Everything Orange 2015

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28 — The comprehensive guide to living in Orange County —

TABLE OF CONTENTS MARCH 2015

9 Colleges

Orange is home to one of the nation’s most highly regarded public universities and boasts an outstanding community college that serves thousands of residents.

10 Carrboro government contacts How to reach city officials.

14 Hillsborough government contacts How to reach city officials.

15 Retirement

Seniors will find plenty of activities across a wide range of interests in Orange County.

39

16 Chapel Hill government contacts

46 35

How to reach city officials.

18 Arts

From Weaver Street Market to Carolina Performing Arts, there are a wealth of options.

21 Orange government, services contacts How to reach county officials, key services.

23 Schools

Being home to the best schools in the state is a big draw for residents.

26 Transportation

Getting around Orange County is easy and efficient thanks in part to public transportation.

4 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

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from our editor — The comprehensive guide to living in Orange County —

A publication of The Herald-Sun PUBLISHER RICHARD A. BEAN  EDITOR BOB ASHLEY  SUPERVISING EDITOR MARK DONOVAN  ADVERTISING DIRECTOR DAVID JONES   DESIGN MICHELLE MONTES  CONTRIBUTING WRITERS JAMICA ASHLEY CLIFF BELLAMY ALEX DIXON APRIL DUDASH RAY GRONBERG JASON HAWKINS KATIE JANSEN CALLAGHAN O’HARE LAURA OLENIACZ KEITH UPCHURCH DAWN BAUMGARTNER VAUGHANÂ

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CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN BERNARD THOMAS Â ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT 919-419-6700

1530 N. Gregson Street, Durham, NC www.heraldsun.com

Orange County:

Cities have 3 distinct personalities

I

t is so subtle — yet so stunningly obvious — that the realization of it crept up on me when I first moved back here more than nine years ago. And my wife had been here for months before it hit her. The fire engines are blue. Light blue. Carolina blue — just like, the bumper stickers remind us, God made the sky. Go almost anywhere else in the country, and fire engines are what fire engines are in the picture books — red. But the Carolina blue firefighting equipment is emblematic of the extent to which the identities of Chapel Hill and the oldest state public university which is the town’s reason for existence are intertwined. Granted the congruence has blurred some in recent years as the town has grown and stretched well beyond the immediate environs of the campus, but the town is indisputably bathed literally and figuratively in Carolina blue.

Orange County, of course, is much more than its famous university and surrounding town. There’s Carrboro, the Paris of the Piedmont, a once-blue-collar mill village of a town that now is a funky, artsy, creative-class saturated town that prides itself in being Ïto the left of Chapel Hill, its next-door neighbor. And there’s Hillsborough, a town that predates the American Revolution and whose graceful historic homes and buildings are home to a thriving literary community and are a magnet for visitors for near and far. Head up to the northern part of the county, and you can find thriving farms and a deeply rooted agriculture heritage. The landscape — physically and psychically — is far different from the southern part of Ïthe southern part of heaven. Fascinating in its diversity and a graceful counterpoint to its fellow Triangle counties of Wake and Durham, Orange County has much to offer. In this magazine, Everything

Orange, our staff has tried to capture that. You’ll find a wealth of information to help you explore and enjoy Orange County, whether youĂ­re a newcomer, a visitor — or perhaps even if youĂ­re a longtime resident. I’m grateful to my newsroom team that has worked hard to put together the stories, photos and many lists in “Everything Orange.â€? And I’m grateful to my colleagues in our advertising department whose hard work and spirited sales have made this section possible. I hope youĂ­ll enjoy reading it and that you’ll hold on to it for re-reading and for reference. And I hope it will help you appreciate and immerse yourself in this distinctive county. Bob Ashley is editor of The HeraldSun and the Chapel Hill Herald.

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PUBLIC OFFICIALS Carrboro — The comprehensive guide to living in Orange County —

Town Manager

TABLE OF CONTENTS

28 Carrboro

MARCH 2015

contact information

A city with a distinctive personality, Carrboro’s vibrant culture embraces being Paris of the Piedmont.

David L. Andrews Telephone: 919-918-7315

35 Chapel Hill

Fax: 919-918-4456

The Southern Part of Heaven is the quintessential university town.

36 Hillsborough

From deep historical roots a friendly, “authentic” small town has blossomed.

Email: dandrews@townofcarrboro.org

David L. Andrews

39 Faith

Police Chief

County’s religious community has a long history and includes a diverse community of beliefs.

40 Sports

From UNC baseball to rec soccer, the county has a range of activities for both spectators and participants.

contact information

41 Real estate

A popular place to live, homes in Orange County go quickly.

42 Business

Orange County is home to local businesses with global notoriety and appeal.

44 Medicine

Health care serves not just Orange County residents, but provides quality care for people who come from across the state.

46 Agriculture

Farming continues to be a major part of Orange’s economic vitality and culture.

52 Doctors

A list of family practice doctors and ob-gyn’s in Orange County.

58 Food

A categorized list of the dining options in Orange.

60 Shopping

Location: Town Hall, 301 W. Main St., 27510

Wallter Horton

Walter Horton, police chief Phone: 919-918-7408 Email: whorton@townofcarrboro.org Department telephone: 919-918-7397 Department email: Police@townofcarrboro.org Location: Century Center, 100 N. Greensboro St., 27510

Interim Fire Chief contact information Rusty Styons, interim fire chief Telephone: 919-918-7347 Email: rstyons@townofcarrboro.org Department telephone: 919-918-7347 Department email: Fire@townofcarrboro.org Location: Town Hall, 301 W. Main St., 27510

A sampling of the many shopping options in Orange County.

EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

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ELECTED OFFICIALS Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Andrew Davidson

Jamezetta Bedford

David Saussy

Annetta Stokes Streater

James Barrett

Michelle Brownstein

Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools contact information

Jamezetta Bedford 401 Knob Court Chapel Hill, N.C. 27517 919-933-5391 jbedford@chccs.k12. nc.us  David Saussy 306 Glendale Dr. Chapel Hill, NC 27514 919-968-9472 dsaussy@chccs.k12.nc.us  James Barrett 100 Morgan Bluff Lane Chapel Hill, NC 27517 919-593-0592 jbarrett@chccs.k12.nc.us

8 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

Mike Kelley

Michelle (Shell) Brownstein 105 Glenhaven Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27516 919-932-3695 mbrownstein@chccs. k12.nc.us  Andrew Davidson, vice chairman 110 Westbury Court Chapel Hill, NC 27516 919-370-9303 adavidson@chccs.k12. nc.us  Mike Kelley, chairman 205 Ukiah Lane Chapel Hill, NC 27514 919-442-8734 mkelley@chccs.k12.nc.us

Annetta Stokes Streater 11 Heather Court Chapel Hill, NC 27517 919-918-2037 astreater@chccs.k12. nc.us  Tom Forcella, Superintendent tforcella@chccs.k12.nc.us 919-967-8211 x28226 To contact the superintendent and full board, email allboardmembers@ chccs.k12.nc.us.

Superintendent Tom Forcella

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Oldest state isuniversity county’s largest employer By APRIL DUDASH

news@heraldsun.com; 919-419-6630

C

hapel Hill is known for its academic history and streets shrouded in Carolina blue — the University of North Carolina is the nation’s oldest state university, which still prides itself on competitive affordability after receiving its charter more than two centuries ago. Durham Technical Community College also has a 20-acre Orange County campus that opened in 2008 in Hillsborough and a Skills and Development/JobLink Center that houses employment and training services on the main Chapel Hill drag, Franklin Street. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was chartered by the N.C. General Assembly in 1789, when George Washington was first inaugurated as president. The cornerstone was laid for Old East, the nation’s first state university building, on Oct. 12, 1793. UNC Chapel Hill today is the top employer in Orange County with nearly 12,000 faculty and staff members. The university is home to more than 29,200 students and offers 78 bachelor’s, 112 master’s, 68 doctorate and seven professional degree programs through its 14 schools and the College of Arts and Sciences. The William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education serves adult learners through credit and noncredit course offerings. UNC-Chapel Hill was ranked the No. 1 public university for combined excellence and affordability on Kiplinger’s Personal Finance report for the 14th year in a row. The university touts the Carolina Covenant, a commitment

Contact information University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 250 E. Franklin St. (Visitor’s Center) 919-962-2211 www.unc.edu Durham Technical Community College, Orange County campus 525 College Park Road, Hillsborough 919-536-7238 www.durhamtech.edu/orange The Herald-Sun | Bernard Thomas

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was chartered by the N.C. General to make college accessible to Assembly in 1789, when George Washington was first inaugurated as president. qualified students regardless of whether they can pay for it. Undergraduate tuition for the 2014-2015 academic year was $6,423 for North Carolina residents and $31,505 for out-of-state students. Carolina not only prides itself on its storied athletics teams but also on its designation as a research university: UNC faculty received nearly $778 million in research grants and contracts in fiscal 2013, an increase from $759 million in fiscal 2012. On average, UNC Chapel Hill’s research awards comprise more than half of the total research awards for all UNC system campuses. Must-see campus hotspots: • Ackland Art Museum: The permanent collection boasts more than 17,000 works of art and is known for its Asian and paper pieces, such as photographs and drawings. The museum, which opened in 1958, organizes more than 12 special exhibitions a year. Morehead Planetarium and Science Center: One of the largest see employer/page 22

EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

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ELECTED OFFICIALS Carrboro Board of Aldermen Carrboro Board of Aldermen contact information

Damon Seils

Sammy Slade

Jacquelyn M. Gist

Randee Haven-O’Donnell

Lydia Lavelle, mayor Telephone: 919-918-7310 (Mayor’s Office) Email: llavelle@townofcarrboro.org Address: 8107 Kit Lane, Chapel Hill, 27516 Jacquelyn Gist Telephone: 919-929-6252 (home) Email:jgist@townofcarrboro.org Address: 206-A Maple Ave., Carrboro 27510 Michelle Johnson Telephone: 919-260-2145 Email: michelleforcarrboro@gmail. com Address: 109 Center St., Carrboro 27510 Sammy Slade, mayor pro tem Telephone: 919-951-5200 (home) Email: sslade@townofcarrboro.org Address: 105 Dillard St.., Carrboro, NC 27510 Randee Haven-O’Donnell Telephone: 919-306-2080 Email: havenod@gmail.com

Lydia Lavelle Address: 106 Fairfield Court, Chapel Hill 27516 Damon Seils Telephone: 919-960-5931 Email: dseils@townofcarrboro.org Address: 601 Jones Ferry Road Apt. B13 Carrboro, NC 27510 Bethany Chaney Telephone: 919-360-4346 Email: bchaney@townofcarrboro.org 217 E. Hillsborough Road, Carrboro 27510

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PUBLIC OFFICIALS Chapel Hill Town Manager

Fire Chief

contact information

contact information

Roger Stancil, town manager Manager’s Office

Dan Jones, fire chief

Town Hall, 2nd Floor

Station #1 403 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Roger Stancil

Phone: 919-968-2781

919-968-2743

Fax: 919-932-2956

manager@townofchapelhill.org

Dan Jones

fire@townofchapelhill.org

Police Chief contact information Chris Blue, police chief 828 Martin Luther King Blvd. Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Phone: 919-968-2760 Fax: 919-968-2846 cblue@townofchapelhill.org

Chris Blue

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ELECTED OFFICIALS

OFFICIALS Orange County

N.C. House Bonnie Hammersley Orange County Manager Bonnie Hammersley Phone: 919-245-2300 200 S. Cameron St. Hillsborough, NC 27278

N.C. Rep. Graig R. Meyer

N.C. Rep.Verla Insko

D-District 50 Legislative mailing address: NC House of Representatives 16 W. Jones St., Room 1111 Raleigh, NC 27601-1096 Phone: 919-715-3019 Email: Graig.Meyer@ncleg.net

D-District 56 Legislative mailing address: NC House of Representatives 300 N. Salisbury St., Room 502 Raleigh, NC 27603-5925 Phone: 919-733-7208 Email: Verla.Insko@ncleg.net

N.C. Senate N.C. Sen.Valerie Foushee D-District 23 Legislative mailing address: 300 N. Salisbury St., Room 520 Raleigh, NC 27603-5925 Office: 520 Legislative Office Building Phone: 919-733-5804 Email: Valerie.Foushee@ ncleg.net

Charles Blackwood Orange County Sheriff Charles Blackwood 106 East Margaret Lane Hillsborough, NC 27278 Phone: 919-644-3050 Fax: 919-732-6403

Attention Carrboro!

For to serve serve you! you! For 108 107 years years we’ve been here to Fitch Lumber and Hardware is a 4th generation family owned business that has served our area since 1907. A.B. Fitch began the business in Mebane, NC, and in 1923, moved into Carrboro because of the rapid growth surrounding the University. His sons, Bernice, and Miles, joined him in business. Following in their footsteps, Miles’ children, Mac Fitch and Carol Fitch Walker are now there, as well as Mac’s sons David, Brad and John. From a sawmill and coal depot, we have transformed into a full service retailer and building supply yard. We currently provide framing and finish lumber, plywoods, masonry products, millwork, windows, doors, roofing, insulation, specialty products, and a large variety of hardware. We also have a custom wood shop for all of your creative needs. We have always provided excellent customer service and maintain great relationships with both our vendors and loyal customers. Fitch Lumber and Hardware has continued to sell top quality products to contractors, remodelers, and homeowners for over a century and has been very active in supporting local schools, churches, as well as community organizations. Fitch is pleased and proud to be one of the oldest businesses in Orange County and hopes to be thriving for generations to come!

Fitch Lumber Since 1907

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ELECTED OrangeOFFICIALS County Board of Education Chairman Stephen H. Halkiotis

Lawrence Sanders

Brenda Stephens

Tom Carr

Vice Chairman Tony McKnight

Donna Coffey

Del Burns, interim superintendent

Orange County Board of Education contact information Email the entire board at ocsboardmembers@orange.k12.nc.us. Individual board members’ email addresses appear below. Stephen H. Halkiotis, chairman 2930 Franklin Road Hillsborough, NC 27278 Phone: 919-732-4813 Email: shhalkiotis@aol.com Tony McKnight, vice chairman 301 Split Rail Lane Hillsborough, NC 27278 Phone: 919-644-2670 Email: mcknightforschools@yahoo.com Donna Coffey 3839 Shelly’s Trail Efland, NC 27243 Phone: 919-304-6839 Email: donna.coffey@orange.k12.nc.us Tom Carr 353 Eden Dr.

Hillsborough, NC 27278 Phone: 919-732-7183 Email: tom.car@orange.k12.nc.us Lawrence Sanders 1429 Ainsworth Blvd. Hillsborough, NC 27278 Phone: 919-883-1592 Email: lawrence.sanders@orange.k12.nc.us Brenda Stephens 5807 Craig Road Durham, NC 27712 Phone: 919-309-0919 Email: brenda.stephens@orange.k12.nc.us Del Burns, interim superintendent (appointed)8 del.burns@orange.k12.nc.us 919-732-8126 Ext. 10001

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ELECTED OFFICIALS Hillsborough Board

Kathleen Ferguson

Eric Hallman

Evelyn Lloyd

Tom Stevens

Jenn Weaver

Brian Lowen

of Commissioners contact information

For information on the board or to contact members, visit http://www.ci.hillsborough.nc.us/content/town-board.

