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Editorial
Getting a fast start
If you want a child to read and write well one day, hand that child a book. If you want a child to build things one day, give that child an erector set. If you want a child to excel at sports one day, toss that child a ball. If you want a child to respect his or her body, and to grow into a healthy adult, enter that child into a triathlon. Or at least tell that child to get off the couch or out from behind the computer and run around th...
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Ready or not
As this is being written, the forecast track for Hurricane Irene is a bit more ominous for Robeson County, the storm having wiggled slightly westward. We will continue to monitor the storm and keep our readers as current as possible, both in the print edition, and on the Internet at robesonian.com. Those of us who have called Southeastern North Carolina home for the past 15 years know the drill, having recollections of Fran in 1996 and Floy...
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It’s a mess, time for fix
It’s been more than a week since the Supreme Council of the Lumbee Tribal Government ruled that Sharon Hunt had to resign either as tribal chairwoman or as the representative of District 2 and, as we write this, she has done neither. Critics see this as a black/white call, easy to make, and wonder what’s the delay. Hunt says not so, that her actions will establish a powerful precedent, and that any decision must be contemplated, not rushed....
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State of health
While Robeson County’s economic engine seems stuck in idle, the health care industry, bolstered by an aging and sedentary population, keeps chugging along. Last week, more evidence of the good health of the local health care industry was evident when Southeastern Regional Medical Center announced it would seek the state’s permission to build a $30 million surgical unit that would sit alongside Interstate 95. SRMC, with about 2,200 employe...
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A step forward
We smacked the Lumbee Tribal Government around pretty good in this space on July 24, saying that the Tribal Council needed to step out from behind the curtain of secrecy, and move toward a more open government. An important step in that direction was taken on Monday when Tribal Chairman Sharon Hunt visited this office, hand-delivering a recent report from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, which was a response to the tri...
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A step
forward

We smacked the Lumbee Tribal Government around pretty good in this space on July 24, saying that the Tribal Council needed to step out from behind the curtain of secrecy, and move toward a more open government. An important step in that direction was taken on Monday when Tribal Chairman Sharon Hunt visited this office, hand-delivering a recent report from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, which was a response to the t...
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Too good to be true?
The improvement in the graduation rate for the Public Schools of Robeson County for the last two years is so steep that it’s difficult to believe. Just three years ago, a fraction more than half of high school students in this county graduated four years after they entered ninth grade. Following the most recent school year, that percentage has risen to almost four out of five graduating — 78.8 percent, which is even better than the state av...
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Holden’s
hot seat

If Holden Thorp, the chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, figured that firing football coach Butch Davis would make the embarrassing headlines of the past year go poof, then he miscalculated badly — and now it’s his own future that appears uncertain. After spending a year telling everyone who would listen that Davis had his support, Thorp fired Davis on July 20 without explanation, angering Tar Heel fans who are no...
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Dead in the water
Robeson County and Lumberton are among more than a dozen local governments in Southeastern North Carolina that are pushing for a state study to determine the pluses and minuses of a deep-water port in Brunswick County. But this cash-strapped state has not provided the funding for such as study, which has given opponents, including our U.S. representative, an excuse to withhold support. Economic development officials in this part of the stat...
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Life

saver


The last five people to die in traffic accidents in Robeson County had this in common: None of them was wearing a seat belt, and all of them were ejected from the vehicle they were traveling in. Staff writer Teddy Kulmala plans a story on seat-belt use in this county and another factor that was common in all four of those deadly accidents — a driver’s propensity to over-correct when a vehicle drifts too far sideways. That article should be ...
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Time to leave
NCLB behind

A true measure of this nation’s ability to educate its young people has been as difficult to achieve as the assignment. The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 was a worthy effort, but its flaws have been exposed over the decade, betrayed by the results: This nation isn’t getting any better at educating our children, and we doubt that anything fundamental will change until discipline again rules in the halls of our schools. President Bush’s ...
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Chancellor Holden Thorp’s firing of Butch Davis “without cause” has left many asking questions.
Carolina's wrong way
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, trying to shove hot air back into a balloon with an ax, fired its head football coach last week, doing so after a 13-month investigation by the NCAA that found the coach was guilty of nothing. Chancellor Holden Thorp said Butch Davis was being dismissed “without cause,” acknowledged that the timing — eight days before players were to report — was “terrible,” and said the coach would be given a $...
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$100,000 question
Sharon Hunt, the chairman of the Lumbee Tribal Council, last week said she wasn’t playing “hard ball” in her refusal to answer questions from the media concerning the tribe’s response to allegations of misspent housing money. And we believe her. Hunt is bound by an ordinance the tribe passed on March 18, 2010, that not only discourages such inquiries, but makes them unlikely. Hunt’s culpability is that she favored the ordinance, which was ap...
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Less of a bad thing
There are few things that more surely divide Americans than the issue of abortion, but on one thing we should all be able to unite: It is shameful that each year in this country about 1.3 million fetuses are aborted. That isn’t an argument that a woman should not have the right to an abortion. Rather, it is the assertion that when there are 1.3 million “unwanted” pregnancies in the United States in 365 days, then something has gone terribly...
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235 multiplied
A line that was already too long lengthened last week in Robeson County when 235 teachers assistants were told they no longer had a job. That represents 40 percent of all the teachers assistants in the county, so it’s sure to be another weight on a school system that is already dragging behind sister systems across the state. The teachers assistants, used primarily in the lower grades, do a lot of the grunt work, including trying to maintai...
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