.com

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/final-weekend-for-chevals-charity-home-tour-and-online-art-and-furniture-auction-300166481.html

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/final-weekend-for-chevals-charity-home-tour-and-online-art-and-furniture-auction-300166481.html

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SOURCE Cheval



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Can Syracuse football afford to keep walking away from high-profile players?

Syracuse, N.Y. — Syracuse University football had a commitment from former five-star tight end Chris Clark to transfer to Syracuse … until it didn’t.

Syracuse also recently had a commitment from four-star running back Robert Washington to join the Class of 2016 … until it didn’t.

Anyone who follows the world of college football recruiting, be it uncommitted high school stars or transfers, knows that things can and do change quickly.

It just so happens Syracuse, a program that doesn’t get four- and five-star recruits on its doorstep that often these days, has caught and then lost two big fish off the line in the last two months.

So what gives here?

Washington cited trust issues with the coaching staff, an accusation SU was not permitted to respond to publicly via NCAA rules.

No matter how it added up, Syracuse lost a player who single-handily almost brought the famed No.44 out of the rafters.

Now Clark has come and gone.

How does Clark go from the right fit at Syracuse to not the right fit at Syracuse in the span of a week?

NCAA rules prohibit Shafer from commenting specifically on Clark’s case, but the Orange head coach reiterated what Syracuse looks for when it brings a player into the program.

“The biggest thing we are looking for is the right fit,” Shafer said Tuesday. “When it fits, we go full-speed ahead. You are always in the information gathering business in recruiting. At the end of the day, we sit around as a staff and try to make the best decision as a team for all the people that are involved in the program here.”

What are the specific qualities of a player with the “right fit” at Syracuse?

“First and foremost what we look at is their character,” Shafer said. “We look at their academic status, what type of schedule they have taken and where they are in terms of eligibility and work ethic. Many times, you get into situations where you look at what the grade-point looks like compared to standardized testing. I always lean on the grade-point because you are going to work hard and put extra effort into a good grade-point average where some people struggle on the standardized tests for many reasons.”

“Does this particular individual love football? Does he carry characteristics of a “gym rat” mentality? Does he play more than one sport? Does he enjoy competing all the time? Over the years, kids that play multiple sports go a long way with us.”

“I also look at the characteristics of the family makeup,” Shafer said. “Is there support there? As I tell all the recruits, there is going to be down times and difficult situations regardless of which school you choose. It takes quite a few people to help in the process to make it in college. You can say that about any student.”

Clark seemed to be surprised at Syracuse’s decision to go in a different direction after the news surfaced on Monday.

“Like it makes no sense to me whatsoever … that they pulled my offer,” Clark said via Twitter direct message to the Daily Orange.

Clark has changed his mind often. He verbally committed to North Carolina and Michigan before signing with UCLA and then transferred to Syracuse before that broke down on Monday.

There was palpable buzz in the football wing when Clark visited Syracuse earlier this month.

This wasn’t a drive-by visit. He spent two days in Syracuse, talked to the coaching staff and planned to come back again for the Syracuse-Pittsburgh game this past weekend.

Then, just like Keyser Söze, poof … he was gone.

Reasonable minds can agree that Scott Shafer isn’t going to pull an offer from a player of Clark’s caliber unless there is a good reason.

I think we all know that more happens beneath the surface in recruiting than maybe we are privy to, but this has been quite the tease for Syracuse fans.

The coaching staff and fan base tweet their #Boom! and #OrangeRevolution!” messages when these guys commit, then turn around and talk about how they would have been a bad fit for the program anyway days later.

This is now twice in the last few months that Scott Shafer thought he had just bought a new Cadillac but got the CarFax report back and discovered it was a lemon.

What’s going to happen the next time a high-profile recruit has interest in Syracuse? There are only so many times you can #Boom! me before I wait for the other shoe to drop.

Syracuse has managed to find exciting young talent like Eric Dungey, Jordan Fredericks, Steve Ishmael, Antwan Cordy and others that make up the foundation of Syracuse football for years to come.

These were examples of the Syracuse recruiting process gone right. Players that may not have had the stars next to their names but were vetted by the Orange coaching staff and determined to be the right fit for Syracuse.

