Big job: Remake area economy
Transcription
Big job: Remake area economy
LOCAL C Tar Heels enlist North Carolina remains a strong source of Army recruits despite an unpopular war in Iraq that has left many soldiers dead. Inside, B5 Friday, October 13, 2006 Bicycle, walking trail plan approved n The BiPed plan calls for miles of new greenways, bike lanes and sidewalks. MORE INSIDE CALL US EXPANDING: The N.C. Shakespeare Festival adds plays in Winston-Salem. B2 n HIGHER RATES: Utilities in the state want them to cover nuclear costs. B5 n YOUR BUSINESS: Credit cards bad at explaining fee policies, a study says. B6 n Do you have a suggestion or a question? Reach us at 373-7001. B For the latest local news updates, go to News-record.com Big job: Remake area economy n The region is one of 13 across the nation to get $15 million grants. B R M. B Staff Writer The Piedmont Triad’s economy doesn’t need just a fresh coat of paint, business experts say. It needs an extreme makeover. Stopping short of that could consign the region’s more than 600,000 workers to a side street as the world economy thunders past, said Don Kirkman, who’s launching an experimental federal economic development program here. Everything from limited population growth to a declining number of jobs in the 12county region suggests that the disastrous implosion of traditional manufacturing indus- tries that began in 2000 still hurts the region’s workers. “Our region is lagging,” said Kirkman, the president of the Piedmont Triad Partnership, the economic development group that is overseeing the program. Part of the problem, he said, is that the region of more than 1.2 million functions as a bunch of disconnected pieces. “Each of our communities in large part operates as though it is not part of a larger whole,” he said. “We just have not cracked the code on how we can work across city and county boundaries to raise the prosperity and visibility and standing of our region. As a top-40 metro area we should be performing better than we are.” Kirkman began this month setting up a staff and work plan for the three-year, $15 million federal program. WIRED, an acronym for Workforce Innovations in Regional Economic Development, emerged from a federal study that concludes the nation has too many disjointed and overlapping economic development programs. Thirteen regions across the country with the greatest need were selected earlier this year for the $15 million grants. See Wired, Page B2 B T W Staff Writer “It was art from ceiling to floor.” The Greensboro area now has a detailed plan to improve residents’ health and their quality of life by increasing the number of places where they can bike, run or walk. After nearly two years of study and public review, the city’s Metropolitan Planning Organization unanimously endorsed a long-range effort Wednesday aimed at those goals, the so-called BiPed Plan. The BiPed, short for “bicycle/pedestrian,” lays out a series of projects that will take decades to achieve, including 420 miles of new greenways, 900 more miles of bike routes and 362 miles of new sidewalks. Before the plan’s approval, several people from Action Greensboro and the bike-advocacy group Bicycling in Greensboro praised it and the extra care that planners took to solicit suggestions from the public. “Just instinctively, as this report points out, we know that our sedentary lifestyles are a major factor in 25 percent of deaths that occur from chronic disease,” said Bob Klepfer, executive director of Action Greensboro, the civic-improvement group that helped pay for the plan. Mayor Keith Holliday also praised the plan but said he hoped city planners and bike- Carla Butler, talking about the treasures that filled the home of the late John Philip Couch See Bike, Page B2 PHOTOS BY JOSEPH RODRIGUEZ/News & Record Carla Butler, with Butler & Associates, is handling the estate sale. The eclectic property of John Philip Couch, who died in March, has been tagged for the sale at his home. SEE THE PLAN The plan is available at public libraries or online at www.greensboronc.gov/Departments/GDOT/divisions/ planning/bicycle/BiPed.htm 705& N.C. HOUSE DISTRICT 58 PREVIEW THE CANDIDATES ALMA ADAMS Party: Democrat Address: Liberty Valley Road, Greensboro. OLGA MORGAN WRIGHT Party: Republican Address: East Lee Street, Greensboro. ANALYSIS PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN Former UNCG professor left house filled with art, assorted treasures B J S Staff Writer GREENSBORO — Carla Butler never met John Philip Couch. Yet, after having practically lived in the late UNCG professor’s home since May, “I feel Couch like we know him, only through what he surrounded himself with.” She has been cataloging his treasures. She says when she first entered the lime-green, early 1900s Queen Anne house on South Mendenhall Street next to the railroad, “It was art from ceiling to floor.” Butler, of the personal property appraisal firm Butler & Associates, has cataloged in the Couch house more than 300 paintings and etchings, thousands of art, architecture and literary books, 2,500 vinyl record albums and 800 CDs, antique chests, pottery and china by pedigreed artists, even a toy armadillo collection from Mexico and a considerable collection of vintage model trains. Butler is calling a tag sale at the house Saturday and Sunday See Property, Page B3 F B This is a rematch of the 2004 campaign for this same seat. District 58 stretches from East Greensboro through rural parts of Guilford County to the Alamance and Randolph county lines. Voter registration in the district is heavily skewed, with 64 percent of voters registered as Democrats to only 22.4 percent Republican. The walls are filled with artwork. Couch taught French at UNCG for 30 years. He spent the summers in the south of France and traveled overseas frequently. Proceeds from the sale will go to charities and institutions. which has been at Dudley and East Market for 67 years, lacks playing fields. B J S Staff Writer NELSON KEPLEY/News & Record Patrick Caudle takes a photograph of his damaged Mercedes-Benz after he said it was hit during a police