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Retiring in Orange High-quality living By KEITH UPCHURCH

Contact information

kupchurch@heraldsun.com; 919-419-6612

E

O R A N G E

CO U N T Y

lla Carver, 103, doesn’t let a minor thing like age keep her from enjoying life. She’s a regular at one of her favorite places — Central Orange Senior Center in Hillsborough. Carver, who turns 104 in May, takes the bus nearly every day from her home to the center, where she plays dominos, takes classes on health, eats lunch and enjoys the company of others. When her day at the center is over, she takes the bus back home. “Our exercise program is terrific,” said Lisa Berley, front desk manager. “We have a yoga class that is amazing, and includes 70- and 80-year-olds.” Other activities include arts and crafts, bridge and mahjong. In the years that the center has been open, the number of visitors has steadily increased, she said. “People drop in to play pool or read books and newspapers,” Berley said. “We have bookcases where people bring books they no longer need, and they take books. It’s an in-and-out-sharing.” Jigsaw puzzles, cards game and Scrabble are popular. There’s also line dancing and oil painting classes, all of which create “a little community,” she said. Center volunteer Gloria Stevens, 69, attends low-impact exercise classes, which are conducted by a physical therapist. A widow, Stevens said the center is a good place to make friends “and get you going. You need to have some structure in your life.” “It’s an important part of my life,” she said. “The

The Herald-Sun | File photo by Christine T. Nguyen

Nancy Thompson, a resident at Signature HealthCARE of Chapel Hill, smiles after receiving a handmade ornament from Estes Hill fifth-graders. staff is wonderful, and you’re helping people with problems as a volunteer. It helps them and me, too.” The center, run by the Orange County Department on Aging, is part of an embarrassment of riches that retirees have to spend their golden years. One retirement community that’s been around for 35 years is Carol Woods, located on 120 wooded acres on Weaver Dairy Road in Chapel Hill. It has 485 on-campus residents, who come in at the independent level and can move through the continuum of care to assisted living and skilled nursing. Residents run 88 committees and special-interest groups such as news watch, meditation, English country dancing, gardening, poetry and bird

Brookshire Nursing Center 300 Meadowland Drive Hillsborough Carol Woods Health Center 750 Weaver Dairy Road Chapel Hill Villines Rest Home 401 W. Queen St. Hillsborough Carolina House of Chapel Hill 100 Lanark Road Chapel Hill The Stratford 405 Smith Level Road Chapel Hill Chapel Hill Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center 1602 E. Franklin St. Chapel Hill Residential Service Inc. Retirement Center 6310 Mt. Herman Church Road Durham Carillon Assisted Living of Hillsborough 1911 Orange Grove Road Hillsborough Crescent Green of Carrboro 624 Jones Ferry Road Carrboro Unihealth Post Acute Care Carolina Point 5935 Mt. Sinai Road Durham

watching. They also plan concert and lecture series. The Cedars of Chapel Hill Retirement Community bills itself as “a different kind of community.” “Unlike your typical, sleepy retirement community, the Cedars is part of the multigenerational, mixed-use Meadowmont neighborhood,” its website says. If offers villas, verandas and individual cottage homes. A full-service clubhouse and on-site health center offer skilled nursing, memory care, assisted living see retiring/page 17

EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

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ELECTED OFFICIALS Chapel Hill Town Council Ed Harrison

Sally Green

George Cianciolo

Chapel Hill Town Council contact information

Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt

Donna Bell

Maria Palmer

Mark Kleinschmidt, mayor 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Chapel Hill, NC 27514-5705 Phone (h): 919-360-8458 Mayor’s Office: 919-968-2714 twitter.com/mayormarkk mkleinschmidt@ townofchapelhill.org mayorandcouncil@ townofchapelhill.org. Sally Greene, mayor pro tem 406 Morgan Creek Road Chapel Hill, NC 27517 Phone: 919-260-4077 sally@ibiblio.org

Donna Bell 611 Craig St. Chapel Hill, NC 27516 Phone: 919-627-1504 dbell4ch@gmail.com George Cianciolo 7704 Amesbury Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514-9713 919-493-7206 george4ch@gmail.com

Ed Harrison 58 Newton Drive Durham, NC 27707-9744 Phone (h): 919-490-1566 ed.harrison@mindspring.com Maria Palmer 303 Forbush Mtn. Drive Chapel Hill, NC Phone: 919-933-0259 mariatpalmer@gmail.com Lee Storrow 208 Barclay Road Chapel Hill, NC 27516 Phone: 919-914-0311 LeeStorrow.CH@gmail.com Jim Ward 112 Bolton Place Chapel Hill, NC 27516 Phone (h): 919-929-7666 jimward@nc.rr.com

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ELECTED OFFICIALS retiring U.S. House U.S. Senate

Mark Walker Graham, N.C. 27253 R-6th District Phone: 336-229D.C. office 0159 312 Cannon House Fax: 336-350-9514 Office Building Greensboro office Washington, D.C. 201 W. Market St., 20515 Suite 312 Phone: 202-225P.O. Box 10072 3065 Greensboro, N.C. Fax: 202-225-8611 27404 Graham office Phone: 336-333219B West Elm St. 5005 P.O. Box 812

Richard Burr Republican Washington, D.C., Office 217 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3154 Fax: 202-228-2981

From Page 15

and home care. As Orange County’s reputation as a retirement magnet grows, so does interest across the nation. Laurie Paolicelli, executive director of the Chapel Hill/ Orange County Visitors Bureau, said inquiries for retiree relocation information continue to increase. “They ask about neighborhoods, traffic, greenways for walking, health care, higher education and proximity to the mountains and beach,” she said. One person who needs no convincing about Orange County’s attractiveness is 79-year-old Richard Tofte, who spends a hefty chunk of his time at the Robert and Pearl Seymour

Center on Homestead Road in Chapel Hill. “I’m addicted,” Tofte said. “It’s like a family here.” When Tofte moved here from upstate New York, he met people who were regulars at the center, so he decided to become a volunteer. Now, he often stays at the center four to five hours a day several times a week. The former constable and electrical contractor said he takes advantage of the center’s offerings – dancing, trips to Durham Bulls baseball games, the symphony, and out-of-state travel. Last year, he made trips to Costa Rica, Great Britain, Scotland and Ireland. Tofte loves what Orange County offers to retirees, and says his life is richer because of it. “Life is short,” he said, “and I’m enjoying it.”

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Fax: 202-225-3354 Western District Office 1777 Fordham Blvd, Suite 204 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Phone: 919-9677924 Fax: 919-967-8324

Thom Tillis Republican G55 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-6342 Raleigh office 310 New Bern Avenue Suite 122 Raleigh, N.C. 27601 Phone: 919-856-4630 Fax: 919-856-4053

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Orangea bounty County offers of arts opportunities BY CLIFF BELLAMY

garts.org. UNC’s Department of Music and its Jazz Studies program ears ago, Carrboro earned also present concerts by student the title “Paris of the groups, faculty members and Triangle” or “Paris of the guest artists. The school’s jazz Piedmont.” The title applies to program presents the annual the town’s casual atmosphere, Carolina Jazz Festival, featuring and its love of the arts, a trait guest artists and teachers, ever y it shares with Chapel Hill, Hillsborough and Orange County. spring. For a list of programs and concerts, visit music.unc.edu/ The lawn at Weaver Street events. Market becomes the town’s PlayMakers Repertor y epicenter during warm months. Company is UNC’s professional During the summer, the market theater that also offers master’s presents free concerts on the level degrees for actors and lawn that showcase the eclectic students of technical theater. talents of local musicians. This season, PlayMakers has Chapel Hill’s new public presented Christopher Durang’s space called The Plaza at 140 “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and West Franklin Street presents Spike,” and “Into the Woods,’ by free concerts, festivals and Stephen Sondheim and James other free events in the spring Lapine. Coming to the series and fall. For updates, visit later this year will be “4000 www.140westfranklinplaza.com. Miles” by Amy Herzog, and Each community in the county offers a wealth of choices “Mar y’s Wedding” by Stephen Massicote. For a schedule and throughout the year, with costs ticket information, visit www. ranging from higher-end tickets playmakersrep.org or call to free events. 962-PLAY. Carolina Performing Arts at Chapel Hill is the new home of UNC continues to present artists DSI Comedy Theatre (formerly in with national and international Carrboro), at 462 W. Franklin St. reputations in Memorial Hall. DSI offers classes in improv and Popular past performers other comedy arts. Ever y year in have included the Alvin Ailey Februar y, the theatre presents American Dance company the N.C. Comedy Arts Festival, and the Jazz at Lincoln Center featuring improv, sketch and Orchestra. This season, the stand-up comedians from across series has participated in UNC’s the countr y. For information, call World War I Centenar y Project. In the coming months, the series 919-338-8150 or visit www.dsicomedytheater.com. will present a performance UNC’s Ackland Art Museum of Benjamin Britten’s “War Requiem,” and Hotel Modern and has an extensive collection of art, including pieces of Asian Arthur Sauer’s “The Great War.” For tickets and information about art, works on paper and North Carolina potter y. Now on view coming events, call 919-843-3333 are the exhibits “Genius and or visit www.carolinaperformincbellamy@heraldsun.com; 919-419-6744

Y

18 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

Grace: Francois Boucher and the Generation of 1700,” “Picasso 3” (an exhibit of three Pablo Picasso paintings) and “Recent Acquisitions of Japanese Art.” For details, visit www.ackland.org or call 919-966-5736. Admission to the Ackland is free. Chapel Hill and Carrboro also have a number of private galleries. Since 2010, FRANK galler y at 109 E. Franklin St. has exhibited works by local artists working in various media. Coming later this month is the exhibit “Edge of White: Five Artists Explore the Perimeters.” For details, visit www.frankisart. com or call 919-636-4135. Tyndall Galleries in University Mall

(www.tyndallgalleries.com, 919-942-2290) and the Chapel Hill Art Galler y, 1215 E. Franklin St. (chapelhillartgaller y.com, 919-636-4557) also present new works by local artists. In Carrboro, the Jesse Kalisher galler y carries black and white and color photography. The galler y is at 209 E. Main St. (www.kalisher.com, 919-967-4300). Among the other galleries in this art-filled town are Main Street Galleries (405 E. Main St., 919-967-7005), N.C. Crafts Galler y (212 W. Main St., 919-942-4048, nccraftsgaller y. com), and A Remix Art Galler y see arts/page 19

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arts

from page 18

(105 E. Main St., 919.441.0972, www.aremixartgaller y.com). The ArtsCenter, at 300-G E. Main St., is the mainstay for arts and entertainment in Carrboro. This nonprofit organization teaches classes in various arts, but also presents locally produced plays, visual art exhibits and concerts. The center is the home of Transactors Improv troupe, and it presents an annual festival of short plays titled “10 by 10 in the Triangle.” This year, the center also is presenting a festival titled “Redbird: One-Act Play Festival.” Beginning May 15, the ArtsCenter will present the World War I satire, “Oh, What a Lovely War!”

The center also has created a niche for listeners of traditional American music. Artists scheduled to perform in the coming months include Lloyd Cole, Tannahill Weavers, and William Tyler with Jake Xer xes Fussell. For more information, visit www.artscenterlive.org or call 919-929-2787. Ever y year in September, Carrboro presents the free Carrboro Music Festival. Listeners can hear ever y conceivable style and genre of music at the Carrboro Centur y Center, on the lawn at Weaver Street Market, in bars, parking lots and other venues. For updates for the 2015 festival, visit www.carrboromusicfestival.com. To the north, Hillsborough has an active visual arts scene. Local artists own and operate the Hillsborough Galler y of Arts, at 121 N. Churton St. For details, visit www.hillsboroughgaller y. com or call 919-732-5001. The Hillsborough Arts Council also

Courtesy of PlayMakers Repertory Company, Jon Gardiner

PlayMakers Repertory Company is UNC’s professional theater that also offers master’s level degrees for actors and students of technical theater. maintains a galler y at 102 N. Churton St. For information, call 919-643-2500 or visit www.hillsboroughartscouncil.org. The Arts Council also presents a number of events. From April to September, the council presents Last Fridays on the last Friday of each month. Last Fridays feature live music and an art walk, with galleries and restaurants participating. In the Parlor Concert Series, local musicians play for audiences in historic homes. In September, the council presents the Hillsborough Jazz Festival at historic Moorefields Estate, featuring local musicians. Orange County is home to

many visual artists, and many of them have home studios. In the fall, the Orange County Artists Guild holds a free tour of artists’ studios throughout the county.

Visitors may use the guild’s annual map and guidebook to take this self-guided tour. For updates, visit www.orangecountyartistsguild.com.

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PUBLIC OFFICIALS Hillsborough Hillsborough contact information Hillsborough Town Manager

Hillsborough Police Chief

Eric Peterson

Duane Hampton

Phone: 919 732-1270, ext. 80 101 E. Orange St. Contact the manager/police chief at

Eric Peterson

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ELECTED OFFICIALS Orange County Board of Commissioners

Chairman Earl McKee

Vice Chair Bernadette Pelissier

Barry Jacobs

Mark Dorosin

Mia Day Burroughs

Orange County Board of Commissioners contact information Earl McKee, chairman 5200 Kiger Road Rougemont, NC 27572 Phone: 919-812-3248 Email: emckee@orangecountync.gov

Bernadette Pelissier, vice chair 4516 Mystic Lane Hillsborough, NC 27278 Phone: 919-643-2762 Email: bpelissier@orangecountync.gov

Barry Jacobs 2105 Moorefields Road Hillsborough, NC 27278 Phone: 919-732-4384 Email: bjacobs@orangecountync.gov Mark Dorosin 113 Creekview Circle Carrboro, NC 27510 Phone: 919-967-1486

Email: mdorosin@orangecountync.gov

Mia Day Burroughs 110 Cedar Hills Dr. Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Phone: 919-932-6282 Email: mburroughs@orangecountync. gov

Renee Price PO Box 1486 Hillsborough, NC 27278 Phone: 919-619-1139 Email: rprice@orangecountync.gov Penny Rich 109 Oldham Place Chapel Hill, NC 27516 Phone: 919-428-5952 Email: prich@orangecountync.gov

Penny Rich

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Employer

Durham Technical Community College has a 20-acre Orange County campus that opened in 2008 in Hillsborough and a Skills and Development/JobLink Center that houses employment and training services on the main Chapel Hill drag, Franklin Street.

transfer associate in arts degree programs in small class sizes, as well as an array of continuing education (noncredit) courses, from emergency medical services and organic gardening to bartending/ mixology and West African drumming. The two-year community college has purchased 4.3 acres adjacent to the main building for expansion and can build four more buildings. As of July 1, 2014, tuition for North Carolina residents was $72 per credit hour and $264 per credit hour for out-of-state students. Durham Tech’s Orange County Skills and Development/JobLink Center at 503 W. Franklin St. houses classrooms, a computer lab, student lounge and nursing assistant lab used for employment and training services.

Mitsuko Uchida and the Kronos Quartet were on the early 2015 performance schedule.

— Staff writer Ray Gronberg contributed to this report.

From Page 9

planetariums in the United States is on Franklin Street. The facility has been open since 1949 and even provided training for U.S. astronauts when the U.S. space program began. — North Carolina Botanical Garden: Considered a leading expert on native plants and wildflowers of North Carolina, the garden also is the homesite of the first European settler in Chapel Hill. Visitors can see 14 collections and display gardens, which encompass 2,100 species. Carolina Performing Arts: UNC’s Memorial Hall was dedicated in 1931, and its first-year lineup included a pep rally and a lecture by Randolph Churchill, son of Winston Churchill, titled, “Can Youth be Conservative?” Pianist

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For students in Orange, a range of educational options BY JAMICA C. ASHLEY and KATIE JANSEN

kjansen@heraldsun.com; 919-419-6675

O

range County boasts some of the best public schools in the state. With high-achieving students, highly trained faculty and staff and relationships with the oldest university in the state, the 30 public schools in Orange County have the resources that many other districts envy. The nine private schools in Orange County offer secular, religiously influenced and

alternative educations. There are currently four charter schools that call Orange County home, with a fifth, The Expedition School, slated to open its doors for the 2014-15 school year.

CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO CITY SCHOOLS

In existence since 1909, the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City School system is composed of 20 schools, including one for students being treated at the University of North Carolina hospital and an alternative high school.

School Listings Orange County Schools Cameron Park Elementary School Central Elementary School Efland-Cheeks Elementary School Grady A. Brown Elementary School Hillsborough Elementary School New Hope Elementary School Pathways Elementary School A.L. Stanback Middle School C.W. Stanford Middle School Gravelly Hill Middle School Cedar Ridge High School Orange High School Partnership Academy Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools: Carrboro Elementary Ephesus Elementary Estes Hills Elementary Frank Porter Graham Bilingüe School Glenwood Elementary McDougle Elementary Morris Grove Elementary Northside Elementary Rashkis Elementary Scroggs Elementary Seawell Elementary Culbreth Middle McDougle Middle Phillips Middle Smith Middle Carrboro High School

Chapel Hill High School East Chapel Hill High School Phoenix Academy High School UNC Hospital School Other: Middle College High School is a magnet high school for juniors and seniors at Durham Technical Community College. Its student body includes students from Orange County Schools, Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and Durham Public Schools. Private Schools: Artgarden Montessori School Chapel Hill KinderCare Community Independent School Emerson Waldorf School Hillsborough Christian Academy Montessori Day School Montessori Farm School Pinewoods Montessori Schoolcorp St. Thomas More Catholic School Charter Schools: Orange Charter School PACE Academy The Woods Charter Willow Oak Montessori The Expedition School

Serving more than 12,000 students, CHCCS has the state’s highest districtwide average SAT score, and more than 85 percent of the district’s eligible students take the exam. The district also has an 89 percent four-year cohort graduation rate and more than 1,200 students in Advanced Placement courses. The school system operates under the common theme of growth by improving the quality of instruction in classrooms, developing the district’s dual language programs and improving their quality and implementing the Teaching and Learning Plan. More than 200 of the district’s teachers are National Board

Certified and 43 percent have master’s or doctorate degrees. The school system is part of the Global Schools Network and the Minority Student Achievement Network. It was also honored for its commitment to sustainability with a Green Plus Certification.

ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOLS

Serving the students of Northern Orange County, Orange County Schools is made up of 13 schools that serve more than 7,000 students, including a year-round elementary school and alternative school. see options/page 24

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Options From Page 23

OCS has nine Pre-K programs, more than 500 teachers and 120 teaching assistants. Of the teachers, 133 are National Board Certified. Of the licensed staff, 332 have advanced degrees. Orange County Schools had a four-year cohort graduation rate of 85.2 percent. Orange County also provides ever y student in grades 3 through 12 with a laptop that they can use throughout the school year. *The information above is from the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and Orange County Schools websites.

CHARTER SCHOOLS

Several charter schools call Orange County home. There are four currently with a fifth, The Expedition School, coming in August. Created through a contract, according to the N.C. Department of Public Orange County Instruction, charter schools Schools had a tend to have a four-year non-traditional curriculum or cohort focus, even graduation though they rate of 85.2 are funded percent. with public tax dollars. Charter schools are not governed by a local board of education like traditional public schools, rather by their charter. They are held accountable to their established standards by the state board of education and the parents of students who attend. Public schools that are privately run, charter schools offer parents a choice for their children’s education. Children who attend charter schools have to apply. If there are more applicants than

24 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

The Herald-Sun | File photos by Katie Jansen

Above, left: First-grade teacher assistant Savada Gilmore, left, reads as kindergarten teacher assistant Lizabeth Mattson acts out the story with a stuffed version of Peter Rabbit. Above, right: Scrogg Elementary fourth-grader Archit Kalra rolls out a slab of clay to prepare it for a collaborative art project — a giant frog made by two classes. seats, a lottery is used to determine who can attend. The open enrollment policy of charter schools is meant to ensure that there is no discrimination against any students. North Carolina had a cap in place that limited the state to 100 charter schools. That cap was lifted in 2011. According to the N.C. Alliance for Public Charter Schools, there are 131 public charter schools in North Carolina that will serve more than 51,000 students for the 2013-14 school year.

schools is 18 percent, it is 31 percent in Orange County. The

student-to-teacher ratio is equal to the state’s at 10:1.