Syracuse football fans take to the radio airwaves and comments sections with claims that the Orange won’t return to ACC contention without four- and five-star recruits on the roster.

Syracuse football’s last two serious dealings with players of that caliber have reminded of the hard lesson that more stars equals more drama.

Now, Shafer has to decide if he wants to throw his pole back in that water or find another pond to fish in.

And Syracuse fans have to decide to trust that their head coach is using the right bait to catch the big ones.

Contact Brent Axe: Email | Twitter

Listen to “On the Block” with Brent Axe weekdays from 5-6 p.m. on ESPN Radio Syracuse

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Springstone Continues Aggressive Growth–Opens 10th Behavioral Hospital








LOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 27, 2015 /PRNewswire/ —Springstone, LLC, a national provider of behavioral health and addiction treatment, has completed development of Highland Springs, a 72-bed hospital located just outside of Cleveland, Ohio. The newly-opened hospital provides inpatient and outpatient mental health and addiction treatment to adults and seniors. Founded in 2010, Springstone now operates 10 hospitals in four states and has hospitals in development in six additional markets.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 27, 2015 /PRNewswire/ —Springstone, LLC, a national provider of behavioral health and addiction treatment, has completed development of Highland Springs, a 72-bed hospital located just outside of Cleveland, Ohio. The newly-opened hospital provides inpatient and outpatient mental health and addiction treatment to adults and seniors. Founded in 2010, Springstone now operates 10 hospitals in four states and has hospitals in development in six additional markets.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 27, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Springstone, LLC, a national provider of behavioral health and addiction treatment, has completed development of Highland Springs, a 72-bed hospital located just outside of Cleveland, Ohio. The newly-opened hospital provides inpatient and outpatient mental health and addiction treatment to adults and seniors. Founded in 2010, Springstone now operates 10 hospitals in four states and has hospitals in development in six additional markets.

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With a focus on underserved markets, Springstone fills a critical void in the communities it serves. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in four U.S. adults has a mental health issue ranging from depression and anxiety to chronic mental illness. Yet, fewer than one in three adults receive treatment. Similarly, while nearly 10 percent of the U.S. population ages 12 and older is estimated to need treatment for an illicit drug or alcohol abuse problem, only one in 10 receive treatment at a specialty facility.

W. Earl Reed, III. “The services provided by our facilities fill an unmet need and are often life-changing for patients and their families.”

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W. Earl Reed, III. “The services provided by our facilities fill an unmet need and are often life-changing for patients and their families.”

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“During the past 20 years, more than 450 hospital-based behavioral units and 150 freestanding psychiatric hospitals have closed, creating significant and growing demand for mental health and substance abuse treatment,” said Springstone Chief Executive Officer W. Earl Reed, III. “The services provided by our facilities fill an unmet need and are often life-changing for patients and their families.”

Cottonwood Springs, a 72-bed behavioral hospital located in Olathe, Kansas. Additionally, the company has completedsite selection for the development of new facilities in Phoenix; Denver; Columbus, Ohio; Raleigh, N.C.; Oklahoma City and Houston.

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Cottonwood Springs, a 72-bed behavioral hospital located in Olathe, Kansas. Additionally, the company has completedsite selection for the development of new facilities in Phoenix; Denver; Columbus, Ohio; Raleigh, N.C.; Oklahoma City and Houston.

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Last month, Springstone completed development of Cottonwood Springs, a 72-bed behavioral hospital located in Olathe, Kansas. Additionally, the company has completed site selection for the development of new facilities in Phoenix; Denver; Columbus, Ohio; Raleigh, N.C.; Oklahoma City and Houston.

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Each Springstone facility features contemporary architecture, outdoor courtyards and environments designed to nurture patients recovering from mental health and addiction issues. In addition to traditional therapies, Springstone takes a holistic approach to treatment, offering yoga, art, movement, pet therapy and nutritional counseling.

About Springstone

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About Springstone

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About Springstone

Louisville, Kentucky, provides mental health and substance abuse treatment to adults and adolescents through 10 hospitals located in Indiana, Kansas, Ohio and Texas. The company currently has three hospitals under construction in Arizona, Colorado and Ohio, and three additional hospitals under development. For more information, please visit www.springstone.com.