chase. Caudle, a junior at UNCG, said he was in a nearby house when he heard a loud crash. What: Estate sale of belongings of John Philip Couch. When: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday. Admittance cards in numbered sequence issued 90 minutes before the opening. Where: Couch home, 628 S. Mendenhall St. YMCA would like roomier site n The Hayes-Taylor YMCA, MORE Inside: Read more about the House District 58 race, including candidates’ positions on issues. B2 Online: Go to News-Record.com/nr/ election/2006 to read more about the Nov. 7 races. WANT TO GO? GREENSBORO — The HayesTaylor YMCA, an anchor at East Market and Dudley streets since 1939, likely will relocate in East Greensboro, but not soon. Michael Digh, marketing director for the Greensboro YMCA system that includes Ys here and in Jamestown and Reidsville, said Hayes-Taylor has no expansion room because of the N.C. A&T campus. He said the Y wants athletic fields, such as those enjoyed by the relatively new Alexander Spears YMCA on Horse Pen Creek Road in northwest Guilford County. Its two regulation soccer fields and two regulation baseball fields, totaling about 12 acres, stay busy. “It’s in our strategic plan to relocate,” Digh said. “But we don’t have land or a capital campaign.” He’s not sure of the cost of a new Y. The Spears YMCA, with its land and 74,000-square-foot building, cost about $5.2 million when it was completed in late 2002. An ideal site for the HayesTaylor Y would be across East Market on the block-long former Greensboro Postal Service site. The United House of Prayer for All People church owns the property. MacArthur Sims, president of the East Market Development Corp., a nonprofit group promoting improvements to the East Market corridor, said See YMCA, Page B5 News & Record, Friday, October 13, 2006 B3 C FROM B1 Kilburne & Finch and Vanetti You’d expect to pay $250 for just one suit in a department store. But now get PHOTOS BY JOSEPH RODRIGUEZ/News & Record 2 SUITS + 2 SHIRTS + 2 TIES One room is full of model trains as well as books and videos about trains. Couch collected HO scale model trains. Boxes include a 1930 railroad post office car, a 1936 observation car and old steam engines. 250 only $ Property Continued from Page B1 “The Property of a Gentleman.” Couch, who taught French at UNCG for 30 years and died in March at age 77, wanted his belongings sold, with proceeds going to charities and institutions. Visitors gasp entering the house. Art saturates every wall. Butler says bathrooms became art galleries. When Couch added a twostory wing about six years ago, “It wasn’t six months before that was filled up,” said friend Virginia Tucker, whose husband, James Tucker, is retired curator of UNCG’s Weatherspoon Art Museum. “There was no place to sit in the house.” Yet, friends managed to squeeze in for gourmet meals that Couch prepared. “Once you get hooked, you can’t stop,” Couch once said about his collection. He liked works by area artists and former art students such as Maud Gatewood. A lifelong bachelor who came to UNCG in 1958, Couch wanted to live near trains that shake the house and to be able to walk to work. “He’d listen to see if trains were on time,” said Jean Buchert, a retired UNCG English teacher who met Couch in graduate school at Yale. Couch collected HO scale model trains. Cars still boxed include a 1930 railroad post office car, a 1936 observation car and old steam engines. Train videos fill a chest and railroad Save $170! Our 2+2+2 Wardrobe Package adds up to the best deal in town. Choose 2 suits from our classic Kilburne & Finch Collection or 2 suits from the trendsetting Vanetti collection. If you prefer, choose one suit from each collection. Then add 2 dress shirts and 2 silk ties. It’s all yours for only $250. Various armadillos from Mexico line a shelf. books are numerous. He liked Jugtown pottery, owning pieces by the renowned potter Ben Owen Sr. Couch served on china by 1950s designer Russell Wright. Cabinets crammed with LPs and CDs are mostly opera and classical music, with an occasional surprise such as music from “Midnight Cowboy.” Butler estimates Couch’s book collection at several thousand volumes, hardback and paper, including one he wrote: “The Opera Lovers Guide to Europe.” Artworks include paintings by 19th-century French Impressionist Henri Morisset; the versatile man of letters and art Jean Cocteau; abstract artist Jean Arp; and Jean-Jacques Sempe, who did New Yorker magazine covers. Couch summered in the south of France and traveled overseas frequently. Friends think Couch, the son of a botany professor at UNC-Chapel Hill, was an heir to oil money. “He just lived a busy, intellectual life,” Buchert said. He was one of a kind,” Vir- ginia Tucker said. “We miss him.” Butler says she loves spanning the walls to see an artist’s evolution. Philip Moose’s large painting of Grandfather Mountain contrasts with an abstract work he did later. It hangs across from a famed opera program signed by singer Leontyne Price. Butler prefers estate sales over auctions. “It’s the most respectful and dignified way” she said. “People leave with a positive feeling about Dr. Couch or whomever we sell an estate for.” Her previous work has included the estate of tire heir Raymond Firestone of Pinehurst. Couch enjoyed walking to class with his dog. When he had to drive, he drove a heap. An old Chevy Cavalier, paint faded and engine dead, is parked next to the house. “That was his car,” Butler said. “It’s for sale, too.” Contact Jim Schlosser at 373-7081 or jschlosser @news-record.com Suits Reg. $159.99 ea. Sizes and styles may vary by store. • Burlington Burlington Manufacturers Outlet Center 229-1017 University Commons 538-2709 • Winston-Salem 566 South Stratford Road 722-7576 Hanes Mall 765-9331 • Greensboro 3901 High Point Road 852-0800 Northwest Center 545-6999 Four Seasons Town Centre 856-9343 To find the S&K Men’s Store nearest you, call 1-800-644-SUIT or visit us online at skmenswear.com #1 !,*' *" "$' ' /$!'- .' " "$' & ! * !*&"'* *&.0 "! "& ,",' ! !*0 *" !, &-* "- *& . ! "" !!' ",&* *! "" *,& & /&' *0 ! ,! ++( /*%