PRIVATE SCHOOLS

According to the Private School Review, there are nine private schools in Orange County serving 1,131 Pre-K through 12th grade students. Among the private schools are religiously affiliated choices including Hillsborough Christian Academy and St. Thomas More Catholic School and nonsectarian schools like Artgarden Montessori School and Emerson Waldorf. While the state average of minority students in private

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Transit in Orange County T

Today and Tomorrow

he “Southern Part of Heaven” has a lot going for it. There’s the obvious. That shade of sky that just seems bluer on game days, the university, and the people. There is one amenity, however, that most everyone in town uses but is easy to overlook— the bus. Chapel Hill Transit, Orange Public Transit and Triangle Transit, Making Connections Chapel Hill Transit (CHT) is the second largest transit system in North Carolina, providing over seven million rides per year. Serving the towns of Chapel Hill, Carrboro, and the UNC community, the fare-free system, one of only a few in the United States, operates fixed-route service on 31 weekday and weekend routes and EZ Rider demand response (ADA) service. CHT has a fleet of 121 vehicles (98 fixed-route and 22 demand response) - covering over 2.5 million miles per year in a service area of 62 square miles. CHT operates from 5:00 a.m. to 1:15 a.m. Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, and 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. on Sunday year round, except for most holidays and during UNC breaks. Orange County Public Transportation (OPT) is the primary transportation resource for county residents. Known as the Orange Bus, OPT provides mid-day service for Triangle Transit’s 420 route to Hillsborough and also offers elderly (60+) or disabled residents transportation from their residence to their medical care

26 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

providers or shopping, with proper certification. Working in concert with CHT, OPT, and other transit providers, Triangle Transit provides regional public transportation service to Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, RDU Airport, Cary, Apex, Hillsborough, and Wake Forest. After 20 years of service, the regional transit agency added Sunday service for core routes connecting Durham, Raleigh, RDU Airport, and Chapel Hill. Saturday service was also extended, allowing Triangle Transit to address the needs of customers that have work schedules beyond the Monday-Friday, 9 to 5 workweek, as well as those that want to use the bus for fun, shopping, and more. Triangle Transit serves Chapel Hill with the following routes: • ODX – Orange-Durham Express (ODX) • Serving Efland-Cheeks Community Center, North Hillsborough Park-and-Ride, Durham Station, Fulton St at VA Hospital, Mebane Cone Health Park-and-Ride, E Washington St at S 5th St (Mebane City Hall), Erwin Rd at Emergency Dr • Operates Monday through Friday, peak travel times only (6-10am, 3-7pm) • CRX - Chapel Hill-Raleigh Express (CRX) • Serving Wilmington St at Martin St (Raleigh), Hillsborough St at Brooks Ave (Raleigh), District Drive Park-and-Ride (Raleigh), South Rd at Student Stores, N Columbia St at Rosemary St,

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TRANSIT Eubanks Rd Park-and-Ride Lot, N Columbia St at W Franklin St, South Rd at Fetzer Gym • Operates Monday through Friday, peak travel times only (6-10am, 3-7pm) • 400 • Serving Durham Station, Erwin Rd at VA Hospital, Westgate Dr at Burger King, Witherspoon Blvd at McFarland Dr, E Franklin St at Varsity Theatre, Manning Dr at UNC Hospitals, E Franklin St at Coffee Shop, McFarland Dr at Witherspoon Blvd, Westgate Dr at Target, Erwin Rd at Duke Hospital • Operates Monday through Friday, 6am-10pm, Saturday 7am-10pm, Sunday 7am-6pm    â€˘ 405 • Serving Durham Station, Erwin Rd at VA Hospital, E Franklin St at Varsity Theatre, Manning Dr at UNC Hospitals, E Franklin St at Coffee Shop, Erwin Rd at Duke Hospital • Operates Monday through Friday only, 6am-7pm • 800 • Serving Regional Transit Center (RTC), NC 54 at S Alston Ave , Southpoint Mall at Movie Theater, South Rd at Student Stores, Manning Dr at UNC Hospitals, South Rd at Fetzer Gym, NC 54 at Alston Ave • Operates Monday through Friday, 6am-10pm, Saturday 7am-10pm, Sunday 7am-6pm • 805 • Serving Regional Transit Center (RTC), NC 54 at S Alston Ave , Woodcroft Shopping Center (across), South Rd at Student Stores, Manning Dr at UNC Hospitals, South Rd at Fetzer Gym, Woodcroft Shopping Center, NC 54 at Alston Ave • Operates Monday through Friday only, 6am-7pm • 420 – Hillsborough, Chapel Hill, operated by Chapel Hill Transit • Serving Manning Dr at UNC Hospitals, N Columbia St at

Rosemary St, Durham Tech OCC (Park-and-Ride), Churton St At Courthouse, Churton St at North Hills Shopping Center, Churton St at Police Station, N Columbia St at W Franklin St • Operates Monday through Friday, peak travel times only (6-10am, 3-7pm) • Orange Public Transportation provides the mid-day “Hill to Hillâ€? service, serving downtown Hillsborough, Triangle SportsPlex, Chapel Hill North Shopping Center, downtown Chapel Hill, and UNC Hospital Our Transit Future: The Durham-Orange Light Rail Project gears up Durham and Orange County voters approved a referendum in 2011 to fund improvements to public transit. In February 2014, the Federal Transit Administration approved one of the proposed projects, Triangle Transit’s request to enter Project Development on the proposed 17-mile Durham-Orange Light Rail Transit Project. Triangle Transit is compiling a Draft Environmental Impact Statement to be published and made available for public comment later this year.   The proposed light rail line will run from Chapel Hill to Durham with stations at UNC Hospitals, Mason Farm Road, Friday Center, the Leigh Village area, Patterson Place, South Square, Duke University and the VA Medical Centers, downtown Durham and Alston Avenue. The D-O LRT project will cost about $1.8 billion (in 2019 dollars). The one-half cent sales tax will help fund the local share of the project. More information is available at ourtransitfuture.com. For more about transit in Orange County, both now and in the future, visit gotransit.org. Let it be your resource for real-time bus arrivals, trip planning, and everything you need to know about getting out of your car and into a smarter commute in Chapel Hill and beyond.

Accolades for Orange County  No. 15, Best Places for the Rich and Single (Money Magazine, August 2012) No. 10, Best Places to Live (Money Magazine, August 2012) Carrboro named one of America’s best art towns by author John Villani in his book, “The 100 Best Art Towns in America: A guide to Galleries, Museums, Festivals, Lodging and Dining.â€? Chapel Hill ranks No. 3 in the 10 Most Exciting Small Cities in America (movoto.com, December 2013)

Chapel Hill one of the top 100 Best Places to Live (livability.com, October 2013) Chapel Hill, one of the Top 10 Best Places to Start a Business (Entrepreneur Magazine, August 2009) Carrboro among Mother Earth News’ fifth annual “Great Places You’ve (Maybe) Never Heard Of� list. (January 2011) The Crunkleton (Chapel Hill, North Carolina), a serious bar without a trace of attitude, named No. 2 for Killer Cocktails by

Southern Living in 2013 Lantern named one of America’s Top 50 Restaurants, best farm-to-table restaurants by Gourmet and one of America’s 50 Most Amazing Wine Experiences by Food & Wine. Chapel Hill, No. 6, Best Cities for Staying Young, RealAge (February 2014) Top Soccer City from livability.com (July 2012) Best Places to Raise Children, Business Week (December 2010)

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‘Paris of the Piedmont’ Carrboro has evolved from mill town to hub of creativity BY CALLAGHAN O’HARE AND KATIE JANSEN news@heraldsun.com

D

C A R R B O R O

espite the fact it was never meant to be more than an access point to Chapel Hill or maybe — if it was lucky — a mill town, Carrboro has defied all expectations and blossomed into a cultural hot spot, complete with hula hooping, street musicians and a once-a-year market where ever ything is free. “Carrboro is a town, and Carrboro is a feeling,” Mayor L ydia Lavelle said. “It is easier to experience than it is to explain.” The town, originally known as West End because of its location west of Chapel Hill, has experienced tremendous change since its humble origins in 1882 as a railroad depot for visitors heading to UNC. Seven years after Carrboro was established as a stop on The State University Railroad, Thomas F. Lloyd built a textile mill next to the train tracks. The Alberta Cotton Mill became the town’s foundation. In 1909, Julian Shakespeare Carr, a tobacco manufacturer from Durham purchased the mill. By 1913, the town was renamed Carrboro to honor Carr, who had worked fer vently to enhance the town’s quality of life by building roads and supplying electricity. The Alberta Cotton Mill was eventually incorporated into The Durham Hosier y Mills before it closed in 1930. Additional cotton and wool mills continued to operate and were the town’s main employers until they closed in the early 1960s. Rather than demolishing the

28 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

The Herald-Sun | Photo by Christine T. Nguyen

Keith Dupuis enjoys the warm weather outside Open Eye Cafe on Wednesday, March 4, 2015. “I love the people. It’s a great community with a great way of thinking,” said Dupuis of why he enjoys living in Carrboro.

Alberta Mill, the Carrboro Board of Aldermen allowed this piece of Carrboro’s histor y to stand. In 1977, the mill was purchased and converted into Carrboro Mill Mall, which now sits at the heart of downtown Carrboro. Carrboro’s transition from a well-known mill town to a town with a quirky vibe that North Carolinians flock to by the dozens was a slow but steady process.

Until the 1960s, Carrboro’s population of primarily menial workers remained relatively small. However, over the past 50 years the town’s population has boomed. Now, more than 20,000 residents proudly call Carrboro their home. No longer known as the town on the other side of the train tracks, Carrboro — now affectionately known as “The

Paris of the Piedmont” — has transformed into one of the most vibrant, liberal communities in North Carolina. With an emphasis on community, artisanship, artistr y and entrepreneurship, Carrboro prides itself on being a haven for creative types and progressive thinkers. see carrboro/page 30


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CARRBORO From Page 28

Far from its early days as a sparse community that served the needs of the university and its next-door neighbor, Chapel Hill, Carrboro now boasts the title of one of the most densely populated towns in North Carolina. For those who live in or have visited the town, it only makes sense that Carrboro’s lively spirit would attract a vast number of residents ranging from musicians to families to university faculty members. What ties together Carrboro’s diverse population is the town’s emphasis on all things local. A walk through the streets of downtown Carrboro is a testament to the thriving local economy. “Carrboro has an exciting, evolving downtown and engaged, open-minded town employees,� Lavelle said. “Carrboro is symbiotic with the recently adopted town slogan: ‘It’s Carrboro. Feel free.’� Directly in the middle of downtown, one can find Weaver Street Market, whose food and outdoor lawn attract a group of people that showcases the town’s diversity. The market offers an array of local, organic food and an outdoor atmosphere in which anyone is welcome sit, eat, read, chat or play tag. As if its laid-back atmosphere weren’t enough to draw residents to Weaver Street Market’s lawn, the co-op hosts biweekly outdoor concerts during the summer. Carrboro’s residents can also count on Weaver Street Market to plan numerous annual events, such as Weiner Dog Day. The surrounding downtown streets are abundant with highly regarded eateries and specialty food shops that strive to support the town’s economy by purchasing from local producers. Some Carrboro staples include Carrburritos, Spotted Dog Cafe, Elmo’s Diner and The Open Eye

30 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

The Herald-Sun | Photo by Christine T. Nguyen

Mariana Rocha-Goldberg, practices Colombian dances, chempale and pollera azul, with members of the group, Takiri, during the Latin American Festival in Carrboro. CafĂŠ. Many of these restaurants’ ingredients are purchased at the famous Carrboro Farmers’ Market, which is a favorite spot for Carrboro, Chapel Hill and Hillsborough residents alike. The market is one of the biggest farmers’ markets in the U.S. and was one of the first platforms in the area for “farmers to sell directly to their customers,â€? according to the Farmers’ Market’s website. Amid the restaurants, scattered art shops and studios add to downtown Carrboro’s eclectic, artsy feel. No place better reflects the town’s central focus on the arts community than The ArtsCenter. The ArtsCenter plays a vital role in supporting Carrboro’s identity as a sanctuary for the creative class and provides opportunities for residents to exercise their artistic talents. The ArtsCenter offers classes for all ages in disciplines ranging from theater to pottery. In addition to hosting classes, the ArtsCenter holds concerts, musical performances and exhibitions for local artists.

Only a few steps away from the ArtsCenter, the nationally known venue Cat’s Cradle hosts big-name musical acts on its main stage every night. Cat’s Cradle also has a separate stage for budding artists trying to break into Carrboro’s up-and-coming music scene. In addition to these cultural landmarks, the town of Carrboro has some of the most widely regarded festivals in the area. Each year The Carrboro Film Festival, The Carrboro Music Festival and The West End Poet’s Festival bring thousands of North Carolinians to see what the creative hub Carrboro

has in store. To help tourists see its attractions, the town welcomed its first hotel in August 2013 with the opening of the Hampton Inn on Main Street. It’s obvious when talking to Carrboro’s residents that they have a lot of pride in their town. In fact, when the citizens of Carrboro and The Board of Aldermen felt like their pride needed to be commemorated in some way, Carrboro Day was born. Carrboro Day, which takes place annually in May, is a day when the town comes together in celebration of Carrboro’s unique history and culture. Most would agree that a major part of what makes Carrboro so special is its ability to strike the perfect balance between a small Southern town and a bustling city overflowing with culture. But it’s Carrboro’s residents who truly make the town flourish. The residents are the ones who volunteer at the festivals, wake up early on Saturday mornings to attend The Farmers’ Market, take swing-dancing lessons at The ArtsCenter and bring their blankets to stargaze and listen to music on Weaver Street Market’s lawn. “There’s a sense in Carrboro that anything is possible,� Alderwoman Randee Haven O’Donnell said. “We strive to promote a community of social justice in which all feel free to pursue the possible and seemingly impossible, until it’s done.�

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34 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015


Chapel Hill

‘quintessential American college town’

BY JAMICA ASHLEY AND KATIE JANSEN

kjansen@heraldsun.com; 919-419-6675

A

C H A P E L

H I L L

ffectionately known as the “Southern Part of Heaven,” Chapel Hill is a university town with a modern edge and cultural twist. Chapel Hill is a destination for many visiting the Research Triangle Park. With a variety of cultural offerings, eateries and sporting events, Chapel Hill is a unique place where diversity converges. “I describe Chapel Hill as the quintessential American college town,” said Chapel Hill Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt. “We’re a community that grew up around a university. The businesses that are here, the people that are here, the recreation that we engage in has something to do with the university.” The town and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have deep roots, with the town growing out of the needs of the university. Chapel Hill was named after New Hope Chapel, a structure that was on a hill at the crossing of main arteries of the town, where the Carolina Inn now stands. Founded in 1819 but chartered

The Herald-Sun | File photo by Elizabeth Mendoza

The Herald-Sun | File photo by Morgan McCloy

Above, left: Merritt’s Store and Grill hosted a celebration in honor of the store’s history. Merritt’s is considered a Chapel Hill staple restaurant. Above, right: Chris Liloia, habitat gardens curator at the North Carolina Botanical Garden, takes advantage of the nice weather and pulls weeds from the gardens. in 1851, the town began as a series of lots around the first university building that were sold to the highest bidders. When a site was selected for the university, a committee was chosen to lay out the town adjacent to it. By 1859, Chapel Hill covered 820 acres and was bound roughly by Sunset Drive, Penick Lane, Tenney Circle and Gimghoul Road. The town maintained these boundaries for about a century until modern

annexation began in 1950, bringing in Northside School and 275 acres known as the Strowd Hill area. Since 1950, the town has continually grown as a steady rate and is now about 21 square miles. Chapel Hill’s population of more than 59,000 boasts students, UNC faculty and staff, entrepreneurs and business professionals along with retirees from all over the world and native residents. The town has grown into a metropolitan university

town from a turn-of-the-century village. Keeping up with the university’s growth and expansion, Chapel Hill has been working diligently to meet the higher levels of service now needed by citizens and visitors. During a 10-year span, Chapel Hill’s government grew to include parks and recreation, planning, personnel, transportation and the public library. see town/page 37

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Hillsborough an unpretentious‘great place to hang out’ BY JAMICA C. ASHLEY AND KATIE JANSEN

kjansen@heraldsun.com; 919-419-6675

H I L L S B O R O U G H

W

hat was originally the home of Native American villages has grown into a bustling town that remembers and respects its past. Hillsborough is the historic gem nestled in Orange County. “It’s just a friendly and ver y authentic, small-town place to be,” said Mayor Tom Stevens. “It’s the convergence of a remarkable histor y with a memorable place in American histor y.” Before it was renamed, the town was known as Orange and laid out across 400 acres. The town was first laid out by William Churton in 1754 but was redesigned in 1766 and named after Irishman William Hill, Earl of Hillsborough, who was secretar y of state for the colonies under George III. Ser ving as the county seat, Hillsborough has always been a center of political activity. William Hooper, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, called the Orange County town home, as did several royal and elected governors. The town hosted the 3rd Provincial Congress and the state’s Constitutional Convention in 1778. The histor y of Hillsborough is documented on paper but also in architecture. More than 100 buildings and structures in Hillsborough illustrate 18th- and 19th-centur y techniques and architecture, including bridges, mill sites and dams. The town is home to Native American relics that are said to

36 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

The Herald-Sun | Bernard Thomas

Boutiques, shops and restaurants that line Churton Street attract those seeking small-town charm with progressive appeal. date back thousands of years. has been reconstructed behind The trails are also a major part There are several historic sites the Orange County Sheriff’s of the statewide Mountains-toand museums in Hillsborough Office on the banks of the Eno Sea Trail, a conceptual system of that connect the present to the River, and the Old Orange trails that may one day stretch past. The Orange County Visitors County Courthouse is an 1844 from the coast to the Appalachian Center is housed in a late-18thGreek-revival building that was Mountains. centur y Quaker-plan house. The designed and built by John Berr y, The River walk was named as a Bur well School was a school for a local builder. semifinalist in a 2015 competition girls that operated for 20 years There’s a historic fiber “that’s for the title of Great Greenway in beginning in 1837. The school woven in with the natural beauty,” North Carolina. is now a museum that offers Stevens said, with great trails The town also offers several heritage education programs. around town that invite people to gardens and natural areas There are several historic enjoy nature. for people to enjoy, including churches for visitors, At the end of 2014, the town Chatwood Gardens, Montrose including Dickerson Chapel completed construction on a Gardens, Occoneechee Mountain AME Church, Hillsborough River walk system that connects State Natural Area and the Poet’s Presbyterian Church and St. all the town’s trails and allows Walk. Matthew’s Episcopal Church. visitors to walk along the Eno see place/page 38 The Occaneechi Indian Village River.