Contact:

Rosemary Plorin

rosemary@lovell.com

615-297-7766

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Louisville, Kentucky, provides mental health and substance abuse treatment to adults and adolescents through 10 hospitals located in Indiana, Kansas, Ohio and Texas. The company currently has three hospitals under construction in Arizona, Colorado and Ohio, and three additional hospitals under development. For more information, please visit www.springstone.com.

Contact:

Rosemary Plorin

rosemary@lovell.com

615-297-7766

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Springstone, LLC, is a developer and operator of behavioral hospitals. The company, based in Louisville, Kentucky, provides mental health and substance abuse treatment to adults and adolescents through 10 hospitals located in Indiana, Kansas, Ohio and Texas. The company currently has three hospitals under construction in Arizona, Colorado and Ohio, and three additional hospitals under development. For more information, please visit www.springstone.com.

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/springstone-continues-aggressive-growth–opens-10th-behavioral-hospital-300167045.html

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/springstone-continues-aggressive-growth–opens-10th-behavioral-hospital-300167045.html

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SOURCE Springstone, Inc.

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Top Ten biggest travel disappointments in the world

CHARLOTTE, NC, October 27, 2015 – Around the world, curious travelers often seek out and visit famous sights they have heard about all their lives. Sometimes, however, such quests result in disappointment when one of these storied places or monuments fails to match its glowing reputation.

In alphabetical order, the following is my personal list of the ten most eagerly anticipated treasures that have failed to live up to their advance billing.

Remember the Alamo, but not for its size
Remember the Alamo, but not for its size. (Image via wikipedia)

1 – The Alamo – This historic onetime mission and fortress is today a museum located in San Antonio, Texas. Though the history of the battle is impressive, this larger-than-life story is overshadowed by the structure’s modest size and cramped downtown location.

2 – Bethlehem – One difficult aspect of traveling in Israel is getting a rational handle on the considerable variety of religious sites.

The site of the manger where the birth of Christ is traditionally believed to have taken place is an example of one such site. Historians have made general estimates on the likely location of this momentous event, but its exact site is unknown.

Bethlehem in the Christmas season? (Bob Taylor)
Bethlehem in the Christmas season? (Bob Taylor)

More unsettling, however, is that 180 degrees behind the entrance to the manger is a mosque that was certainly not there at the time of Jesus’ birth. Somehow, that detracts from the aura of this important destination.

3 – Island of Capri – All those exotic and salacious stories about Tiberius, Caligula, and others like them conjure images of Roman decadence in an otherwise idyllic location surrounded by the sea and bathed in glorious Italian sunshine.

Although Capri is still a gorgeous destination for the traveler, today it is a glorified shopping mall crammed onto an island. Crowded with day-trippers, Capri today is more notable for its congested streets and overpriced merchandise.

Capri the way the Roman emperors saw it -- Today it is a maze of shops (wikipedia)
Capri the way the Roman emperors saw it. Today it is a maze of shops. (Image via Wikipedia)
Style: 70's look
Eurostar Channel Tunnel Train.  (Image via Wikipedia)

4 — The Channel Tunnel – The 31.4 mile Channel Tunnel is one of the greatest architectural achievements in history.

Linking Folkestone in the United Kingdom with Coquelles, Pas-de-Calais in France, high-speed Eurostar trains travel through the “Chunnel” in approximately twenty minutes from country to country.

While the tunnel itself is an amazing accomplishment, the ride through the darkness as you travel from one side of the English Channel to the other is decidedly a non-event. That’s the reason why it’s included on this list.

The tower is great, the shopping is junk (wikipedia)
The tower is great, the shopping is junk (wikipedia)

5 — Leaning Tower of Pisa – Unlike many other sites throughout Europe, Pisa’s campanile, known as the Leaning Tower of Pisa, is a worthwhile tourist destination. This nearly 200-foot tower underwent extensive restoration between 1990 and 2001 to reduce the degree to which the tower leans.

Unfortunately, Pisa failed to get the message about tacky vendors and junk dealers. Today, there’s little to do in Pisa, except to see the tower and shop for junk, making this site a “been-there-done-that” experience.

