We’ve added reviews of three more books to the Bookshelf, the place to visit if you love books and reading. The newcomers share an atomic theme, thanks to a clever editor at USA TODAY: “American Prometheus,” an epic biography of J. Robert Oppenheimer; “The Bomb: A Life,” a seriously funny biography of the weapon that changed the world; and “The Worlds of Herman Kahn,” a befuddling look at the life and times of a man who dared to dream of …
Author: Jason Feingold
Prayer meeting light on attendance, high on devotion
A regular anti-violence prayer meeting is under way in Vance County.
$7,000 reward in murder case
Information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killer or killers of a Maple Street man is now worth up to $7,000.
Violent Latino gangs come ever closer
Latino gang markings cover a wall across William Street from Henderson Middle School. Henderson has avoided the onslaught of the Latino gangs that have taken hold across the nation since the 1980s, but the handwriting — or the spray paint — is on the walls and signs around town.
City struggles to pay for bigger library
Less than four weeks after celebrating the construction of the new library, city officials are stumbling over the expense of running the much larger facility.
What’s the public’s place in crafting budget?
City Council members brought very different philosophies into their meeting on the budget Tuesday night.
The more the merrier for Street Pride
The Clean Up Henderson Committee has shifted into fundraising mode to support its Street Pride campaign.
Butterfield moves to help small tobacco farmers
Rep. G.K. Butterfield introduced legislation Tuesday to help tobacco farmers and quota holders keep more buyout money.
Payday lending bill delayed
The state Senate’s payday lending bill didn’t get its scheduled hearing before the Commerce Committee on Tuesday. The News & Observer reported that the bill’s primary sponsor, Sen. David Hoyle, D-Gaston County, couldn’t make the late-morning hearing, so it was postponed. During Saturday’s Faith Summit in Henderson, Gateway Community Development Corp. leader Margaret Ellis raged against the effort to give legal footing to payday lending. She directed much of her anger at state Sen. Robert Holloman of Ahoskie, who represented …
Faith Summit produces prayer meeting
One of the immediate effects of Saturday’s Vance County Faith Summit was an agreement among participants to meet regularly for sessions of interdenominational prayer crossing lines of race and class. The first session will be Thursday at noon at West Hills Presbyterian Church on Ruin Creek Road.
Council members don’t believe in Embassy theater
City Council members expressed doubts Tuesday about the Embassy Square Foundation’s ability to raise the money for its planned theater and about the city’s ability to support the project now or in the future.
Rollins student wins national writing award
Yousef Saleh, a fifth-grader at E.M. Rollins Elementary, accepts a certificate Friday recognizing him as a national finalist in a writing contest run by Nationwide Learning of Topeka, Kan. Academically and Intellectually Gifted teacher Inez Bostic presents the award during a ceremony recognizing more than 120 fourth- and fifth-graders at Rollins who published their own books through a Nationwide program this year. Flanking Yousef are Assistant Principal Willie Fuller and Principal William Bowers. Bostic said she has participated in the …
Opinion: We hope the
The City Council had a short night by its recent standards Monday, adjourning at 9:25 p.m., one hour and 55 minutes after beginning.
City aims for different result from same TIP list
“This transportation stuff is screwy,” Henderson Mayor Clem Seifert said Monday night, and nobody argued with him.
Privilege licenses defy enforcement
Privilege licenses are the latest hot topic for the Henderson City Council.
Smith case sent back to finance committee
Even when he skips City Council meetings, Samuel Smith can drive Henderson officials crazy.
Civil penalties face first test
Nothing is simple in Henderson’s effort to clear out dilapidated structures and to use civil penalties as a stick to force property owners to act, as a City Council discussion showed Monday night.
Silence slows Speak Up forums
The Speak Up Henderson forums are being cut back to once a month after no one showed up to speak to Mayor Clem Seifert on Monday night.
Council aims for quick pace on night of reports
The Henderson City Council will try to manage its time better tonight with the help of estimates from City Manager Eric Williams on how long each agenda item should take.