TOWN From Page 35

Surviving and growing around the university has allowed Chapel Hill to foster learning and the free exchange of ideas, as well as the democratic process among citizens. Kleinschmidt said that someone walking down Franklin Street is as likely to stand beside a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer at a bus stop as they are a Nobel Prize-nominated scientist. “Robust conversation can happen anywhere,� he said. The dynamic population adds to the quaintness of Chapel Hill. The range of cultural and athletic events offered in the town reflects its respect for innovative thinking and its role as a small city in a global community. One way to unite a global

community is through celebrations, and Chapel Hill is no exception. Several festivals are unique to Chapel Hill and allow the town to celebrate various cultures simultaneously. From the Annual Children’s Egg Hunt and ConvergeNC Southern Music Festival to the 140 West Plaza Events series and Festifall Arts Festival, Chapel Hill honors its rich cultural traditions, including music, food and the arts. The town’s dedication to the arts has resulted in a Chapel Hill Public Arts Office and a program that allocates 1 percent of selected capital projects for the creation, construction, installation and maintenance of works of public art. In light of the modernization and growth the town has undergone, there has been a concerted effort to preserve and maintain the natural beauty in the area, including small streams and

wooded vistas. Chapel Hill encourages visitors and residents to enjoy natural splendors and is implementing more than 28 miles of greenways. The greenways already in place connect neighborhoods and commercial areas as well as parks, schools and other destinations throughout town. While serving as buffer zones between urban developments, the greenways also provide a safe travel corridor for local wildlife and help preserve trees and plants. The additional greenways will allow cyclists and pedestrians even more access to Chapel Hill. Residents of Chapel Hill partner with residents of Carrboro to form a Bicycle Coalition and advocate to make the town safer for cyclists and pedestrians alike. In addition to the town’s natural areas, the business sector has also continued to boom. Chapel Hill

was named America’s Foodiest Small Town by Bon AppĂŠtit magazine in 2008, and the food scene has continued to climb from there. Chapel Hill Transit offer fare-free rides for those moving about the town, neighboring Carrboro and UNC. The public transportation system also offers the park and ride option to patrons. Chapel Hill Transit helps people move about the smaller UNC area, but Triangle Transit connects Chapel Hill to the larger Research Triangle Park. UNC also offers park-and-ride lots. Chapel Hill has gained fame beyond its borders as it continues to grow, with the city making several “best ofâ€? lists over the years, including two 2014 distinctions that named the town one of the best college towns and one of the best small cities for singles.

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PLACE From Page 36

Hillsborough has not let its rich history keep it from maturing into a modern town with a vibrant downtown that draws people from across the county. The boutiques, shops and restaurants that line Churton Street attract those seeking small-town charm with progressive appeal. “For people who like to eat, it’s a feast,” said Stevens. “Downtown, there are nine sit-down restaurants. All of these places are locally owned. From the food trucks and the old-fashioned diners to absolutely best-in-thecountry, destination restaurants, Hillsborough has it all.” While Hillsborough is just shy of five square miles, it does provide transit for those needing help getting around town. The Hillsborough Circulator provides loop access throughout town as connectivity to Triangle Transit, the public bus system that connects the Triangle area. The Orange Bus gives rides to elderly citizens in Orange County, and there are three park and ride lots in town. Hillsborough also provides fun for the whole family. Taking advantage of the region’s moderate temperatures throughout much of the year, Hillsborough knows how to have a good time. The town’s attractions contributed to it being named a 2015 semifinalist for America’s Coolest Small Town by Budget Travel magazine. Last Fridays bring artists, musicians, food vendors and craftspeople to the lawn of the Old Orange Courthouse. Along with a film-makers film series and family movie night, this monthly activity is a staple April through September. Pops in the Park brings the

38 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

Durham Symphony Orchestra to Cameron Park for a free outdoor concert in May. Then there’s the biennial Spring Garden Tour hosted by the Alliance for Historic Hillsborough and Hog Day, the town’s largest festival. Even though the Chamber of Commerce decided to stop hosting Hog Day last year, a group of residents with a strong sense of tradition stepped up so the festival could continue for its 32nd year. Hog Day is held the third weekend in May and combines food, music and a barbecue cook-off. Bicyclists get to take over the street with the BikeFest Rural Heritage Tour. Several bike rides allow cyclists to go at their own pace on a 7-mile tour of historic Hillsborough. If four wheels and doors are more appealing than pedal power, there’s the Celebration of the Automobile Car Show and Racers Reunion at the Historic Occoneechee/Orange Speedway Trail, NASCAR’s last remaining dirt track. Aside from its historical presence, Hillsborough is also a literary hub and was recognized as “America’s little literary town” in 2014 by The Wall Street Journal. Considered one of the most literary communities in North Carolina, Hillsborough has almost two dozen well-known writers calling it home including Lee Smith, Jill McCorkle, Allan Gurganus, Frances Mayes, Hal Crowther, Craig Nova and Balazs Szabo. Poets, novelists and short-story writers live and write in the county’s haven for the creative. “The combination of histor y, the natural assets, ar t and music, writers and the wonder ful food, Hillsborough is a great place to hang out,” Stevens said. “It’s not that big. It’s not pretentious but there’s a wealth of strong, solid downtown character.”

The Herald-Sun | Bernard Thomas

Wyatt Harrell gets his face painted at the Picnic in the Park, a Fourth of July celebration in Hillsborough.


Orange County religion from Colonial era to campus BY DAWN BAUMGARTNER VAUGHAN

Holocaust survivor Hal Myers lights a candle in memory of Alice Resch Synnestvedt during the Yom Hashoah Holocaust memorial service at Kehillah Synagogue.

University Baptist Church, at the corner of Franklin and Columbia streets, was founded in 1854 and has been at its current he religious community in Orange location since 1923. The progressive Baptist County dates back to the Colonial era. Little River Presbyterian Church, congregation includes many students and UNC alumni, including longtime pastor Rev. New Hope Presbyterian Church and St. Mitch Simpson, Class of 1972. Members Matthew’s Episcopal Church are all more are of all ages and reflective of many than 250 years old, established before the cultures, Simpson said in an interview Revolutionary War. St. Mary’s Chapel was also founded more than 250 years ago. The last year, including Burmese. The church original building’s foundation stones remain shares its facilities with the Chapel Hill Chinese Christian Church, and University near the chapel cemetery outside historic Hillsborough, and contain headstones from Baptist has a strong relationship with First Baptist Church of Chapel Hill, which is the late 1700s. The chapel doesn’t have a predominately African-American. congregation anymore, but is the site of Walking distance from downtown Chapel an annual homecoming service and the Hill is the small town of Carrboro, where property is maintained. the Kosala Buddhist Center has been for At the other end of the county is Chapel a decade. A nonprofit Buddhist meditation Hill, a college town home to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Downtown center, it is part of the New Kadampa Chapel Hill is lined with shops and see religion/page 49 restaurants but also places of worship.

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The world ofinsports Orange County BY JASON HAWKINS

Teams compete during the spring and summer with a limited range County is home fall season. to many recognized In western Orange County, the collegiate and community Eurosport soccer complex on West recreational sporting venues. Ten road, has grown as a regional From the hallowed hardwood destination for soccer. Here, the bearing the name Smith to the grounds are well groomed and quiet historically resurrected track soccer fields and opportunities at the old Occoneechee Speedway abound, for youth and adult leagues to heated high school rivalries, alike. Orange County offers something Gaining in popularity throughout for every sporting interest. Orange County, specifically in In the spring, fans of the final Hillsborough, is the River Walk. leg for the journey to NCAA men’s This paved meandering along the and women’s basketball enjoy the Eno River will join soon join The madness of March. Yet, this is also Mountain to Sea Trail, linking the a time of recreational transition. N.C. coast and the mountains. In Chapel Hill, the UNC baseball Along this traill, walkers and team takes to the field during a runners and casual inhalers of time when morning frost is still nature can head east or west from possible. Yet, soon the schedule downtown Hillsborough, with the will warm and UNC will rekindle its east trek connecting to Gold Park. annual hope of a march to Omaha, The walking trail has provided area Nebraska for the College Baseball residents and visitors alike with a World Series. walking view of Hillsborough. At Boshamer Stadium, the Heels Residents in and around usuall host excellent marquee Hillsborough have embraced the games against the likes of N.C. idea of walking and running. State, Duke, Miami, Virginia and In Efland, a walking track national powers on the diamond. exists off of Highway 70. In Cedar Boshamer is extremely Grove, residents walk the track of fan-friendly with picturesque the Ruritan Club on Efland Cedar sunsets and the great aromas found Grove Road. In Hillsborough, at baseball parks throughout the the HARES, also known as the country. Hillsborough Running Club, meets While watching baseball is at 6 p.m. Wednesdays and 8 a.m. an intriguing pastime, the act of Sundays at Weaver Street Market, playing baseball abounds through for running 2-mile, 4-mile and a combination of community 6-mile loops open to all ages and recreational teams to traveling skill levels. squads of budding future baseball Also included in the special players. selection of sporting interest In Hillsborough, the Hillsborough in Orange County is the annual Youth Athletic Association offers fishing rodeo, held June 6 at nearly year-round baseball and Strayhorn’s Pond on New Hope softball opportunities for youth Church Road. players from four-years old through middle school. see sports/page 41

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The Herald-Sun | File photo by Bernard Thomas

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Real estate thrives in Orange County BY ALEX DIXON AND LAURA OLENIACZ

could compare.� Orange County is a draw as adixon@heraldsun.com; 919-419-6684 a retirement destination, said D U R H A M Mark Zimmerman, a real estate broker and the owner of RE/MAX fter retiring in what had been a vacation destination Winning Edge in Chapel Hill, and it also attracts home buyers for Joan Call and her to the towns of Chapel Hill and husband Charlie for many years Carrboro because of the Chapel in Florida, they found that living there full time was not the same as Hill-Carrboro City Schools district. The two towns dominate the relaxing there for weeks at a time. county’s real estate market, “I didn’t feel this was the place Zimmerman said. where I wanted to spend the rest Sales in the two towns last of my life,� Call said. year made up 98 percent of the So they set out to find a new 1,628 sales in Orange County place to retire that would be that closed in 2013, according to near universities for cultural and Triangle Multiple Listing Service entertainment opportunities, data in a report from RE/MAX where they’d see tall trees and Winning Edge. all four seasons, and that had a “County data is always driven lower cost of living than what they by Chapel Hill and Carrboro,� were used to in Chicago and in Zimmerman said. Florida. Last year, they moved to Sales in the towns also had Hillsborough. Call said they found a home on a higher median price than the median in a 10-county Triangle a pond, with a screened-in porch region, according to the 2014 and two back decks. They were report. in short driving distance of good The median sales price for health care options, among other the Triangle region in 2014 was benefits. $205,000, while it was $267,000 in “When we saw this place in Hillsborough, it was just, ‘Oh, my Orange County, and $329,500 in God,’� she said. “We saw this place Chapel Hill and Carrboro. early on, and looked at several see thrives/page 43 other properties, and nothing

A The Herald-Sun | Christine T. Nguyen

Tar Heel mascot Rameses cheers during a men’s basketball game at the Smith Center.

SPORTS From Page 40

For decades, this event has allowed youth the opportunity to fish and enjoy free hot dogs as well as introductions to the outdoors. Finally, from spring until late fall, the scenic sites of Orange County are absorbed by a growing contingent of bicycling enthusiasts. Orange County has established a bicycling map that provides ample opportunities to

enjoy the county by bicycle mode, from southern to northern reaches of the county. Spring and summer sports in Orange County vary from college to backyard and community interests to organized recreational play and high school and middle school sporting opportunities for players and fans alike. Orange County has positioned itself to accommodate the growing popularity of community sporting interests. Opportunities abound for athletes of all skill levels and fans, too.

Online Resources http://www.co.orange.nc.us/planning/documents/Att3-OrangeCoBikeMap. pdf www.townofchapelhill.org (recreation link) http://www.co.orange.nc.us/recparks Hillsborough Running Club via Facebook www.goheels.com/SportSelect https://www.facebook.com/ocstrack www.co.orange.nc.us/.../Att3-OrangeCoBikeMap.pdf http://tarheel10miler.com/race-info/resultsphotos/ https://www.facebook.com/Occoneechee5K

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Businesses abound in Orange County BY ALEX DIXON AND LAURA OLENIACZ

adixon@heraldsun.com; 919-419-6684

A

C H A P E L

H I L L

n authentic Turkish meal, handcrafted Italian dishes and coffee from beans roasted on site: Orange County business have drawn international attention and consistently appealed to young and old residents alike. Southern restaurant Crook’s Corner, a Chapel Hill institution for more than 30 years, “is one of the birthplaces of the modern renaissance in Southern cooking” and “reintroduced shrimp and grits to the world,” according to Garden & Gun Magazine. Southern Season, a Chapel Hill gourmet food store, has grown from a small wine and coffee shop to a 60,000 square-foot retailer that has expanded to other cities and ships items across the country through online and catalog ordering. Coffee retailer Carrboro Coffee Roasters sources its beans from around the world, roasts them and sells the product in locations along the East Coast in addition to operating two coffee shops in Orange County: Open Eye Café and Caffe Driade. At Vietri in Hillsborough, Italian tableware and home décor products are imported and sold to retail stores across the U.S. Hillsborough is also home to Sports Endeavors Inc., a retailer of soccer, lacrosse and rugby equipment and clothing, as well as to PHE Inc., the parent company of the adult toys and novelty stores Adam & Eve. PHE started in 1970 as a mail-order contraceptive business, and was an outgrowth

42 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

The Herald-Sun | File photo by Bernard Thomas

The Herald-Sun | File photo by Christine T. Nguyen

Above, left: From left, UNC students Tara O’Connor and Holly Caudill eat dinner at the Mediterranean Deli on West Franklin Street in Chapel Hill. Above, right: Brightly colored ceramic dinnerware is on display at the Vietri outlet store on Elizabeth Brady Road in Hillsborough. of the master’s thesis project of co-founder Phil Harvey, who was then a UNC graduate student. Those companies aren’t the only businesses in Orange County with long histories. The building supply store Fitch Lumber started its full-scale operations in 1945 in the town of Carrboro, although the business got its start in Mebane in 1907, according to the company’s website. Along Franklin Street in Chapel Hill, a number of mom-and-pop operations have been running for years. Sutton’s Drug Store dates to 1923. Ye Olde Waffle Shoppe, also on Franklin Street, dates to 1972. Time-Out, known for its chickenand-cheddar-cheese biscuits and other late-night fare, has been open since 1978 and recently moved locations from West Franklin to East Franklin Street because of the 123 W. Franklin development. There have been concerns that the environment on Franklin Street see businesses/page 47

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THRIVES From Page 41

Zimmerman said renters make up half or more of residents of Chapel Hill and Carrboro, due to the student population. And for the people who are looking to buy single-family homes, the prices start at a higher point, he said. Family-oriented homes range from the high $200,000s up to seven figures, Zimmerman said, with the bulk of them falling in the $400,000 to $600,000 price range. Zimmerman said those homes are in more of a suburban setting, but there is a range of options in and outside Chapel Hill and Carrboro. There are historic homes in parts of Hillsborough and Chapel Hill, condominiums

Dining

in Chapel Hill, apartments and homes in the mixed-use developments of Southern Village and Meadowmont, among other options. Following the recession and recover y, Zimmerman said home sales overall grew in 2012 and last year. In 2013, Orange County sales were up 27.5 percent over 2012 levels. And even though new listings and closed sales were down in 2014 compared to 2013, Zimmerman said that now is a great buying opportunity given the increase in inventor y and he expects an upswing in 2015. According to a Triangle Area Residential Realty report for the fourth quarter and for 2013 that was edited by the Car y-based residential real estate appraiser and market analyst Stacey Anfindsen, closed sales in the Chapel Hill and Carrboro school

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Health care that serves the state T he extensive health care system in Chapel Hill began in September 1952 under the name N.C. Memorial Hospital. Since then, the public, academic medical center has grown to include the Children’s Hospital, Neurosciences Hospital, Women’s Hospital and the Cancer Hospital. UNC Hospitals is the second largest employer in Orange County with a team of 8,190 full-time employees and more than 1,000

attending physicians. In 2012, the Chapel Hill-Carrboro hospitality community welcomed 2.5 million visitors who spent $162 million in the area. Visitors to UNC Health Care contributed to that dollar amount, according to Patty Griffin, communications director for the Chapel Hill/Orange County Visitors Bureau. Each year, UNC Hospitals cares for residents from all 100 North Carolina counties and

several surrounding states. About 30 percent of UNC Hospitals’ patients come from Orange and surrounding counties.

N.C. Cancer Hospital

The state’s only public cancer hospital is home to UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center and receives more than 135,000 patient visits each year. The hospital also offers more than 225 clinical trials of

the latest treatments developed at UNC, and the facility includes 101 examination, treatment, consultation and procedure rooms, as well as state-of-the-art diagnostic imaging equipment.

N.C. Children’s Hospital

The children’s hospital provides care to more than 70,000 children from all 100 N.C. counties each see care/page 45

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CARE

From Page 44

year. The physicians and clinicians represent a variety pediatric subspecialties, and the facility has 150 beds. At the beginning of 2014, the N.C. Children’s Hospital was verified by the American College of Surgeons (ACS) as a Level I pediatric trauma center, the highest verification offered by the ACS Committee on Trauma. It is the first hospital in the Triangle, and one of only two in the state, to receive ACS recognition for having the highest level of expertise in treating critically injured children.