6 – The Little Mermaid – The operative word here is “little.” This internationally famous and beloved statue has been a symbol of the city of Copenhagen since 1913.

The harbor sculpture was a gift to the city and was meant to honor the well-known fairy tale written by native son Hans Christian Andersen. But it’s the miniature size of the statue that causes the letdown. When seen in photographs, the Little Mermaid always appears larger in scale than its actual dimensions when tourists visit the site in person.

The Little Mermaid in Copenhagen isn't much bigger than this picture (wikipedia)
The Little Mermaid in Copenhagen isn’t much bigger than this picture. (Image via Wikipedia)

7 – London Bridge – We only have ourselves to blame for this one. The “original” London Bridge is actually now in Lake Havasu City, Arizona. But what was dismantled in London and re-engineered and re-assembled in Arizona was actually the 1831 edition of the famous bridge. Legend has it that the people who bought it thought they were buying its predecessor, Tower Bridge, but the UK and US principals involved in the deal have long denied this.

Today in the UK, New London Bridge has replaced the one now in Arizona, and there’s nothing particularly distinctive about it. But head for the Tower of London and get a view of Tower Bridge and you will be pleasantly surprised.

New London Bridge is pretty in pink but hardly what people expect (wikipedia)
New London Bridge is pretty in pink but hardly what people expect. (Image via Wikipedia)
The Mona Lisa isn't much bigger than a postage stamp (wikipedia)
The Mona Lisa isn’t much bigger than a postage stamp. (Image via wikipedia)

8 – The Mona Lisa – It is the most recognized painting in the world. Mona Lisa’s enigmatic smile has been the subject of speculation for hundreds of years. Many experts believe it is the portrait of Lisa Gherardini, the wife of Francesco del Giocondo.

Yet as with some other members of this list, size matters. The diminutive nature of this famous work by Leonardo da Vinci leaves many visitors busily discussing its dimensions rather than its genius.

9 — Plymouth Rock – Future colonial governor William Bradford is said to have been the first of the Mayflower pilgrims to step ashore in 1620, and the site of Bradford’s monumental step has become an important American symbol. Truthfully, Plymouth Rock is more accurately described as Plymouth Pebble. Plymouth Rock shares once again that problem of diminished size which also minimizes its reputation.

Plymouth Rock did the job, but it's basically a stepping stone (wikipedia)
Plymouth Rock did the job, but it’s basically a stepping stone. (Image via Wikipedia)

10 – Pyramids – The Pyramids of Egypt have been around for nearly 5,000 years. Little wonder they have been the focus of archaeological and historical curiosity for centuries. Sadly, the hordes of beggars and street hawkers are more prevalent at the site today than flies on honey. There is no escaping the throngs that surround these astonishing ancient monuments, and that fact alone immediately eliminates the joy of experiencing some of the greatest architectural and historic achievements in the history of civilization.

The great pyramids at Giza are spectacular if you can avoid the beggars (wikipedia)
The great pyramids at Giza are spectacular, if you can avoid the beggars. (Image via Wikipedia)

The destinations and attractions described in this list are unquestionably worthy of their notoriety. Unfortunately, other influences have combined to relegate many of them to little more than curiosities.

That said, the greatest joy of travel is discovery. As someone once wrote, “every place is undiscovered until you discover it yourself.” As you travel, take the time to explore. Absorb the world through your pores. You may be amazed at what you “discover” for yourself.

Contact Bob at Google+

About the Author: Bob Taylor is a veteran writer who has traveled throughout the world. Taylor was an award winning television producer/reporter/anchor before focusing on writing about international events, people and cultures around the globe.

He is founder of The Magellan Travel Club (www.MagellanTravelClub.com)

His goal is to visit 100 countries or more during his lifetime.

Read more of Travels with Peabod and Bob Taylor at Communities Digital News

Follow Bob on Twitter @MrPeabod

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Activism in Russia Can Mean Jail, Beatings

Members of Environmental Watch of the North Caucasus are arrested by police in 2011 for protesting environmental abuses in a public forest on the Black Sea. Photo: Environmental Watch of the North Caucasus

Members of Environmental Watch of the North Caucasus are arrested by police in 2011 for protesting environmental abuses in a public forest on the Black Sea. Photo: Environmental Watch of the North Caucasus

OCEAN — Environmental activism might sometimes seem like risky work in the United States. Ruffling the feathers of officialdom can bring lawsuits and torrents of criticism.

