We aren’t the problem: UNC students should get housing preference near campus
The Chapel Hill Town Council is poised to pass a temporary moratorium on development in two neighborhoods near campus.
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The Chapel Hill Town Council is poised to pass a temporary moratorium on development in two neighborhoods near campus.
Third-grader Ben Kulberg and his friends struggle to entertain themselves during recess.That’s because state budget cuts have left Hillsborough’s Grady A. Brown Elementary School’s playground low on the list of priorities for funding.“There’s nothing to do on it,” Ben said. “It’s an open field. It’s just nothing.”To remedy this, the PTA decided last June to build a playground during the next two years. But a $50,000 grant from the Pepsi Refresh Project could have the playground ready in five months.“It would be a small miracle,” Principal Fay Jones said.The school submitted a proposal to the project in early December. Each month, people vote online for the top 10 ideas of the pool, which will receive $50,000 each.Grady Brown is competing with hundreds of other projects, ranging from scholarships to a sanctuary for Labradors. The school reached the top 40 Monday night and has until Jan. 31 to crack the top 10.Jones said the entire school has gotten involved, with faculty and staff wearing buttons designed around the Pepsi logo to remind people to vote every day.“Mainly, this has been the grassroots effort of reaching out to all of our personal contacts,” Jones said.“But we need everybody in Hillsborough and all of Orange County to help us.”The school’s push for the Pepsi playground money hasn’t been without obstacles.None of the school’s students meet the 13-year-old age requirement to vote. Moreover, Jones said the school has to compete with The Progressive Slate, which coordinates groups to vote for each other to increase their chances of winning.“There’s about six or seven grants that are kind of in a little alliance coalition together voting for one another, and they’re kind of in the top ten,” Jones said.The PTA has already raised about $7,000, including $1,750 from the Just Push Play initiative, $1,000 from the Hillsborough Exchange Club, $1,000 from the school’s general budget, $1,000 from the PTA and more than $3,000 from Orange County.Ben’s mother, PTA member Rachel Kulberg, said losing the Pepsi money would complicate but not derail the school’s plans.“If this Pepsi grant came in, we’ve already talked to builders, they could have it in by June,” she said. “But if we have to just continue to fundraise, we might just try to do things in installments.”Fifth-grade teacher Beth Quick said her class has noticed a link between their academic performance and level of physical activity.“They were even saying, ‘If you’re physically active you feel better and if you feel better you learn better,’” Quick said.Quick said she used the campaign to teach her 5th graders persuasive essay writing. Her students wrote that recess is their chance to mingle with students in other classes, resolve interpersonal conflicts and make choices for themselves.“We want them to be creative in their thinking outside without us doing the leading,” Quick said. “This is their time for that.”Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.
Orange County Judge Beverly Scarlett didn’t know about the old slave cemetery growing up because blacks didn’t visit that part of Hillsborough.
Chapel Hill Training opened Nov. 1 in Rosemary Village at 400 W. Rosemary St., owner and personal trainer Lauren Cruz said.
Chapel Hill unveiled its newest program aimed at encouraging alternative methods of transportation at a Friday conference.
Chris Blue will never forget the day the day he joined the Chapel Hill Police Department 13 years ago.
India pale ales, porters and pilsners were shared aside chocolate, chili and pumpkin spice brews at Saturday’s World Home Brew Festival.
Giant puppets, musicians and dancers will soon take over downtown Hillsborough, gamboling down the town’s main thoroughfare.
Five years of planning, economic hiccups and controversy culminated in Greenbridge’s official ribbon cutting Friday.
UNC students face a sharp transition when they first leave dorms for off-campus housing.
The shade of trees and notes of cool jazz helped locals fight off 95-degree heat at an event celebrating the area’s ties to music greats.
About 50 people gathered at the Varsity Theater Monday to watch a live webcast celebrating and planning for improvements in public health.
Cooper Herman, an outgoing and energetic 1-year-old by all accounts, began complaining of neck pain in May 2009 while he played.
As Brian Glass restocked the shelves at Kangaroo Express one Sunday night, a man entered and nervously walked around the store. Once Glass reached the register, the man pulled out a handgun and demanded money.