N.C. Neurosciences Hospital

The $43-million facility opened in 1995 and is designed to accommodate the rapid changes occurring in the field of neurosciences, from brain-mapping techniques and gene therapy of head-and-neck to the latest in psychiatric care, according to UNC Health Care. The building includes psychiatry services, research laboratories and expanded inpatient and outpatient clinics for neurology, neurosurgery and otolaryngology, or the treatment of diseases or disorders located in the head and neck.

N.C. Women’s Hospital

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Farms producing a variety of goods call the county home BY ALEX DIXON AND JAMICA ASHLEY

Farmers’ Markets in Orange County

adixon@heraldsun.com; 919-419-6684

W

ith more than 600 farms growing fruits and vegetables or raising livestock, Orange County has a large agricultural presence. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s 2012 Census of Agriculture, Orange County has about 57,000 acres of farmland, with the average farm consisting of 88 acres and resulting in 17,854 acres of harvested cropland. In 2012, hay led in terms of acres harvested with 14,800, followed by soybeans with 2,850 and wheat with 2,100. Cash receipts during the same year were around $31.4 million, with $13.5 million in livestock, dairy and poultry and $15.6 million in crops. Nurseries, greenhouses, floriculture and Christmas tree sales account for a little more than $7.2 million in Orange County. And throughout the county, efforts are made to connect residents with the agriculture around them.

COMMUNITY FARMS

The PLANT Farm Enterprise Incubator is part of N.C. State University’s W.C. Breeze Family Farm Agricultural Extension and Research Center and sits on 269 acres between Hillsborough and Hurdle Mills. Local cooperative extension centers are also partners in the incubation center. The pastoral farmland between the Triad and the Triangle is used to fulfill the need for alternative farming systems like organic or grazing, and to highlight emerging opportunities for farm diversification in the region. The Breeze Family Farm is also integrated with Piedmont Food and Agricultural Processing Center, also in Orange County, for the use of food

46 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

Carrboro Farmers Market 301 W. Main St., Carrboro

Eno River Farmers’ Market 144 E. Margaret Lane, Hillsborough

Chapel Hill Farmers’ Market 201 S. Estes Drive, Chapel Hill

Hillsborough Farmers Market N.C. Highway 86 and Interstate 85, Hillsborough

Efland Farmers Market 3106 U.S. Highway 70, Efland

Southern Village Farmers Market Aberdeen Drive, Chapel Hill

The Herald-Sun | File photo by Christine T. Nguyen

Tomatoes grow in a greenhouse at in Hillsborough is continuing a Flat River Nursery & Farm. more than 250-year downtown market tradition and provides chef entrepreneurs and farmers. demonstrations, arts and crafts, live Another community farm music and storytelling along with its is Transplanting Traditions edible fare. Community Farm, a collaborative The Southern Village Farmers effort between the Orange County Market offers eco-friendly cleaning Partnership for Young Children and products, book signings, greeting the Triangle Land Conservancy cards, pottery and free samples to that provides agricultural and those walking its rows of items. The entrepreneurial education on four Hillsborough Farmers Market has acres to Burmese refugees with been in place for almost 30 years limited resources. and has coffee, custom woodwork, TTCF trains the refugees herbs, marinades, flowers and fresh on sustainable agricultural lavender available. techniques through weekly The year-round Carrboro agriculture workshops while Farmers’ Market is more than 30 honoring their nation’s agricultural years old and is recognized as one of traditions. According to its the best in the nation with an array website, Transplanting Traditions Community Farm “seeks to address of offerings from prepared foods like breads, jams and hot dogs to the challenges of food insecurity, produce, meat and even pottery. healthy food access and economic well being inequity in the refugee and immigrant community.”

FARMERS’ MARKETS

Six farmers’ markets in Orange County provide fresh, locally grown or produced food items and more throughout the year. The markets vary in what they offer depending on the time of year and the availability of the vendors, but the sense of community and alternative living is abundant year-round. The Eno River Farmers’ Market

SPENCE’S FARM

From April through October, the Efland Farmers’ Market calls the Ruritan Club grounds home and provides fresh produce to visitors. The Chapel Hill Farmers’ Market on South Estes Drive began in 2008 when the nonprofit Farmers of Orange decided to create a market by farmers and for farmers. The year-round market in Chapel Hill has a seasonal guest chef and offers events for children the first Saturday of each month.

FARM TOURS

Farms tours have grown in popularity as people show more and more interest in knowing where their food comes from, including how it’s treated before it makes its way to their plate. see farms/page 47

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FARMS From Page 46

At Maple View Farms’ countr y store in Hillsborough, customers can buy dair y items including milk, butter, and homemade ice cream then sit in rocking

BUSINESSES From Page 42

is getting tougher for independent businesses after the closure of restaurants like the long-time Chapel Hill restaurant Pepper’s Pizza. Vimala Ranjendran, the owner of Vimala’s Curryblossom Café in Chapel Hill, had concern about parking availability and high rents. But she also said the business has done well since it opened in 2010 in The Courtyard development on West Franklin Street. The business was an outgrowth of the community dinners she held in her home as part of a desire to feed her family good, local, food. She started inviting the neighbors to share, the dinners started to grow. “My food is cooked exactly like my mother cooked for my family, and how I cooked for my kids in Chapel Hill,” she said. “While the spices are Indian, my food is made with mostly locally-sourced ingredients and sustainably-raised meat.” Despite challenges of business in the town, she said she loves Chapel Hill. She also said she’s been able to build connections with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, helping to advise student groups with their catering needs. In addition to Vimala’s, newer restaurants have popped up in Chapel Hill including Kipos, a Greek restaurant by the established Triangle restaurant Giorgios Baktasias, which opened in 2013, and CholaNad, a restaurant and bar serving contemporary southern Indian food that opened in 2012.

chairs and look out over the nearby farmland and grazing cows whose milk goes into the product. The Annual Piedmont Farm Tour in April takes visitors to farms throughout the Piedmont region and allows them to see modern farming up close. The annual event is sponsored by

the Carolina Farm Scholarship Association and the Weaver Street Market in Carrboro. The 20th annual farm tour takes place this year and Avillion Farm in Efland, Coon Rock Farm in Hillsborough and the Chapel Hill Creamer y are among the farms in Orange County included on the tour.

Other farms across Orange County offer tours to visitors including Merr y Hill in Mebane, Genesis Farm in Chapel Hill and Fickle Creek Farm in Efland. Offering agriculture tours to children and college students, several farm tours are available to the general public to give an inside peek at modern farming.

And some businesses on Franklin Street see a trade-off between the high rents and the high traffic from the students at UNC. After Qdoba closed in the fall of 2014 at 100 W. Franklin St., Greek-Lebanese fusion restaurant Jasmin Mediterranean Bistro announced plans to fill the space. “I don’t see (a) reason why we won’t succeed it Chapel Hill, except (for the) high rent,” said Jasmin’s owner Nawwaf Said. Chapel Hill has also added to its retail-space landscape with several new buildings that include residential as well as retail space, including condo and apartment residential buildings said Barry Jacobs, an Orange County commissioner. And Jacobs said that with more people living downtown, there will be more support for retail businesses. Jacobs believes that the small-business scenes in Hillsborough and Carrboro are “thriving.” He noted the opening of the first phase of a new development 300 East Main in Carrboro that brought a parking deck and Hampton Inn hotel to the town. The development is also bringing in retail shops and restaurants, including Tom and Chee, a chain focused on grilled cheese and tomato soup, and CalaVela, an empanadas and tequila bar. In addition, Carrboro is also home to existing businesses such as Weaver Street Market, a cooperative grocery store that first opened in the town in 1988 and has since expanded with locations in Hillsborough and in Chapel Hill’s Southern Village, and many acclaimed restaurants such as Acme Food and Beverage Co. and

Neal’s Deli. Carrboro is also home to the Southern Rail, a restaurant and bar in a building that combines restored railroad cars. It’s immediately adjacent to a music venue and bar in a renovated train depot building called the Station. Small businesses in Hillsborough range from The Wooden Nickel, a pub that opened in Hillsborough in 2003, to the town’s chocolate shop Matthew’s Chocolates on the same street. On top of the existing business base, county and other officials have

worked to bring new businesses to Orange County as well. In Orange County near Mebane, the Japanese candy company Morinaga plans to start production this month at its first U.S. manufacturing plant. And town, county and university officials partnered to help foster the growth of new start-up companies with the opening of the business accelerator program Launch Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill. In Hillsborough, the Piedmont Food & Agriculture Processing Center is helping small food-and-agriculture-based companies to get on their feet.

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Plan includes light rail and bus service

I

n the early summer of 2012, the Orange County Board of County Commissioners, Durham-Chapel Hill-Carrboro Metropolitan Planning Organization (DCHC MPO) and Triangle Transit Board of Trustees approved the Orange County Bus and Rail Investment Plan (often called the Transit Plan). This progress report highlights some of the advancements made in the implementation of the Transit Plan since that time.

Goals of the Orange County Transit Plan

• Improve overall mobility and transportation options in the region • Provide geographic equity • Support improved capital facilities • Support local land use and development plans

• Provide positive impacts on air quality Strategies to accomplish these goals include: 1. New bus services locally, throughout the county, and across the region that: • Improve connectivity • Increase frequency in peak hours • Improve weekend, night services (off peak) • Enhance existing services • Maintain existing services • Maintain level of local funding at no less than the August1, 2009 spending level; 2. An Amtrak train station in the town of Hillsborough 3. Enhanced bus service on MLK Boulevard in Chapel Hill 4. A 17-mile light rail connection from Chapel Hill to Durham.

Bus Service

Orange County and Triangle Transit are working cooperatively to refine a bus service expansion program for central and northern Orange County to meet growing needs for local and regional transit travel. Some of these services area already in operation. Over the next five years, Chapel Hill Transit, Orange Public Transportation, and Triangle Transit will implement new or expanded bus services. Residents will also see new bus shelters, park-and-ride lots and sidewalk connections to bus stops.

Durham-Orange Light Rail Project

Planning work continues on the proposed 17-mile Durham/ Orange Light Rail Transit

Project that would connect East Durham, through downtown Durham to Chapel Hill and UNC Hospital. The Federal Transit Administration recently approved Triangle Transit’s request to start the next phase of called project development. This two-year phase will allow for Triangle Transit to work with partners and stakeholders to identify and resolve issues as they work to complete an intensive environmental study of the proposed corridor. Planning and Engineering work on the light rail project has been is being funded through the Transit Plan revenues including the voter-approved one-half cent sales tax for transit. Construction could begin by 2021 with operations underway in 2026. For more information on the Durham-Orange light rail project, please visit ourtransitfuture.com.

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RELIGION From Page 39

tradition. Chapel Hill is also home to a Jewish synagogue, the Chapel Hill Kehillah, whose denomination is Reconstructionist. The Levin Jewish Community Center in Durham serves both the Durham and Chapel Hill communities, as does the Jewish Federation of Durham-Chapel Hill. Another Jewish denomination, Chabad, serves both Chapel Hill and Durham, holding several events on campus. Led by Rabbi Zalman Bluming, Chabad hosts several public educational events and celebrations throughout the year. The Rev. Brooks Graebner, longtime rector of St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church in Hillsborough, knows much about the church history of Orange County. Graebner said last year that as the county changed over time, so did the religious makeup as “In the latter half of the 20th century new congregations started and separate African-Amerespecially, as the population of the ican denominations were county grew not only in number but created after the Civil War. also in diversity, more denominations Graebner listed Dickerson Chapel AME Church, Mt. and more religions took home in Bright Missionary Baptist Orange County, so that one can now Church and St. Paul AME find Roman Catholics, Jews, Bahais, Church as examples. St. Paul Buddhists, Unitarians and many other AME celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2014 with faiths, along with an increasing special events and a diversity of Protestant denominations.” several commemorative book. “In the latter half of the — The Rev. Brooks Graebner 20th century especially, as rector of St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church the population of the county grew not only in number but also in diversity, more denominations and more religions took home in Orange County, so that one can now find Roman Catholics, Jews, Bahais, Buddhists, Unitarians and many other faiths, along with an increasing diversity of Protestant denominations,” Graebner said. St. Thomas More Catholic Church and St. Thomas More Catholic School are adjacent to each other and serve a large Catholic community of parishioners and students in Chapel Hill and beyond. The church and school have been active in the community, including flood relief for Carrboro residents and Christmas gift donations to students in West Virginia coal mining country.

The Herald-Sun | File photo by Dawn Baumgartner Vaughan

Little River Presbyterian Church’s current brick building was constructed in the 1940s over the 1890 wooden structure, which lies between the bricks and sheetrock. The cemetery dates to 1788.

EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

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Worship in Orange County 1. Abundant Life Church 512 US 70 Hwy E. Hillsborough 919-732-646 abundantlifechurch.com 2. Advent Lutheran Church LCMS 230 Erwin Road Chapel Hill 919-9687690 adventlutheranch.org 3. Aldersgate United Methodist Church 632 Laurel Hill Road Chapel Hill 919-968-6231 gbgm-umc.org 4. Alpha International ChurchChrist 352 Faucette Mill Road Hillsborough 919-245-0483 5. Alston Grove Christian Church 5201 Old Greensboro Road Chapel Hill 919-968-3355 https://www.facebook. com/pages/Alston-Grove-ChristianChurch/113169165373090 6. Amity United Methodist Church 825 N Estes Dr Chapel Hill 919967-7546 amityumc.org 7. Antioch Baptist Church 1707 White Cross Rd Chapel Hill 919-9292230 abccommunity.com 8. Bahai Faith 307 Westbrook Dr Carrboro 919-929-3331 bahai.org 9. Barbee’s Chapel Baptist Church 54916 Barbee Chapel Rd Chapel Hill 919-967-4586 https://www.facebook. com/pages/Barbees-Chapel-BaptistChurch/111792225523638 10. Bethel Baptist Church 9326 Bethel Hickory Grove Church Rd Chapel Hill 919-929-5511 https://www. facebook.com/pages/Bethel-BaptistChurch/105029969539731 11. Calvander Church 215 Eubanks Rd Chapel Hill 919-960-8606 http:// www.calvanderchurch.org/ 12. Calvary Baptist Church 1000 W Main St Carrboro 919-942-2653 calvarychurchcarrboro.org 13. Calvary Baptist Church 522 W Hill Ave N Hillsborough 919-732-1090 http://www.calvarybaptistcarrboro. com/ 14. Calvary Chapel of Chapel Hill 1129 Weaver Dairy Rd Chapel Hill 919932-4733 calvarychapelchapelhill.org

50 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

15. Cane Creek Baptist Church 6901 Orange Grove Rd Hillsborough 919-967-2876 canecreek.org 16. Carrboro First Church of God 102 Boyd St Carrboro 919-929-1733 churchofgod.org 17. Carrboro United Methodist Church 200 Hillsborough Rd Carrboro 919-942-1223 www.carrboroumc.net 18. Cedar Grove UMC 5218 EflandCedar Grove Road Cedar Grove 919732-8405 cedargroveumc.net 19. Celebration Assembly of God 114 Weaver Dairy Rd Chapel Hill 919968-3455 caog.com 20. Chapel Hill Bible Church 260 Erwin Rd Chapel Hill 919-408-0310 biblechurch.org 21. Chapel Hill Friends Meeting 531 Raleigh Rd Chapel Hill 919-9295377 chapelhillfriends.org 22. Chapel in the Pines Presbyterian Church (USA) 314 Great Ridge Pkwy Chapel Hill 919-960-0616 citppc.org 23. Chestnut Ridge UMC 3505 Chestnut Ridge Church Rd Efland 919563-5108 crumc-nc.org 24. Christ UMC 800 Market St Chapel Hill 919-969-8820 christmethodist.org 25. Church of God 2412 NC Hwy 86 N Hillsborough 919-732-5683 churchofgod.org 26. Church of God of Prophecy 2334 Blair Dr Hillsborough 919-7326604 27. Church Of Reconciliation Presbyterian Church (USA) 110 Elliott Rd Chapel Hill 919-929-2127 churchrec. org 28. Church of the Harvest 100-A Hillview St Carrboro 919-933-0778 cotharvest.org 29. Church of the Holy Family 200 Hayes Rd Chapel Hill 919-942-3108 chfepiscopal.org 30. Community Church of Chapel

Hill Unitarian Universalist 106 Purefoy Rd Chapel Hill 919-942-2050 c3huua.nc.uua.org 31. Damascus Congregational Christian Church 522 Damascus Church Rd Chapel Hill 919-929-7123 https://www.facebook.com/pages/ Damascus-Congregational-ChristianChurch/115628935133018 32. Deliverance Tabernacle Fellowship Church 1703 Legion Rd Ste 101 Chapel Hill 919-969-0025 33. Deliverance Tabernacle Fellowship Church 3907 Bivins Rd Hillsborough 919-477-6724 https://www.facebook.com/pages/ Deliverance-Tabernacle-FellowshipChurch/100858823292079 34. Deliverance Tabernacle Fellowship Church 429 Bivins Rd

Hillsborough 919-479-9814 35. Dickerson Chapel AME Church 100 E Queen St. Hillsborough 919-732-3050 https://www.facebook. com/pages/Dickerson-Chapel-AmeChurch/120051641341203 36. Ebenezer Baptist Church 1210 Pleasant Green Rd Hillsborough 919-3836668 ebenezeronline.net 37. Efland Presbyterian Church 3700 U.S. 70 Efland 919-644-0420 https:// www.pcusa.org/congregations/21321/ 38. Efland United Methodist Church 3418 US 70 Efland 919-732-7957 eflandumc.org 39. Endtime Revival Center 1621 Purefoy Dr Chapel Hill 919932-6133 https://www.facebook. com/pages/Endtime-RevivalCenter/120358827980564