But for a group that visited coastal North Carolina recently, the dangers of activism extend well beyond words and legal documents.

Some in the Unites States know about Environmental Watch of the North Caucasus, or EWNC. The Russian group criticized the environmental and social effects of the construction of the Olympic Village for the Sochi Winter Olympics in 2014. Some of its members have been badly beaten and are routinely followed, at times daily, everywhere they go. Some have been jailed. Their homes have been searched, family members harassed.

The Russians were in Carteret County recently as guests of the N.C. Coastal Federation. Speaking through an interpreter, they said they were stunned by the level of cooperation the federation gets from local and state government agencies, scientists and the public.

In particular, EWNC deputy director Dmitri Shevchenko said, the group “could not even conceive” of any group in Russia getting the cooperation necessary to undertake something similar to the federation’s North River Farms project, a multi-year, multi-million-dollar effort to restore thousands of acres of wetlands in eastern Carteret County. What you’re much more likely to see, group member Aleksandr Biryvkof said, is what they saw at Sochi: the filling in, with cement, of a large wetlands area that was the last remaining stopover in the region for countless migratory birds.

“There is no (environmental) movement” in the country, Shevchenko said, no well-linked network of groups, no easily-shared information. While there are, he said, some pretty good laws on the books at the federal level, enforcement to protect wetlands is spotty at best, and in many cases, nonexistent.

Russian environmental activists watch a demonstration of drones at North River Farms in Carteret County. Photo: N.C. Coastal Federation

Russian environmental activists watch a demonstration of drones at North River Farms in Carteret County. Photo: N.C. Coastal Federation

Shevchenko was accompanied on this trip by fellow EWNC members Biryvkof, Vladimir Kimaev and Tatyana Luova, and interpreter Kate Watters. She is the executive director of Crude Accountability, which is based in Alexandria, Va., and works with activists and citizen groups in the Caspian Sea basin to protect the region’s natural environmental and to ensure environmental justice for communities impacted by natural resource development.

They spoke at federation founder and executive director Todd Miller’s house in Ocean, off N.C. 24, and they had N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission licenses in hand, ready to shove off for a little recreation the day after touring North River Farms and visiting the Duke University Marine Laboratory, where they saw a demonstration of how drones can be used in science research … and environmental investigations. They also toured Wanchese Seafood Co.; visited Wrightsville Beach to see living shorelines and other federation storm water management efforts; met with members of the Ocracoke Foundation, a grass-roots group dedicated to environmental stewardship and responsible economic development; talked to charter boat fishermen in Hatteras; and attended a board meeting of Restore Americas Estuaries in Manteo.

It was all part of an exchange organized through the U.S. Embassy; Miller and several other federation staff members visited Russia and the Caucasus region, right on the hotly contested Ukrainian border, in June.

There, Miller and the others had seen firsthand what their Russian cohorts go through.

“The police,” he said, “follow and stop you repeatedly.”

The highway department blocked a coastal road, for no apparent reason, Miller said. The marine patrol detained the party of travelers for a time in the Krasnodar Region, which borders the Black Sea, about a three-hour plane ride south of Moscow.

There, Miller said, the group from NCCF saw that farms, industry and urban land uses significantly alter the landscape, and estuaries are enriched with pollutants and invasive plant species. Pressure to drill for oil and gas is high and increasing, at the same time tourism, fishing and hunting remain important to the local economies.

It’s that economic reality, not so much widespread environmental altruism, Biryvkof said, that fires activism, which bubbles up as locals try protect their livelihoods.

Members of Environmental Watch of the North Caucasus examine a clear cut for a road to Sochi for the Winter Olympics in 2014. Photo: Environmental Watch of the North Caucasus

Members of Environmental Watch of the North Caucasus examine a clear cut for a road to Sochi for the Winter Olympics in 2014. Photo: Environmental Watch of the North Caucasus

“Tourism is a big part of the economy in the region,” he said. “If someone is proposing to do something that will affect fishing or hunting, that’s when the people get concerned.”

