per today's N & O.http://www.newsobserver.com/102/story/471409.html
8/16/2006 11:26:08 AM
Interesting. I went there for a year. I think it would be a positive move for the college to become a UNC system university.
8/16/2006 2:08:49 PM
"Unfortunately, there are parts of Eastern North Carolina that are almost like a Third World country,"
8/16/2006 2:11:00 PM
Seems like a logical location for another UNC campus. I'd imagine it would be a real mess converting a private college to a public institution though (as the article partially covers).I still want the James B Hunt School of Law here at NCSU first
8/16/2006 2:14:07 PM
I think NC should probably focus on K-12 education rather than higher education.
8/16/2006 2:15:31 PM
^thats been the main problem with the UNC system for over half a century now.I have had several conversations with former Commisioner of Labor John Brooks at my work. He the first General Assembly employee back in the early '60s and a lawyer from Greenville/Raleigh. He basically told me that before the 1950s, UNC Chapel Hill was top ten in the nation in Chemistry,History, English and Pol.Science but when the chancellor/President's office changed over during this time, the main financial contributor (big Texas oil shareholder -from Elizabeth City, NC) influenced the university and the entire system by focusing the system through business owners instead of academics.This is why Kenan-Flagler Business school is so big and not the English/History/Chem depts.This hurt the overall UNC system because it created a business/corporate approach to academics while excluding those who should benefit from it (taxpayers/in-state students)This is one of the reasons there are already 16 UNC institutions in the state. By giving a little bit to each school, the fatcats can feel comfortable in excluding average/above avg. students from the major universities.[Edited on August 16, 2006 at 2:33 PM. Reason : .]
8/16/2006 2:26:15 PM
I live in Rocky Mount now and drive by Wesleyan everyday going to work. Wesleyan in the past year has opened a technology center, meant to help students take online courses through Carolina and State at the building.It's pretty much the size of Meredith. There are dorms onsite and they started up a D-III football team a couple years ago, but it's too small to garner UNC interest.^ I'm perfectly fine with that. What's the point in getting a degree if you can't get a job with it after you graduate? Joke: How do you get a Chapel Hill graduate off your front porch?You pay him for the pizza.[Edited on August 16, 2006 at 4:13 PM. Reason : /]
8/16/2006 4:07:21 PM
The Gateway Technology Center is for taking courses through ECU and NCSU, not UNC.
8/16/2006 4:08:52 PM
Might be a good time to buy land around Wesleyan. I could turn it into slum housing and bars in a decade or two.
8/16/2006 5:48:06 PM
My "perminant residence" is in Rocky Mount, and honestly, Rocky Mount sucks ass so bad, I dont see how they could draw more people to go to school there beacuse it sucks so bad.
8/16/2006 6:22:50 PM
there is nothing past 95 to the beachdo we really need anything out there
8/16/2006 7:01:22 PM
do we really need another third tier public university?
8/16/2006 7:17:19 PM
I really don't think Rocky Mount is the "third world country" part of Eastern NC, so that statement is ridiculous.And ECU is further east.As well as UNC-W.[Edited on August 16, 2006 at 7:21 PM. Reason : s]
8/16/2006 7:21:24 PM
Are you kidding?? Have you been to Rocky Mt lately???good lord.
8/16/2006 8:13:50 PM
the outlying parts of rocky mount outside the actual city can be kind of bad, third world like backwoods south america. The Ghetto of rocky mount can be like Beirut third world though, its pretty bad. I would feel better in Raleigh's ghetto than I do in Rocky Mount's
8/16/2006 8:45:01 PM
Yea I live in some of the "Third World Area" in Scotland Neck. The areas on the older eastern side of Rocky Mount are ghettoriffic and areas like Princeville are right bad as well.I had thought about the whole argument about UNC-W and ECU, and your right to an extent. But Northeastern NC doesn't have much to offer students in the area that can't afford to move out, aside from black colleges like Elizabeth City State, small and fairly expensive liberal arts colleges like Wesleyan and Chowan College, or the community college system. I personally own a house up here and can't afford to drive to Raleigh to take classes at NCSU, though the option is there for some majors to take distance education at the Gateway Technology Center at Wesleyan right now. But if there was a real state supported University in this area, I think it would give folks a better chance that otherwise can't afford to move out of the area, and get stuck in community college systems or in dead-end minimum wage jobs.Personally I'm a fan of Wesleyan, my dad graduated with a degree in Biology from there. But it was considered more of a fallback school for most people when I graduated. Nobody thought there was much of a chance for getting anything worthwhile in our area, and when they are gone, many of my friends have not and will not return to the area. I think its a really good idea and something that the state ought to look into more seriously.