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Worship in Orange County 40. Eno United Methodist Church 903 Eno St Hillsborough 919-967-1523 https://www.facebook. com/pages/Eno-United-MethodistChurch/72608206771 41. Ephesus Baptist Church 1495 Ephesus Church Rd Chapel Hill 919489-4483 ephesusbaptistchurch.org 42. Evergreen United Methodist Church 11098 US 15-501 N Chapel Hill 919-968-0198 evergreen-umc.org 43. Fairview Baptist Church 600 Cornelius St Hillsborough 919-7323571 fairviewbaptistonline.org 44. Faith Tabernacle Oasis of Love International Church 8005 Rogers Rd Chapel Hill 919-967-8667 faithtabernacleolc.org 45. First Baptist Church 106 N Roberson St Chapel Hill 919-942-2509 firstbaptistchurch-chapelhill.org 46. First Baptist Church 201 W King St Hillsborough 919-732-8174 fbchillsborough.org 47. First Church of Christ, Scientist 1300 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd Chapel Hill 919-942-6456 cschapelhill.org 48. First Community Baptist Church 509 Eno St Hillsborough 919732-6135 firstcommunitymbc.org 49. Flat Rock AME Church 919 New Sharon Church Rd Hillsborough 919-732-4798 flatrockamechurch.com 50. Gaines Chapel AME Church 4024 US Hwy 70 W Efland 919-5635648 https://www.facebook.com/ gaineschapelefland 51. Gospel Baptist Tabernacle 2646 Orange Grove Rd Chapel Hill 919732-2786 gospelbaptisttabernacle. weebly.com 52. Grace Church 200 Sage Rd Chapel Hill 919-968-4328 gracelife.com 53. Grace Hill Church 515 Meadowland Dr Hillsborough 919-5932169 gracehill.info 54. Grace Independent Baptist Church 9922 NC Hwy 86 N Cedar Grove 336-562-4722 https://www.

facebook.com/pages/GraceBaptist-Church-of-Cedar-GroveNC/110485815706634 55. Hillsborough Presbyterian Church 102 W Tryon St Hillsborough 919-732-3131 hillsboroughpres.org 56. Hillsborough Seventh Day Church 1808 NC Hwy 86 N Hillsborough 919-732-5275 http:// www.hillsboroughadventist.org/ 57. Hillsborough United Church of Christ 200 Davis Road Hillsborough 919-732-9183 hucc.org‎ 58. Hillsborough United Methodist Church 130 W Tryon St. Hillsborough 919-732-3460 humchurch.org 59. HillSong Church 201 Culbreth Road Chapel Hill 919-967-3056 hillsong.org 60. Holy Family Catholic Church 216 Governor Burke Road Hillsborough 919-732-1030 http://hfcch.org/ 61. Holy Trinity Lutheran Church 300 E. Rosemary St. Chapel Hill 919942-2678 holytrinitychapelhill.org 62. Jehovah’s Witnesses 127 Estes Drive Extension Carrboro 919-9294881 https://www.facebook.com/ pages/Kingdom-Hall-of-JehovahsWitnesses/117639928255618 63. Kehillah Synagogue 1200 Mason Farm Road Chapel Hill 919-9438914 kehillahsynagogue.org 64. Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses 518 Dumont Drive Hillsborough 919-732-2773 https://www.facebook.com/ pages/Kingdom-Hall-of-JehovahsWitnesses/117284474956637 65. Lawrence Road Baptist Church 1901 Lawrence Road Hillsborough 919-732-9193 lawrenceroadbaptist.com 66. Lighthouse Baptist Church 12063 U.S. 15-501 N. Chapel Hill 919967-3680 lighthouse15501.com 67. Love Chapel Hill 7326 Sunrise Road Chapel Hill 919-489-8413 lovechapelhill.com

68. Mars Hill Baptist Church 1418 N.C. 57 Hillsborough 919-732-2041 marshillbaptistchurch.org 69. McCoy’s Temple UHC 204 Tinnin Road Efland 919-5632260 https://www.facebook. com/pages/McCoys-Temple-UH-C/167947426550389 70. Mebane’s Chapel Holy Church 421 W Union St. Hillsborough 919-7324772 mebaneschapeluhc.com 71. Mission Bautista Monte Carmelo Baptist Church 1201 Jack Bennett Road Chapel Hill 919-5936135 http://www.faithstreet.com/ church/mision-bautista-montecarmelo-baptist-church-chapel-hill-nc 72. Mount Carmel Church 2016 Mt. Carmel Church Road Chapel Hill 919-933-8565 mount-carmel-baptist. org 73. Mount Moriah Baptist Church 549 Erwin Road Chapel Hill 919-4893425 mymtmoriah.com 74. Mt. Bright Baptist Church 211 W. Union St. Hillsborough 919732-4789 https://www.facebook.com/ pages/Mt-Brigth-Baptist-Church/12090 9107920617?rf=281465678626943 75. Mt. Zion AME Church 5124 N.C. Hwy 86 N. Hillsborough 919-7325450 76. New Goloka 1032 Dimmocks Mill Road Hillsborough 919-732-6492 newgoloka.com

77. New Hope Church of the Nazarene 3603 N.C. Hwy 86 N. Hillsborough 919-644-1127 http:// www.newhopenazarene.org/ 78. New Hope Presbyterian Church 4701 N.C. Hwy 86 N. Chapel Hill 919-942-4710 newhopepresusa. org 79. New Sharon United Methodist 1601 New Sharon Church Road Hillsborough 919-732-5144 newsharonunitedmethodist.org 80. Newman Catholic Student Center Parish 218 Pittsboro St. Chapel Hill 919-942-8471 newman-chapelhill. org 81. O’Bryant Chapel AME Zion 509 Chapel St. Chapel Hill 919-9292786 https://www.facebook.com/ pages/O-Bryant-Chapel-Ame-ZionChurch/111569108882939 82. Olin T Binkley Memorial Baptist Church 1712 Willow Drive Chapel Hill 919-942-4964 binkleychurch.org 83. Orange Cross Roads Missionary Baptist Church 1920 Orange Xroad Church Road Hillsborough 919732-6297 orangecrossroads missionarybaptistchurch.com 84. Palmer’s Grove United Methodist Church 1211 Palmers Grove Church Road Hillsborough 919644-1866 palmersgroveumc.org

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Medical Doctors Worship in Orange County in Orange County 85. Piney Grove Missionary Baptist Church 1929 Piney Grove Church Road Hillsborough 919-732-9706 pineygrovembc.org 86. Second Baptist Church 114 S Graham St. Chapel Hill 919-942-2953 https://www.facebook.com/pages/SecondBaptist-Church/111541375551846 87. St Joseph Christian Methodist Church 510 W Rosemary St. Chapel Hill 919-929-1116 saintjosephcme.com 88. St Matthew’s Episcopal Church 210 St. Marys Road Hillsborough 919-732-9308 stmatthewshillsborough.org 89. St Thomas More Church 940 Carmichael St. Chapel Hill 919-942-1040 church.st-thomasmore.org 90. St. Benedict’s Anglican Church 870 Weaver Dairy Road Chapel Hill 919-933-0956 saintbenedicts.net 91. St. John Holy Church 607 Pine Acres Road Chapel Hill 919-967-2318 https://www.facebook.com/pages/St-John-HolyChurch/111950418841837 92. Sunrise Church 1315 New Hope Trace Chapel Hill 919929-4673 sunrisechurchnc.org 93. Temple of Truth United Holy Church 113 New Sharon Church Road Hillsborough 919-643-0201 94. The Chapel of the Cross 304 E Franklin St. Chapel Hill 919-929-2193 thechapelofthecross.org 95. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 1050 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd. Chapel Hill 919-967-0986 lds.org 96. Transforming Love Community 400 S Elliott Road, Suite A1 Chapel Hill 919-990-1336 transforminglovecommunity.com 97. Triangle Church of Christ 5510 Barbee Chapel Road Chapel Hill 919-929-0437 trianglechurchofchrist.org 98. Union Grove Church 6407 Union Grove Church Road Hillsborough 919-967-1523 uniongroveumc.org 99. Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Hillsborough 1710 Old N.C. Hwy 10 Hillsborough 919-644-0567 uuchnc.org 100. United Church of Chapel Hill UCC 1321 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd. Chapel Hill 919-942-3540 unitedchurch.org 101. University Baptist Church 100 S. Columbia St. Chapel Hill 919-942-2157 ubc-ch.org 102. University Presbyterian Church 209 E. Franklin St. Chapel Hill 919-929-2102 upcch.org 103. University United Methodist 150 E. Franklin St. Chapel Hill 919-929-7191 chapelhilluumc.org 104. Wayside Baptist Church U.S. Hwy 70A E. at U.S. Hwy 70 E Hillsborough 919-732-8507 wbchillsborough.com 105. Welcome Baptist Church 3100 New Sharon Church Road Hillsborough 919-245-0149 welcomebaptistchurch.net 106. West Hill Baptist Church 209 Jones Ave. Hillsborough 919-732-4008 westhillbaptist.org 107. White Rock United Holy Church 932 White Rock Church Road Chapel Hill 919-933-0593 whiterockuhc.org

52 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

ALPHABATIZED BY LAST NAME, LIST IS COMPILED FROM A SEARCH OF GENERAL PRACTICE PHYSICIANS REGISTERED IN ORANGE COUNTY AS REPORTED BY THE NORTH CAROLINA MEDICAL BOARD. Asher, Gary Norman UNC Chapel Hill Wm B Aycock Bldg Dept of Family Med Manning Dr, CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Ashkin, Evan Arthur UNC Chapel Hill Family Medicine Center 590 Manning Drive, CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Axelbank, Arthur Orange Family Medical Group 210 S Cameron Street Hillsborough, NC 27278 Aycock, Ngwe AchiriMofor University of North Carolina Hospitals OGME/Room 1107-G 101 Manning Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Bankaitis, Lee Anne Comprehensive Family Medicine 1717 Legion Rd, Ste 103 Chapel Hill, NC 27517 Barnhouse, Kathleen Knesper University of NC Chapel Hill Dept of Family Practice CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Becker-Dreps, Sylvia Irene Piedmont Health Services 299 Lloyd Street Carrboro, NC 27510 Bowen, Laura Madeline Orange Family Medical Group

210 S. Cameron Street Hillsborough, NC 27278

Brickner, Thomas Eugene UNC Chapel Hill Campus Health Center CB 7470 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Bunn, Kellie Ann Chapel Hill Primary Care Boyd Hall 55 Vilcom Center Dr, Ste 110 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Carlough, Martha Christine University of North Carolina Dept of Family Medicine Manning Dr, CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Chai, Chanhthevy Sourisak UNC Chapel Hill James A. Taylor Campus Health Srv. CB 7470 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7470 Coeytaux, Remy Rene Chapel Hill Primary Care 55 Vilcom Center Dr, Ste 110 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Crim, Chad David Duke Primary Care Hillsborough 267 S. Churton Street Hillsborough, NC 27278 Crummett, Daniel David Duke Primary Care Hillsborough 267 S Churton St Hillsborough, NC 27278-2104 Daaleman, Timothy Paul UNC Chapel Hill Dept of Family Medicine Manning Drive, CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595


Medical Doctors in Orange County Dancel, Rex Drapete Duke Primary Care Meadowmont 801 W Barbee Chapel Road Suite 200 Chapel Hill, NC 27517 Daugird, Allen Joe UNC Family Practice Center Manning Drive CB 7586 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7586 Dechow, Denise Daum UNC Campus Health Services CB 7470 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7470 Denham, Amy Catherine UNC Dept of Family Medicine Manning Drive CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Denniston, Clark Rohwer UNC School of Medicine Dept of Family Medicine CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 DeVries, Abigail Greiner Carrboro Community Health Center 301 Lloyd Street Carrboro, NC 27510 Donahue, Katrina Erika P. UNC Chapel Hill, Family Medicine 590 Manning Drive CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Dore, Katie Brocksmith Jenny Franczak, MC PLLC 1829 E Franklin St, Ste 700B Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Edwards, R. Elizabeth Carrboro Family Medicine Center 610 Jones Ferry Rd

Suite 102 Carrboro, NC 27510 Eisen, Mark Joshua 900 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd, Ste A Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Farahi, Narges UNC Dept of Family Medicine University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Fedoriw, Kelly Bossenbroek UNC Dept of Family Medicine 590 Manning Dr CB 9575 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Forbes, Karolyn Beth Carrboro Community Health Center 301 Lloyd Street Carrboro, NC 27510 Fowler, Natalie Logan Carrboro Community Health Center 301 Lloyd Street Carrboro, NC 27510 Fowler, Natalie Logan Piedmont Health Services 299 Lloyd Street Carrboro, NC 27510 Fox, Laurie Judith Piedmonth Health Services 301 Lloyd St Carrboro, NC 27510 Franczak, Jenny Elizabeth Jenny Franczak, MD, PLLC 1829 E. Franklin St., Ste. 700B Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Furman, Jeffrey William Jeffrey W. Furman, MD PLLC

120 Conner Dr, Ste 200 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 George, Sionne Anhelicia Cid Piedmont Health Services 299 Lloyd Street Carrboro, NC 27510 Goldstein, Adam Oliver UNC School of Medicine CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Gourlay, Margaret Lee UNC Health CareFamily Medicine William Aycock Bldg 101 Manning Dr, CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599

Guiteras, George Patrick G. Patrick Guiteras, PLLC 120 Conner Dr, Ste 200 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Gwynne, Mark David UNC Chapel Hill Dept of Family Medicine 590 Manning Drive CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Gwyther, Robert Edwin UNC Chapel Hill Dept of Family Medicine CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595

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EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

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Medical Doctors in Orange County Hannapel, Andrew Christopher University of NC at Chapel Hill Dept of Family Med 590 Manning Dr, CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Haswell, Betty Jo The Family Doctor 151 Rams Plaza Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Helton, Margaret Rose UNC School of Medicine CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 House, Laura Klatt UNC Dept of Family Medicine 590 Manning Drive CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Huin, Alexandre Walter Duke Primary Care Timberlyne Dawson Hall 77 Vilcom Dr, Ste 200 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Ingledue, Vickie Fowler UNC Department of Family Medicine 590 Manning Drive CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Jagust, Mortimer 250 S. Estes Drive Suite 44 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Johnson, Mark Powell Orange Family Medical Group 210 S. Cameron St. Hillsborough, NC 27278 Johnson, Victoria Gwynn Orange Family Medical Group 210 S Cameron St Hillsborough, NC 27278

54 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

Kistler, Christine Elizabeth UNC Family Medicine CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Klein, Carol Lynn Carrboro Community Health Center 301 Lloyd St Carrboro, NC 27510-1823 Klein, Jonathan Edan Orange Family Medical Group 210 S Cameron St Hillsborough, NC 27278 Komives, Eugenie Marie Duke Primary Care Hillsborough 267 S. Churton St. Hillsborough, NC 27278 Koonce, Thomas Fredrick UNC Dept of Family Medicine Manning Dr CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Laney, Jr. Ronald Buren UNC Urgent Care 6013 Farrington Road, Suite 101 Chapel Hill, NC 27517 Lingley, Lauren Hoskins UNC Family Medicine at Hillsborough 2201 Old Hwy 86 Hillsborough, NC 27278

McClester, Mallory Jean University of North Carolina Hospitals OGME/Room 1107-G 101 Manning Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Merinar, Audrey Lynn UNC Dept of Surgery Burnett Womack Bldg CB 7206 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7206 Messick, Mark Andrew Duke Primary Care Timberlyne 77 Vilcom Cir, Ste 200 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Monaco, Julie Ann UNC Family Practice Center 590 Manning Dr. Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Mounsey, Anne Leathes UNC Family Medicine Manning Drive CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Neumann, Iliana Angelica University of North Carolina Hospitals 590 Manning Dr Chapel Hill, NC 27599

Luyando, Yvonne Duke Primary Care Timberlyne 77 Vilcom Circle Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Neutze, Dana Michelle University Of North Carolina Hospitals CB 7595 590 Manning Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Manor, James Peter Carrboro Family Medicine Center, P.A. 610 Jones Ferry Rd Suite 102 Carrboro, NC 27510-2157

Newton, Warren Polk UNC Family Medicine Center William B Aycock Bldg, 590 Manning Dr. CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595

Nowicki, Donna Meiwen Planned Parenthood of Central NC 1765 Dobbins Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Orendorff, Rebecca Lynn Duke Primary Care Hillsborough 267 South Churton Street Hillsborough, NC 27278 Owens, Leanne Whaley Duke Primary Care of Hillsborough 267 S Churton St, Ste 100 Hillsborough, NC 27278 Page, Cristen Parker UNC Family Practice Center CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27517-7595 Passannante, Mary Louise Orange Family Medical Group 210 S Cameron St Hillsborough, NC 27278 Patel, Depesh Kanaiyalal UNC Chapel Hill CHS CB 7470 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7470 Pathman, Donald Earl UNC Family Medicine Center Carolina Campus CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Potter, Joan Garska UNC Chapel Hill Campus Health Services James A Taylor Bldg, CB 7470 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7470 Rapaport, Sonia Aviva Haven Medical 121 S Estes Dr, Ste 205D Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Rayala, Brian Zaguirre UNC Family Medicine Center 590 Manning Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7586


Medical Doctors in Orange County Reddy, Vinay Chintala UNC Hospitals 590 Manning Dr Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Ringel, Sarah Cornwell Duke Primary Care Hillsborough 267 S Churton St., Ste 100 Hillsborough, NC 27278 Rizzolo, Peter Joseph 2021 S Lakeshore Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Ro, Sarah Jean Chapel Hill Primary Care 55 Vilcom Center Dr, Ste 110 Chapel Hill, NC 27514-1690 Sandbulte, Zachary W University of North Carolina Hospitals OGME/Room 1107-G 101 Manning Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Sander, Margie Catherine Ebbing Comprehensive Family Medicine 1717 Legion Rd, Ste 103 Chapel Hill, NC 27517 Satter, Jane Duke Primary Care Hillsborough 267 S. Churton St, Ste 100 Hillsborough, NC 27278

