Solas Named to Top 50 Late Night Finds
OpenTable Diners have spoken, and they have named Raleigh’s Solas among their list of best late night eats in the country . No other restaurants in North Carolina won the award.
2012 ACC Basketball Calendars Ready for Download
Local basketball fans with iPhones, Android Phones, Blackberrys, Outlook, Palm devices, and more are in luck! Gogoraleigh’s Calendars Tab is your home for free 2011-2012 ACC basketball schedules for the entire ACC in .CSV, .ICS, and Google Calendar formats.
gogo has gone all out again, offering schedules for each individual ACC team , as well as one giant calendar which includes all 281 games. Events on the calendars include not only the game time, but also links to ESPN’s team pages and the name of the venue where the game is being played. On some devices, like Android phones, the location becomes a link to Google Maps showing the venue’s location.
For those already subscribed to the Google Calendar version of the ACC Complete calendar or any of the other supporting Google Calendars from gogoraleigh, you don’t have to do anything. All 281 events have been added automatically. As event details change, you’ll see automatic changes in your calendar.
And wait….there’s more! Gogoraleigh decided that these 13 calendars aren’t enough, and added home-only calendars for UNC and N.C. State. All for the low low price of ZERO!
Outlook-Based Blackberry/iPhone/Palm Users
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After downloading the appropriate CSV file (see below), create a new folder in your in Outlook calendar (Bball11, for example). Use the File | Import and Export… to import from “another program or file”, then “Comma Separated File (Windows)”. Be sure to pick your new calendar folder as the target. This will set up the schedule in your new sub-calendar where you can make whatever changes you want.
- iPhone Users – Open iTunes with the iPhone connected and sync (you may have to specify your newly added calendar in the “Info” tab’s Calendars section.) Now you can view the basketball schedules as their own sub-calendar or as a part of all calendars.
- If you have a device which doesn’t support subcalendars (like Treos and older Palm devices), you’ll need to copy the imported basketball events into your main calendar. When you are happy with the way the subcalendar looks, change the calendar view to “Events” (instead of 7-day or 31-Day or whatever view you’re using). “Select All” from the list, and drag them over to your main “Calendar” (The Treo and other Palm Handhelds only sync to the main calendar – time for Palm to get with the program on that one!). If you want to keep your sub-calendar intact, use Ctrl-drag instead of plain drag. That will create a copy of each event to the main Calendar and keep the Bball08 calendar in place. Sync your handheld to copy the events to the handheld.
Google Calendar/Android Users
My favorite way to follow the ACC’s basketball calendar is to add it to my Google Calendar set. The Google Calendar is a dynamic, subscribable calendar that offers much flexibility. For instance, several game times have not been announced. As soon as they are set, actual game times will magically appear in your calendar. Also, Google Calendar offers a map link for quick viewing of the game’s venue location.
Additionally, Google has created a simple interface through mobile phone browsers. It allows one to view and implement ACC Calendar events. It also recognizes hyperlinks in the event’s description, so easy access to the team files is achievable by using the online Google Calendar app. To view these add the calendar using the link below, then visit http://calendar.google.com from within Safari on the iPhone or your Android browser.
(Note: Gogoraleigh will also carry the home-only calendars as an integrated feature of its normal Gogoraleigh Do-It Calendar ).
To view a Google Calendar, go to the gogoraleigh Calendars page and click on the appropriate calendar link. Once the calendar is displayed, you can add it your set of Google Calendars by clicking on the “+Subscribe” bottom on the bottom right.
iCal Users
There are two options:
- Use iCalTextImport to import the .CSV version (linked above) of the schedule.
- Download the .ics file from the Calendars page and import it into iCal.
Palm Desktop and Yahoo! Calendar Users
My brother-in-law taught me a neat trick. In order to get a CSV calendar into Palm Desktop, one can use Yahoo! Calendar as an intermediary. After downloading the .CSV file from gogoraleigh, open Yahoo! Calendar and click “Options” in the upper right. Then select “Import/Export”. Go to “Import From Outlook”, selected the filename, and click “Import”. Yahoo! Calendar users are done at this point. Palm Desktop users need to verify the import, then return to the “Export to Palm Desktop” section. Pick your target and hit “Export”. The resulting .DBA file should then be ready to import into Palm Desktop.
Beware! It appears easy to lump Yahoo! Calendar events that are unrelated into one calendar. If you are simply using Yahoo! Calendar as a conduit to Palm Desktop, verify that your calendar is clean before originally importing the .CSV file, otherwise unrelated events will get lumped with basketball dates in your resulting .DBA file.