8/16/2006 9:02:24 PM
yea, I for damn sure will not be returning to Rocky Mount, and about 85% of my friends wont be either, so they need something to attract people to live there, because right now, I can promise you I would have to be making $texas to live in Rocky Mount after college. Hell its not even worth capatalizing-rocky mount.
8/16/2006 9:31:51 PM
This money would really be better spent in the k-12 area than on another college.For what it's worth, NC has one of the best community college systems in the country, and just about the best in terms of availability and number of campuses. There's nothing wrong with going to the tech school for two years and transferring.
8/16/2006 9:38:02 PM
^^ I work as an engineer at CDC (Cummins and Case engine factory) in Whitakers and have since I graduated from State in May 2004. (I live in a subdivision off Hunter Hill.) I'm from Havelock originally. There's only one job in Havelock: a Marine Corps base, and everything else in the city supports that base. Compared to that, Rocky Mount is a gold mine. I'm not going to lie by saying the nightlife in Rocky Mount is fantastic or anything or it's an amazing city for entertainment (I go to Raleigh or Greenville for that). But you're halfway in between Raleigh and Greenville and only an hour from each, there is more than one job, and it's a hub for travel (where 64 and 95 meet).I wouldn't say Rocky Mount (city limits) is third-world. Some places outside the city are if your point of view is a Manhatten penthouse you lived in your whole life. Maybe second-world would be more appropriate. But that's pretty much eastern NC cause most businesses don't plant there. Driving through Whitakers just makes me look in awe. There's an entire main street storefront with not a single business in it. Just a bunch of empty buildings, I am guessing they are for rent or owned by someone. Compared to a lot of cities in North Carolina, Rocky Mount is pretty good. Take out the four military bases in eastern North Carolina and there is nothing save POS tourism. Unless you're in Charlotte, the Triad, or the Triangle, there's not a lot to our state as far as our generation in terms of employment and fun (beach weekend trips don't count). Maybe I'm just used to it and don't look at it in a big-city point of view. I have family that live in towns in central Indiana and eastern Kentucky that are 99% white and a substantial part of the population qualify for welfare.[Edited on August 16, 2006 at 9:58 PM. Reason : /]
8/16/2006 9:56:05 PM
I usually do burnouts and set off fireworks in a subdivision off of hunter hill, it has a cul-de-sac in the back with no houses
8/16/2006 10:19:43 PM
As long as there is a plethora of fast food restaurants, wal-marts, etc. it won't be "third world" in or around Rocky Mount. That includes Pinetops, Tarboro, etc.Go to some of the eastern NC counties where there is one grocery store, one gas station and no restaurants and I can understand.
8/16/2006 10:25:17 PM
Some of the neighboring counties are. Look at Northampton or Hertford or some places like that which are absolute shithole counties.BTW, the night life might get better in another couple of years if Carolina Crossroads really kicks off like they say. Between the 1500 seat Randy Parton Theater under construction now, the new 20k seat ampitheater, aquarium, waterpark, and like 300k sq. feet of shopping space that is all scheduled to open next year,, as well as 5 new hotels and the Haliwa-Saponi Indian tribes Turtle Park theme park, there may be quite a bit going on around Roanoke Rapids in the next couple of years. Its supposed to be very much like Broadway on the beach, so maybe we will get some clubs there like Broadway has. Also some nice jobs are coming in with the Advanced Vehicle Research Center, so thats supposed to employ a lot of folks in high-end jobs working on cars, so its not just a bunch of minimum wage jobs for people in the area to get. But I would expect that it might just make Roanoke Rapids not be the shithole that it has been for the last 20 years since the mills closed.
8/17/2006 6:54:24 AM
lets just put this little misconception to rest: high end, educated employees are NOT going to start relocating next to a Dolly Parton theme park - I don't care what RR city government tells you.The whole Parton adventure is a great idea in the short term; it will bring in a lot of redneck tourism and create a number of crappy dead-end jobs. But that is where it will end. No business in an industry with a future is gonna locate next to that blue-collar carnival.[Edited on August 17, 2006 at 7:41 AM. Reason : s]
8/17/2006 7:39:01 AM
8/17/2006 9:21:50 AM
whatever - you could have at least argued that the jobs being created will not be a dead-end for the area's development.instead you argued that any job that is created, no matter what it is, will help and thats just so stupid I have no desire to discuss this further with you
8/17/2006 9:35:40 AM
Yea shit man its one less excuse for the deadbeat lazy ass motherfuckers that are around here on welfare and using the "There ain't no jobs here" excuse for not working.I ain't saying SAS is gonna build a new office here, but I still think that between the new bigger airport, more jobs in the area and a city/county that is really devoted to getting business here by tax incentives, etc. that blue-collar jobs will still come around here.