Slatkoff, Susan Faith UNC Dept of Family Medicine Wm B Aycock Bldg, Manning Dr CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595

Stetson, Margaret Ann Duke Primary Care-Timberlyne Dawson Hall 77 Vilcom Dr, Ste 200 Chapel Hill, NC 27514-1595

West, Anne Jungran Duke Primary Care Timberlyne Dawson Hall 77 Vilcom Dr, Ste 200 Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Sloane, Philip David University of North Carolina Dept of Family Medicine CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595

Thomas, Gayle Beth UNC Family Medicine 590 Manning Rd Chapel Hill, NC 27599

Wilber, Joseph Stettner Duke Primary Care - Timberlyne Dawson Hall 77 Vilcom Cir, Ste 200 Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Tobin, Rebecca Brown Comprehensive Family Medicine 1717 Legion Road Suite 103 Chapel Hill, NC 27517

Wilks, Bruce Evan Carrboro Family Medicine 610 Jones Ferry Rd Suite 102 Carrboro, NC 27510-2165

Sonis, Jeffrey Hal UNC Chapel Hill Dept of Family Medicine Manning Dr, CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Sonnenschein, Jason Carrboro CHC 301 Lloyd St Carrboro, NC 27510 Spanos, Alan Alan Spanos MD 200-A Franklin Sq 1829 E Franklin St Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Spencer, Donald Charles UNC Family Practice Center Manning Drive CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595

Shapley-Quinn, Todd Wesley Hillsborough Family Practice 267 S. Churton St., Ste 100 Hillsborough, NC 27278

Stanford, Joseph Barney University of North Carolina 308F University Square East 123 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill, NC 27516-2524

Singer, Francis Philip G. UNC Family Medicine At Hillsborough 2201 Old NC Highway 86 Hillsborough, NC 27278

Stapleton, Dr. Shaina Better Hearing Rehabilitaion Center 14 Consultant Place Suite 220 Durham, NC 27707

Vaillancourt, Anne Therase The Family Doctor 151 Rams Plaza 1728 Fordham Blvd Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Viera, Anthony Joseph UNC Chapel Hill Family Medicine CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595 Vines, Dain Edsel Family Centered Healthcare 1814 Becketts Ridge Drive PO Box 1119 Hillsborough, NC 27278 Wang, Tracy Carole Watson UNC PM&R 101 Manning Dr. Main Hosp. N1181 CB 7200 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Weir, Samuel Stucker UNC Family Medicine Center 590 Manning Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Williams, Katrina Marie The Family Doctor 1728 Fordham Blvd Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Williams, Kia Jeanell UNC-Family Medicine at Hillsborough 2201 Old NC Hwy 86 Hillsborough, NC 27278 Withrow, Glenn Ashley 151 Rams Plaza 1728 Fordham Blvd Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Yang, Helen Wen Synergy Family Medicine PA 122 Timberhill Place Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Yu, Rupal Lakhani Carrboro Community Health Center 301 Lloyd Street Carrboro, NC 27510 Zolotor, Adam Jason UNC Chapel Hill UNC Family Practice Center Manning Dr, CB 7595 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7595

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OB-GYNs in Orange County ALPHABATIZED BY LAST NAME, LIST IS COMPILED FROM A SEARCH OF OBGYN PHYSICIANS REGISTERED IN ORANGE COUNTY AS REPORTED BY THE NORTH CAROLINA MEDICAL BOARD. Armstrong, Don Michael UNC Chapel Hill 3027 Old Clinic Bldg CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 Berger, Gary Sterling Gary S Berger MD, PA 109 Conner Drive Suite 2202 Chapel Hill, NC 27514-7042 Biermann, Jennifer Alice Planned Parenthood 1765 Dobbins Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Brewster, Wendy Rosamund UNC Chapel Hill Dept of ObGyn/Div of Gynecologic Oncology B103 Physicians Office Bldg, 170 Manning Dr Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Clark, Karen Harrell Karen Clark MD, Gynecology PLLC 55 Vilcom Center Drive Suite 110 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Clark, Vivian Elizabeth Chapel Hill Ob/Gyn 120 Conner Dr, Ste 101 Chapel Hill, NC 27514-7083

56 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

Clarke-Pearson, Daniel Lyle University of North Carolina Div of Gyn Oncology 3009 Old Clinic Bldg, CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 Danvers, Antoinette Annmarie UNC Hospitals 101 Manning Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514 De La Cruz, Jacquia Fenderson UNC Hospitals 101 Manning Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Dicker, Elizabeth Mary Planned Parenthood of Central NC 1765 Dobbins Drive Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Dingfelder, James Ray 180 Providence Rd Suite 3 Chapel Hill, NC 27514-2206 Dotters-Katz, Sarah Kathleen UNC Chapel Hill Medical Center 3009 Old Clinic CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599

PO Box 3317 Chapel Hill, NC 27515-3317 Fritz, Marc Anthony UNC School of Medicine Dept of Obstetrics & Gynecology 4001 Old Clinic Bldg, CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 Gehrig, Paola Alvarez UNC Chapel Hill Hospitals POB CB 7572 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Geller, Elizabeth Joanne University of NC at Chapel Hill Dept of OB/GYN, Div of Urogynecology Old Clinic Bldg, CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 Grimes, David Alan UNC School of Medicine CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 Hussain, Sonia UNC Chapel Hill Campus Health CB 7470 Chapel Hill, NC 27599

Evans-Hoeker, Emily A UNC Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility 4001 Old Clinic Bldg CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599

Krase, Kelli Elizabeth University of North Carolina Medical Center Department of Ob/Gyn 3027 Old Clinic Building, CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27514

Fried, Michael David Chapel Hill OB/GYN 120 Conner Dr, Ste 101

Matthews, Catherine Ann UNC OB-GYN Dept 3032 Old Clinic Bldg


OB-GYNs in Orange County CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 McElligott, Kara Alina May UNC Hospitals 101 Manning Drive CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Mesen, Tolga Berlo UNC Dept of OB/GYN CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Motyka, Elizabeth Gomba For Women, PA 727 Eastowne Dr, Ste 200A Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Myers, Erinn Michelle UNC Chapel Hill 3032 Old Clinic Bldg Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 Nebel, William Arthur Chapel Hill Obstetrics & Gynecology 120 Conner Dr, Ste 101 Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Nieto, Maria De La Luz UNC Urogynecology OBGYN Dept 7570-3009 Old Clinic Bldg CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Siedhoff, Matthew Thomas UNC Dept OBGYN Div of Advanced Laparoscopy & Pelvic Pain CB 7570

Specializing in Obstetrics & Gynecology

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Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 Soper, John Tunnicliff UNC Chapel Hill B110 Physicians Office Bldg CB 7572 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7572

Katrina H. Avery, M.D. Melody Baldwin, M.D. Mina N. Choi, M.D. Charles O. Harris, M.D. Stacey Heath, M.D. Lucy Schenkman, M.D.

Steege, John Francis UNC Dept of ObGyn CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 Stuart, Gretchen Sauer UNC Dept Ob/Gyn 3031 Old Clinic Bldg CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570

4116 Capitol Street Independence Park Durham, NC 27704 919-471-1573

Thorp, Jr. John Mercer UNC School of Medicine Obstetrics/Gynecology 3027 Old Clinic Bldg, CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570

Ira Q. Smith, M.D. Georgina Fierro Keene, PA-C Lena Kruth, WHNP Amanda O’Briant, WHNP Margaux Simon, NP Heather Vawter, PA-C 5324 McFarland Drive, Suite 200 Patterson Place Durham, NC 27707 919-967-8052

267 S. Churton St., Suite 200 Hillsborough, NC 27278 P 919-643-4501

Wu, Jennifer Marie UNC Dept of Ob/Gyn CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570 Zerden, Matthew Louis Univ of North Carolina Hospitals 3020 Old Clinic Bldg CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Zolnoun, Denniz Asad UNC Dept of OB/GYN CB 7570 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7570

Accepting new patients at ALL locations! GYN only services in Roxboro, NC. Please call 919-471-1573 for more information. harrissmith.com Duke Obstetrics/Gynecology

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A SERVICE OF DUKE UNIVERSITY HEALTH SYSTEM


Dining OutRestaurants in Orange County Restaurant Listings Sorted Alphabetically By Restaurant Name And Divided By City, Compiled From A Search Of The North Carolina Department Of Health’s Website.

Carrboro Acme Food And Beverage 110 E Main Street Carrboro Akai Hana Japanese Restaurant 206 W Main St Carrboro Amante Gourmet Pizza 300 E Main Street Carrboro Anna Marie Pizzeria 104 U Hwy 54 Bypass/ Carrboro Plaza Carrboro Armadillo Grill 120 E Main Street Carrboro Ba-Da Wings 302 B East Main St Carrboro Carrboro Pizza Oven 200 Greensboro St Suite B8 Carrboro Carrburritos 711 W Rosemary Street Carrboro China Wok 1 104 Hwy. 54 By Pass Carrboro Country Junction 402 Weaver St. Carrboro Don Jose 708 Rosemary Street Carrboro Elmos Diner 200 N Greensboro Street Carrboro Glasshalfull 106A S Greensboro St S Carrboro Gourmet Kingdom 301 East Main Street Carrboro Hickory Tavern 300 East Main Street Carrboro Hong Kong Chinese 602-R Jones Ferry Road Carrboro Jade Palace 103 A E Main St Carrboro Jessees Coffee & Bar 401 East Main Street Carrboro Looking Glass Cafe 601 West Main Street Carrboro Mill Town 307 East Main Street Carrboro Munchies Mexican Bar And Grill 104 Hwy 54 West Suite N Carrboro Neals Deli 100 East Main Street Carrboro Open Eye Cafe 101 S Greensboro St Carrboro Panzanella 101 E Weaver St Carrboro Peccadillo 100 A Brewer Lane Carrboro Provence 203 West Weaver Street Carrboro Southern Rail 201-C East Main Street Carrboro Spotted Dog Restaurant And Bar 111 E Main Street Carrboro Steel String Brewery 106 A South Greensboro Street Carrboro Taqueria Tres Amigos 109 West Main Street Carrboro The Oasis At Carr Mill 200 North Greensboro Street A6 Carrboro Toledos Taqueria & Carniceria 506 Jones Ferry

58 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

Road Carrboro Tylers Restaurant And Tap Room 102 E Main Street Carrboro Venable Rotisserie Bistro 200 N Greensboro St Ste A18 Carrboro Wingman 104-S Nc Hwy. 54-W Carrboro

Chapel Hill 2Nd Wind 118 East Main Street Chapel Hill 35 Cafe 1704 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill 35 Chinese 143 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill 501 Diner 1500 N Fordham Blvd Chapel Hill Alfredos Pizza Villa 201 S Estes Dr Chapel Hill Allen And Son Bbq 6203 Mill House Rd Chapel Hill Alpine Bagel Cafe 209 South Road Chapel Hill Als Burger Shack 516 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Artisan Pizza Kitchen 153 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Baileys Pub And Grill 1722 N Fordham Blvd Chapel Hill Bandidos Mexican Cafe 159 1/2 E Franklin St Chapel Hill Ben And Jerry’s/Auntie Anne’s 102 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Bin 54 1201-M Raleigh Road Chapel Hill Bread & Butter 503 W Rosemary St Chapel Hill Breadmens 324 W Rosemary Street Chapel Hill Brixx Pizza 501 Meadowmont Village Circl Chapel Hill Buns 107 North Columbia Street Chapel Hill Cafe Carolina & Bakery 7254 601 Meadowmont Village Circl Chapel Hill Cafe Driade 1215 A E Franklin St Chapel Hill Caribou Coffee Company Store 305 110 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Caribou Coffee Company Store 308 1408 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Carolina 1663 1 Europa Drive Chapel Hill Carolina Brewery 460 W Franklin St Chapel Hill Carolina Coffee Shop 138 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Carolina Crossroads 211 Pittsboro Street Chapel Hill China Wok 2 1129 Weaver Dairy Road Chapel Hill Chipotle Mexican Grill 301 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Cholanad 308 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Chopsticks And More 163 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill

Cinco De Mayo 1502 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill City Kitchen/Village Burger 201 S Estes Drive Chapel Hill Cosmic Cantina 128 E Franklin Street Chapel Hill Crooks Corner 610 W Franklin St Chapel Hill East End Oyster Bar 201 E Franklin Street Chapel Hill Elaines 455 W Franklin St Chapel Hill Elements 2110 Environ Way Chapel Hill Evos 1800 East Franklin St Suite 26 Chapel Hill Farm House 6004 Millhouse Road Chapel Hill Fiesta Grill 3307 Hwy. 54-W Chapel Hill Fitzgeralds Irish Pub #1 206 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Five Guys Burgers And Fries 407 Meadowmont Village Circle Chapel Hill Fosters Market 750 Mlk Blvd Chapel Hill Four Corners 175 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Four-Eleven-West 411 West Franklin St. Chapel Hill Freedom House Recovery Kitchen 102 New Stateside Drive Chapel Hill Great Harvest Bread Company 229 South Elliott Road Chapel Hill Guru India Restaurant 508 A West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Hibachi Sushi St 103 Meadowmont Village Cir Chapel Hill Hong Kong Buffet 1742 N. Fordham Blvd. Chapel Hill Humus Cafe 169 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Hunam Chinese Restaurant 790 Mlk Blvd Chapel Hill I Love Ny Pizza 106 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Il Palio Siena Hotel 150 5 E Franklin Street Chapel Hill Industry 403 West Rosemary Street Chapel Hill Italian Pizzeria 3 508 W Franklin St Chapel Hill

Japan Express 261 South Elliott Road Chapel Hill Joe Van Gogh 1129 Weaver Dairy Rd Chapel Hill Joe’s Joint 161 And A Half E Franklin Street Chapel Hill Jujube 1201-L Raleigh Road Chapel Hill Kipos Greek Taverna 431 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Kitchen At Midtown Market 764 Mlk Jr Blvd Chapel Hill Kurama 105 N Columbia Street Chapel Hill La Hacienda 1813 Chapel Hill Blvd Chapel Hill La Residence 202 West Rosemary St Chapel Hill La Vita Dolce 610 Market Street Chapel Hill Lantern Restaurant 423 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Lime & Basil 200 W Franklin St Chapel Hill Lime Fresh Mexican Grill #6330 140 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Lindas Bar And Grill 203 E Franklin Street Chapel Hill Los Potrillos 220 W Rosemary Street Chapel Hill Lucha Tigre 746 Mlk Jr Blvd Chapel Hill Mama Dips Kitchen 408 West Rosemary Street Chapel Hill Marcels Catering 1821 N. Fordham Blvd. Chapel Hill Margarets Cantina 1129 Weaver Dairy Road Chapel Hill Mariakakis Fine Foods 1 Mariakakis Plaza Chapel Hill Market Street Coffee & Ice Cream 2805 Homestead Road Chapel Hill Market Street Coffee House 227 South Elliott Road Chapel Hill Market Street Coffee Ice Cream 2 503 Meadowmont Village Circle Chapel Hill

DAILY SPECIALS!! EL

PATRON

Mexican Grill Patio Seating at both locations Closed Sunday’s 107 James J. Freeland Memorial Dr. Hillsborough, NC 27278 puebloviejomexicanrestaurantnc.com (919) 732-3480

GOOD FOOD GOOD SERVICE! Open Seven Days a Week University Shopping Center 3438 Hillsborough Rd (Beside Auto Zone) Across the Street from Kroger on Hillsborough Rd. Durham 919-937-9971


Dining OutRestaurants in Orange County Whole Foods 10008 81 S Elliott Rd Chapel Hill Wilco Food Mart #201 1213 Airport Road Chapel Hill Windows 311 West Franklin St Chapel Hill Ye Olde Waffle Shop 173 E Franklin St Chapel Hill Asia Cafe 118 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill

Efland Missys Grill 321 Mt. Willing Road Efland

Hillsborough American Hero Restaurant 640 North Churton Street Hillsborough Anna Marias 670 N Churton Street Hillsborough Antonia’s 101 North Churton Street Hillsborough Bandidos Mexican Cafe 122 S Churton St Hillsborough Big Bob’s City Grill 584 Cornelius Street Hillsborough Brookshire Dietary Kitchen 300 Meadowland Drive Hillsborough China Fuji 615 Hampton Point Blvd Suit108 Hillsborough Country Fresh Grill 1414 Us Hwy 70 East Hillsborough Cup Of Joe 120 West King St Hillsborough Gulf Rim Cafe 111 North Churton Street Hillsborough Hillsborough Bbq Company 236 South Nash Street Hillsborough Hwy 55 Burgers,Shakes, And Fries 601 Hampton Point Hillsborough Hwy. 70 Bbq & Kebab 646 North Churton

Street Hillsborough Jack’s Country Restaurant 125 Rebecca Rd Hillsborough John’s Grill 3121 Hwy 86 N Hillsborough Kelsey’s Cafe 126 Unit A West King Street Hillsborough Mystery Brewing Pub 230 South Nash Street Hillsborough Panciuto 110 South Churton Street Hillsborough Pueblo Viejo Mexican Restaurant 107 James J Freeland Mem Drive Hillsborough Radius Pizzeria And Pub 112 N Churton St Hillsborough Restaurante Ixtapa 162 Exchange Park Lane Hillsborough Russell’s Steak House 378 S Churton Street Hillsborough Saratoga Grill 108 S Churton St Hillsborough Taqueria Michoacan 117 Cornelius Street Hillsborough Tokyo Express 145 Mayo Street Hillsborough Triangle Sportsplex Snackplex 101 Meadowlands Drive Hillsborough Village Diner 600 W King St Hillsborough Vinnys Italian Grill & Pizzeria 133 N. Scotswood Blvd. Hillsborough Wooden Nickel Pub 105 N Churton St Hillsborough Yum Yum 155 Mayo Street Hillsborough Zhang Garden 117 N Scotswood Blvd Suite D Hillsborough

Mebane Foust Corner Market 509 East Center Street Mebane Hueys Restaurant 7601 Hwy 70 East Mebane Ice Chest Pub And Grill 6102 Us Hwy 70 Mebane Iron Skillet #29 501 Buckhorn Rd Mebane

Veal, Chicken, Seafood, Pasta, Pizza & Salads Woodcroft Shopping Center

RE

ADER’

4711 Hope Valley Rd., Durham • 919-490-1172

www.pulcinellasitalianrestaurant.com Monday-Sunday 11am-10pm

Reader’s Choice Winner for 6 Years!