But, he added, there’s little history of environmental activism, and some of the older people actually remember when draining and filling in wetlands was a good thing for them, if not for the ecosystems. Mosquitoes, of course, love wetlands, and malaria was a big problem. When the wetlands were destroyed in the 1920s and 1930s, the mosquito population was greatly lessened, and so was the malaria problem. That kind of thinking can be an obstacle to protection, to this day; wetlands are a good thing, “but a whole lot of people don’t get that. The average person has a very low level of understanding,” Biryvkof said.

The Russians also said many people have very little confidence they can do much to affect policy or to stop development that is pushed by government. And they also said corruption is a problem at almost all levels.

“There are actually some quite good laws (to protect wetlands) and they look good on paper,” Schevchenko said, but enforcement is spotty at best, and there’s very little government support for environmental protection efforts. Scientists are rarely independent, and the kind of cooperation necessary to do what the federation has done at North River Farms is “unthinkable” at present.

To Americans and probably the world, the most prominent example of the lack of regard for the environment in Russia was construction effort for the Sochi Olympics, which earned EWNC some degree of fame.

“There wasn’t a single building built for the Olympics according to environmental standards,” Biryvkof said.

Few people in the region benefitted from the Olympics, he noted, and fewer still can claim that their lived are better because of the games. Life, for the most part, Biryvkof said, has gotten significantly worse.

Two of the Russian activists tour North River Farms in eastern Carteret County. Photo: N.C. Coastal Federation

Two of the Russian activists tour North River Farms in eastern Carteret County. Photo: N.C. Coastal Federation

“On one hand, you have President Putin and his administration and the state-controlled media saying everything is perfect, everything is fine, no problem, when in truth, the exact opposite is the case,” said Kimaev.

According to reports at the time that the Olympic village was built, many people living in the region had to move when the trucks and bulldozers moved in. For years, those who didn’t endured constant noise, traffic jams and dust, electricity cuts and lack of tap water. A new road and a new high-speed railway were built in the river bed of the Mzymta River to connect Krasnaya Polyana with Sochi and the other Olympic locations. Forests were felled to make room for ski jumping hills and snow reserves.

Merely telling others about the situation could and did have dire consequences.

Shevchenko, who extensively reported on the environmental disaster in Sochi, was held at the airport in the regional capital of Krasnodar for four hours and was searched there, then taken to a police station, where he was held without being told why, even when he was released.

According to Human Rights, investigative teams arrived simultaneously one day in May 2013 at the apartment and at the dacha of Kimaev, who had documented and publicized environmental and other concerns related to preparations for the Olympic Games, including landslides, river pollution and deforestation. He wasn’t home at the time, and investigators did not remove anything during the searches, but the Russians said those kinds of things are typical.

“We are followed all the time, sometimes every day, watched all the time,” Kimaev said. And, Schevchenko said, there are frequent efforts to discredit them, and “Aleksandr was beaten.”

It is, of course, frightening, but Shevchenko said EWNC persists in its efforts and works as much as possible through social media to get around the almost total absence of favorable media coverage for pro-environment activities. Cell phones with video camera capabilities are indispensable.

And, he said, there is – and must be – hope, or else they wouldn’t keep going. There are, after all, some successes, at least on the local level, in efforts to fight back against those who pollute estuaries and seek to do projects in other fragile environmental areas.

For example, in one community, over 10,000 people signed a petition in just three days to protest plans by an oil company to drill in a highly prized estuary. That indefinitely delayed the wells, and led to a new 30-year investment by the oil company to help sturgeon recover .

While the Russians has their eyes opened while in America, Miller learned a few things over in Russia. At the very least, he said, they got a better understanding of how fortunate they are to be doing their work in eastern North Carolina and the United States, and also of how tenuous that privilege can be.

“In Russia, we learned that even without the advantages we have, the power of informed people can make a difference and have an impact,” he said. “And we came back more worried about efforts by some state lawmakers to make it harder for ordinary citizens to contest environmental management decisions by state government” by weakening laws.

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