8/17/2006 10:00:26 AM
ok well just remember what happened to the blue-collar mill jobsyou've got to plan for the future not just grab whatever looks easy at the time
8/17/2006 10:08:43 AM
So what are you saying? They should just do NOTHING unless they can land something like a major corporate biz? They'll be waiting around for fucking ever and never get anything. They got to take small steps before they can making fucking strides.And your right they did lose a lot of blue-collar jobs, but that was partially based on the fact that all their eggs were in one basket. They had no job diversity. When the market tanked on it, they all moved to Mexico and closed down here. Tourism is one thing that can't be moved abroad really. In recent years they have had PCB moved in (auto sensors), Reser Foods, the Automotive Test Track, now the tourism stuff, etc. Hence if one tanks, the whole area isn't decimated.
8/17/2006 10:22:46 AM
[quote]I still want the James B Hunt School of Law School of Public Policy here at NCSU first <!--
8/17/2006 11:01:26 AM
fuck public policy, give me a law school so I can be part of its first class besides, we can always have a John Edwards School of Public Policy if you want it
8/17/2006 11:07:25 AM
We'll never get a law school unless Jim Goodnight gives us part of his fortune.oh yeah, I was reading the Princeton reviews for NC Wesleyan and they are pretty weak. Barton College in Wilson had a much higher rating. The average SAT for Wesleyan students was in the 800s.[Edited on August 17, 2006 at 11:24 AM. Reason : .]
8/17/2006 11:24:02 AM
Goodnight will fund State's B-School, which already exists, before he does a law school here
8/17/2006 11:30:54 AM
I'm still not convinced on this whole Dollywood Roanoke Rapids thing.I personally think there is a good chance it will flop.I'm not saying it definately will flop, but I wouldn't invest my money in it.I've never been to Branson or wherever the other one is, but when I look at the one in Myrtle Beach I think it is successful in large part because it is in Myrtle Beach. Roanoke Rapids doesn't have much else to offer and it doesn't already have a strong tourist based economy to bring people in.
8/17/2006 11:31:52 AM
8/17/2006 11:42:13 AM
I wonder what this would mean for other small private colleges in the area. Louisburg College and Barton College are right down the road.
8/17/2006 1:20:35 PM
8/17/2006 1:26:51 PM
How does funding work from the state? Won't another university take money from the pockets of the current universities?
8/17/2006 1:31:57 PM
^this is North Carolina -- they'll just raise taxes
8/17/2006 1:34:26 PM
and then be in session for months trying to work out a new budget, right?
8/17/2006 1:36:37 PM
8/17/2006 2:01:32 PM
8/17/2006 2:05:39 PM
8/17/2006 2:22:52 PM
Ahaha I think its going to be more a of a mix of Branson and something like Smithfields outlet shopping.The whole point is the RR area is the damn halfway point for folks, and aside from Smithfield, there is pretty much NO town on I-95 that has anything more than a couple of hotels and gas stations. Why the hell would anybody stop in here? The only strip of road more boring is 64 from 95 to Raleigh.
8/17/2006 2:55:09 PM
we're a research U. run them b*tches out of business.
8/17/2006 3:03:22 PM
this idea is just an academic welfare hole in the middle of a social welfare holethe money would much better be spent elsewhere
8/17/2006 3:07:17 PM
8/18/2006 1:26:23 AM
the more pit stops ppl make in our state, the more money they spend here, the betterthe more possible half way points, the more chance that we get them to.but this idea can't be sold on economics. i think more education for a more rural part of the state has to be key value to get people on board. although maybe educating people more will help economically too in the long run.[Edited on August 18, 2006 at 1:47 AM. Reason : .]
8/18/2006 1:47:28 AM
^^Yea depending on where you leave from and shit, that area is. But Rocky Mounts problem is all their shit is on 64. You can ride down 95 and hardly know that you are passing one of the larger cities in the area. People don't want to have to drive far off the interstate to get somewhere, they want to see it as they drive by. Hence shit like South of the Border and Smithfield Outlets get a lot of interstate biz.
8/18/2006 7:00:18 AM
Now Wilson on the other hand ....
8/18/2006 1:05:26 PM
8/18/2006 4:44:55 PM