2013

ICE

Chapel Hill Southern Comfort Cafe 100 Europa Drive Chapel Hill Spankys 101 E Franklin St Chapel Hill Squids 1201 N. Fordham Blvd. Chapel Hill Starpoint Convenience Grill 1950 South Fordham Blvd. Chapel Hill Sugarland 140 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Suttons Drugstore Inc 159 E Franklin St Chapel Hill Talullas 456 W Franklin St Chapel Hill Tandoor Indian Restaurant 1301 E Franklin St Chapel Hill Thai Palace 1206 Raleigh Road Chapel Hill The Agora At Granville Towers 2100 Granville Towers South Chapel Hill The Bagel Bar 630 Weaver Dairy Road Ste 109 Chapel Hill The Carolina Club George Watts Hill Alumni Center Chapel Hill The Catering Company Of Chapel Hill 1322 North Fordham Blvd Chapel Hill The Dead Mule 303 W Franklin Street Chapel Hill The Loop Pizza Grill 1800 E Franklin St Chapel Hill The Pig 630 Weaver Dairy Road Ste 101 Chapel Hill The Pita Pit 115 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill The Thrill 157 East Rosemary Street Chapel Hill The Weathervane 201 S. Estes Drive Chapel Hill Time Out 133 W Franklin St Chapel Hill Time Out Tavern 1301 N. Fordham Blvd. Chapel Hill Tobacco Road Sports Cafe 1118 Environ Way Chapel Hill Top Of The Hill 100 E Franklin St Chapel Hill Top This! Roast Beef Burgers & More 161 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Toppers Pizza 306A W Franklin Street Chapel Hill Tortilla Wrap Grill 147 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Town Hall Grill 410 Market Street Chapel Hill Tracy’s Deli 400C Elliott Road Chapel Hill Tru Deli Llc 114 Henderson Street Chapel Hill Twisted Noodles 1800 East Franklin Street 20B Chapel Hill Vespa 306 W Franklin Street Chapel Hill Vimalas Curry Blossom Cafe 431 W Franklin St Suite 16 Chapel Hill Vinny’s Italian Grill & Pizzeria 1800 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Walts Grill 111 S Merritt Mill Rd Chapel Hill West End Wine Bar 450 W Franklin Street Chapel Hill

S CHO

Mcalisters Deli 1059 205 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Mediterranean Deli 410 W Franklin Street Chapel Hill Mei Asia 143 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Mellow Mushroom 156 310 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Merlion 410 Market Street Chapel Hill Merritts Market 1009 S Columbia Street Chapel Hill Minga Restaurant 116 Old Durham Road Chapel Hill Mint 504 W Franklin St Chapel Hill Mixed Restaurant 1404 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Monterrey Mexican 237 S Elliott Rd Chapel Hill Mozzarella 401 W Franklin St Chapel Hill Naismith Grill 500 Finley Golf Course Road Chapel Hill Nantucket Cafe 121 Rams Plaza Chapel Hill Noodles & Company 214 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Oishii Japanese 1129 Weaver Dairy Rd Chapel Hill One Restaurant 1000 Meadowmont Village Circle Chapel Hill Panera Bread 213 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Pantana Bobs 300 W Rosemary St Chapel Hill Pazzo 700 Market Street Chapel Hill Piola 1101 Environ Way Chapel Hill Pita Grill 1129 Weaver Dairy Road Chapel Hill Pops Pizzeria 1822 Martin Luther King Blvd Chapel Hill Qdoba Mexican Grill 238 100 West Franklin Street Chapel Hill Queen Of Sheba 1129 Weaver Dairy Road Chapel Hill R & R Grill 137 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Raaga 3140 Environ Way Chapel Hill Rasa 1826 Martin Luther King Blvd Chapel Hill Re:fuel@Aloft 1001 South Hamilton Road Chapel Hill Recovery Room 108 Henderson Street Chapel Hill Red Bowl Asian Bistro 201 South Estes Dr Chapel Hill Red Lotus 239 E Elliott Rd Chapel Hill Residence Inn 101 Erwin Road Chapel Hill Robert & Pearl Seymour Center 2551 Homestead Road Chapel Hill Sage 1129 Weaver Dairy Road Chapel Hill Sakura Xpress Japanese Resta 110 N. Columbia Street Chapel Hill Sals Pizza 2811 Homestead Rd Chapel Hill Sandwhich 407 407 West Franklin Street

AWARDS

EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

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Shopping in Orange County CARRBORO

CHAPEL HILL

University Mall – Southern Season, The Print Shop, Wentworth & Sloan jewelers, restaurants, retail, live theater Eastgate – Trader Joe’s, Stein Mart, Wild Bird Center, restaurants, retail, drugstore, coffee shop Rams Plaza – Food Lion, restaurants, retail, drugstore, healthcare, auto repair Meadowmont – Harris Teeter, ABC store, restaurants, retail, fitness East 54/Glen Lenox – Fresh Market, restaurants, retail, hotel Timberlyne – Food Lion, Rite Aid, Wells Fargo bank, movie theaters, restaurants, retail, office

60 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

supply, veterinarian, salon, martial arts Chapel Hill North – Harris Teeter, ABC store, restaurants, retail, fitness Village Plaza/Elliott Road – Whole Foods, Staples, Clothes Mentor, restaurants, retail, ABC store, thrift shop, salons, fitness, Farm Bureau Insurance Southern Village – Weaver Street Market, movie theater, restaurants, retail, bank, insurance, business services, healthcare providers Downtown Chapel Hill/ Franklin St. – Whitehall Antiques, restaurants, retail, coffee shops, galleries, CD & record store, bookstores, salons, movie theater, nightclubs, hotels, auto sales & repair

HILLSBOROUGH

The Shops at Daniel Boone – Daniel Boone Co., Hillsborough Pharmacy, Wagner’s Tire, Pueblo Viejo, restaurants, retail, antiques, barber shops, motel, fitness, auto repair Hampton Pointe – Walmart, Home Depot, restaurants, retail, mobile phone Churton Grove – Food Lion, State Employees Credit Union, restaurants, retail Maxway Plaza – Kerr Drug, Amazing Grace spa, restaurants, retail, tax services Downtown Hillsborough – Weaver Street Market, restaurants, retail, coffee shop, art galleries, attorneys, real estate & business services Nash Street District – Paws at the Corner pet supply, restaurant, brewpub & homebrew store, healthcare

SHOP DINE MEET

!PPAREL s *EWELRY s 'IFTS s (OME #ASUAL $INING s %NTERTAINMENT 3PECIALTY 3HOPS s 'ROCERY

CARRBORO

Carr Mill Mall – Harris Teeter, CVS, Weaver Street Market, Gold Assay, restaurants, retail, salon, fitness, business services, comedy theater Carrboro Plaza – Food Lion, SunTrust bank, State Employees Credit Union, Carrboro Tobacco, ABC store, restaurants, retail, veterinarian, fitness, insurance, business services Willow Creek – Food Lion, Rite Aid, restaurants, laundromat, salons, mobile phone, tax services 300 East Main – ArtsCenter, Cat’s Cradle live music club, hotel, restaurants, retail Downtown Carrboro – Farmer’s Market, Fitch Lumber, restaurants, retail, thrift shop, banks, coffee shops, galleries, real estate agencies, veterinarian, optician, fitness, salons, healthcare providers, auto parts & repair, car wash & detailing, lawn & garden, attorneys & business services

CarrMillMall.com

$RUG s 3ERVICES AND !MPLE &REE 0ARKING

200 N. Greensboro St. In the heart of Carrboro at the corner of Weaver St.


Licensed Child care facilities in Orange County compiled from the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services’ Division of Child Development and Early Education website. ABUNDANT LIFE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 512 U S 70 HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-6460

Child Care in Orange County CARRBORO UNITED METHODIST CHILD CARE CENTER 200 HILLSBOROUGH ROAD CARRBORO, NC 27510 (919) 929-5143

CENTRAL ELEMENTARY HEAD START 154 HAYES STREET HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-3622

BLOSSOMS HOME DAY CARE 402 PRITCHARD AVE CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 933-1014

CENTRAL ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AFTERSCHOOL PROGRAM 154 HAYES STREET HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-3622

CAMERON PARK ELEMENTARY AFTERSCHOOL PROGRAM 240 E SAINT MARYS STREET HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-4166

CHAPEL HILL CO-OP PRESCHOOL INFANT & TODDLER CTR 110 N ELLIOTT RD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 942-0220

CAROLINA FRIENDS CAMPUS EARLY SCHOOL 4809 FRIENDS SCHOOL ROAD DURHAM, NC 27705 (919) 383-6602

CHAPEL HILL COOPERATIVE PRESCHOOL 106 PUREFOY ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 942-3955

CAROLINA FRIENDS SCHOOL CHAPEL HILL EARLY SCHOOL 531 RALEIGH ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 929-7080

CHAPEL HILL DAY CARE CENTER 401 KILDAIRE ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 929-3585

CARRBORO EARLY SCHOOL 310 LLOYD STREET CARRBORO, NC 27510 (919) 929-9998 CARRBORO ELEMENTARY PRE-K/HEAD START 125 WEST MAIN STREET SUITE 200 CARRBORO, NC 27510 (919) 918-2153 CARRBORO SCHOOL AGE CARE PROGRAM 400 SHELTON ST CARRBORO, NC 27510 (919) 968-3652

CHILD CARE MATTERS INC 825-A N ESTES DR CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 929-8190 CHILDREN’S CAMPUS OF CHAPEL HILL 110 KINGSTON DR CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 967-5020 CHILDREN’S CAMPUS OF CHAPEL HILL II 1620 MLK JR BLVD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 967-5020 CHILDREN’S LEARNING CENTER

500 NORTH NASH STREET HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 644-6590

COMMUNITY SCHOOL FOR PEOPLE UNDER 6 102 HARGRAVES STREET CARRBORO, NC 27510 (919) 929-1543 EFLAND CHEEKS ELEMENTARY PRE-K 4401 FULLER ROAD EFLAND, NC 27243 (919) 563-5112 EFLAND CHEEKS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AFTERSCHOOL PROGRAM 4401 FULLER ROAD EFLAND, NC 27243 (919) 563-5112 EMERSON WALDORF SCHOOL 6211 NEW JERICHO ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 967-3362 EPHESUS ELEMENTARY PRE-K/HEAD START 1495 EPHESUS CHURCH RD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 929-8715 EPHESUS SCHOOL-AGE CARE PROGRAM 1495 EPHESUS CHURCH ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 929-8715 ERWIN ROAD MONTESSORI SCHOOL 735 ERWIN RD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27707 (919) 490-5437 ESTES CHILDREN’S COTTAGE 200 NORTH ESTES DRIVE CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 942-8485 ESTES HILLS PREK 500 N ESTES DR CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514

(919) 942-4753 ESTES HILLS SCHOOL-AGE CARE PROGRAM 500 ESTES DRIVE CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 967-8211 FAIRVIEW CHILD AND FAMILY CENTER 125 LAWNDALE DR HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 643-4000 FRANK PORTER GRAHAM ELEMENTARY PRE-K 101 SMITH LEVEL ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 942-6491 FRANK PORTER GRAHAM SCHOOL-AGE CARE PROGRAM 101 SMITH LEVEL ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 967-8211 GLENWOOD EL SCHOOL-AGE CARE PROGRAM 2 PRESTWICK ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 967-8211 GLENWOOD ELEMENTARY PREK 2 PRESTWICK RD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27517 (919) 968-3473 GRADY BROWN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AGE CARE PROGRAM 1100 NEW GRADY BROWN ROAD HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-4166 HAPPY DAY NURSERY AND DAY CARE 107 LAUREL AVENUE CARRBORO, NC 27510 (919) 967-2016 HAPPYLAND CHILD CARE 6319 INDUSTRIAL DR MEBANE, NC 27302 (919) 563-2185

EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

61


HILLSBOROUGH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AFTERSCHOOL PROGRAM 402 NORTH NASH STREET HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-4166 HOLMES CHILD CARE 216 N ROBERSON ST CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 942-5493

CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 969-2435 MI ESCUELITA SPANISH IMMERSION PRESCHOOL 405 SMITH LEVEL RD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 969-7949

KEHILLAH JEWISH PRESCHOOL 1200 MASON FARM RD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 942-0233

MONTESSORI ACADEMY OF CHAPEL HILL 1200 MASON FARM ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 883-9050

KINDERCARE LEARNING CENTERS LLC 210 SOUTH ELLIOTT ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 942-7223

MORRIS GROVE ELEMENTARY PREK/HEAD START 215 EUBANKS ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 918-4800

KNEE HIGH PRESCHOOL 125 JOHN EARL STREET HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-4433

MORRIS GROVE SCHOOL-AGE CARE PROGRAM 215 EUBANK ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 918-4800

LEARNING EXPRESSIONS, LLC 114 S GRAHAM STREET CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 240-5771 LEGACY ACADEMY FOR CHILDREN 515 E WINMORE AVE CARRBORO, NC 27516 (919) 929-7060 LIL TREASURES DAY CARE 554 NASH STREET HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-8242 MARY SCROGGS ELEMENTARY PRE-K/HEAD START 501 KILDAIRE DRIVE CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 918-2153 MASTER’S GARDEN PRESCHOOL 7500 SCHLEY ROAD HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-3449 MCDOUGLE ELEMENTARY PREK/HEAD START 800 OLD FAYETTEVILLE ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 969-2435 MCDOUGLE SCHOOL AGE CARE PROGRAM 890 OLD FAYETTEVILLE ROAD

62 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

NEW HOPE ELEMENTARY HEAD START 1900 NEW HOPE CHURCH ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 942-9696 NEW HOPE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AGE CARE PROGRAM 1900 NEW HOPE CHURCH ROAD HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27514 (919) 942-9696 NORTHSIDE ELEMENTARY PREK 350 CALDWELL ST CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 918-2153 NORTHSIDE SCHOOL-AGE CARE PROGRAM 350 CALDWELL EXT CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 918-2220 ONL CDC AMITY 825 N ESTES DRIVE CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 537-8567 ONL CDC BINKLEY 1712 WILLOW DR CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 240-4357

ORANGE CHATHAM EARLY SCHOOL 1740 SMITH LEVEL ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 928-9145 PATHWAYS ELEMENTARY PRE-K 431 STROUDS CREEK HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-9136 PATHWAYS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AGE PROGRAM 431 STROUDS CREEK ROAD HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-9136 RASHKIS ELEMENTARY PRE-K/HEAD START 601MEADOWMONT LN CHAPEL HILL, NC 27517 (919) 918-2160 RASHKIS SCHOOL AGE CARE PROGRAM 601 MEADOWMONT LANE CHAPEL HILL, NC 27517 (919) 918-7165 SCROGGS SCHOOL AGE CARE PROGRAM 501 KILDAIRE RD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 967-8211 SEAWELL PRESCHOOL 9115 SEAWELL SCHOOL ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 967-4343 SEAWELL SCHOOL-AGE CARE PROGRAM 9115 SEAWELL SCHOOL ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516 (919) 967-4343 SMALL PEOPLE CHILD CARE CENTER 922 WHITE ROCK CHURCH ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 960-5857 SOUNDS AND COLORS 200 DAVIS ROAD HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 245-0606 SPANISH FOR FUN ACADEMY 1001 S COLUMBIA STREET CHAPEL HILL, NC 27516

(919) 969-9055 THE LITTLE SCHOOL OF HILLSBOROUGH 301 COLLEGE PARK ROAD HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 644-1818 THE SCHOOLHOUSE AT GREENWOOD 806 CHRISTOPHER ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 918-7802 THE UNIVERSITY CHILD CARE CENTER 130 FRIDAY CENTER DR CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 929-2662 TINY HANDS OF HOPE 114 W CORBIN ST HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 245-1640 TINY STEPS-(PASITOS) 4 BYPASS LANE CHAPEL HILL, NC 27517 (919) 928-0024 TINY TOTS 323 CRAWFORD ROAD HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 732-3102 TINY TOTS TOO 2711 HWY 86 S HILLSBOROUGH, NC 27278 (919) 245-3101 WADE’S CHILD CARE CENTER 7619 US 70 EAST MEBANE, NC 27302 (919) 563-5081 WADE’S CHILD CARE CENTER # 2 2517 MILL CREEK ROAD MEBANE, NC 27302 (919) 304-4358 WADE’S INFANT-TODDLER CENTER 7805 HWY 70 MEBANE, NC 27302 (919) 304-1067 WEAVER DAIRY COMMUNITY PRESCHOOL 124 WEAVER DAIRY ROAD CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 (919) 932-1300


Rediscover J oy OUR MEMORY CARE MAKES IT POSSIBLE. The Bridge to Rediscovery™ community celebrates individuals with Alzheimer’s and related disorders for who they are – who they will always be. Call today to schedule your personal visit to learn more about Seasons’ award‐winning program.

The memory care community that makes rediscovery possible.

1002 East Highway 54 - Durham, NC 27713

919-484-8518

www.SeasonsAtSouthpoint.com © 2014 Five Star Quality Care, Inc. EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015

63


I got it at Bano!

BANO Boutique Durham and Chapel Hill’s Premier Designer Clothing Boutique

Designer Clothing & Accessories Couture Tailoring Custom Clothing Design Personal Shopper Closet Organization 2699 Durham Chapel Hill Blvd. Durham, NC 27707 banoboutique.com • 919-489-9006 Tuesday - Saturday 10:00am to 5:00pm or by appointment 64 EVERYTHING ORANGE 2015


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