RSS
Each of the Google Calendars carries an RSS feed. This might be an interesting addition to your RSS Feed collection because each calendar change will appear in the feed. This is most useful as an alert to a game time changes in the schedule. The RSS Feed for each calendar can be found when viewing each individual Google Calendar.
Notes
Calendars are apt to change, so check back occasionally for updates. To determine the version of your schedule, open the note associated with any event, and look for the version number. If your calendar is older than those listed above, simply delete the events in Outlook in your old one and import the events of the newer file. Google Calendar is dynamically updated on the back end, so you always know you are up to date when using Google Calendar.
Use at your own risk. I do not accept responsibility for any consequences resulting from errors in the schedule.
Ashley Christensen’s Sunday Supper Featured in Bon Appetit
The September issue of Bon Appetit magazine features their latest favorite restaurants. On page 67 Raleighites will be happy to find a 3-page feature of Ashley Christensen’s “Down-Home Sunday Supper”. The spread contains recipes for these dishes:
- Roast Chicken and Herb-and-Garlic Pan Drippings
- Fig and Thyme Jam
- Creamy Rice Grits with Tomato Relish
- Late-Summer-Greens Sauté
- Pots de Crème with Reisling-Poached Grapes
Bill Cosby Returning to DPAC
One of the legends of comedy is coming back to Durham! Bill Cosby will be performing at the DPAC on Saturday, January 21. General Public tickets go on sale tomorrow (8/26) at 10am.
Durham and Bill Cosby have always had a special relationship. Readers may recall that Russell and Anna Huxtable, Cosby’s fictional parents on the show “Cosby”, met in Durham before moving to Philadelphia and then New Jersey. Cosby last performed in Durham during March of 2009.
Lupe Fiasco Coming to The Walt
The week that keeps on giving, just got even better! On Sunday, September 18, Lupe Fiasco will play The Walt with Tinie Tempah opening. Tickets go on sale tomorrow morning (8/26) at 10am.
World Wide Webb
Congratulations to Raleigh native Webb Simpson who won the Wyndham Championship (formerly the GGO) on Sunday. It’s been a long road to a first win for the 26 year old, and there no indication it is the last. Simpson has done it the right way, whether it Is picking up self-imposed penalty strokes or getting up with the baby so his wife can sleep in, Simpson seems to be a much needed stable figure in the golf world. He holds the course record (?52? shots) at Raleigh’s exclusive Carolina Country Club, yet Simpson seems to be the type person that the golf world feels comfortable rallying behind. Tiger Woods; he is not. Check out these nice articles which undoubtedly are making his family proud this Monday morning. Congratulations, Webb!
- Webb Simpson a humble star in the making (CBSSportsline)
- Webb Simpson rising through the ranks (ESPN.com)
- Simpson reacts to the win he "was dreaming about" (WRAL video)
- Simpson’s victory hits close to home (Boston Globe)
- Webb Simpson Wins Wyndham, Proclaims Christ Lord and Savior (Examiner.com)
Classic Car Show Coming This Weekend
The Carolina Classics at the Capital car show is coming to the Raleigh Convention Center tomorrow (Friday). The show, which runs thru Sunday, will feature “the Southeast’s largest indoor car show”, plus free viewings of classic cars on closed-off Fayetteville Street and a Kids Zone with inflatable attractions. Last year’s event drew more than 25,000 attendees.
New for 2011 are the Munster Mobile and Grandpa’s Dragula from TV’s “The Munsters,” a $2 million 1961 Aston Martin DB4 GT Super Legera, Ferrari , car club block parties, and a History of the Automobile exhibit.
Admission is $10 and tickets are available at the Convention Center.
Ummmm….
WRAL welcomed new sports reporter Mandy Mitchell this week. This is from her story about, well, I have no idea what she said. There were plenty of distractions from the work she was hired to do. Check the video .
Allen & Son BBQ Variant Coming to Five Points
It appears that Jimmy Stubbs from the Pittsboro Allen & Son Barbecue will be opening a store called “Five Points BBQ” in Raleigh. You can follow them on Twitter @5PointsBBQ .
At this point I still don’t know if the restaurant will be in the old Audio Buys building or if it will go into the old Johnson’s Pharmacy spot (at Oberlin and Fairview). Word has been that the people who overhauled the old Audio Buys were hoping the space would be retail, but would upfit the space for a restaurant if that is the only potential suitor they could find.
RBC Center Turning Red
This summer the RBC Center’s 100 Level is getting a long-awaited makeover. New seats are currently being installed and the good news for State fans is that they are, indeed, RED. RBC Center General Manager Dave Olsen said that the upholstery of the building’s original, 12-year-old seating is still in excellent shape, however the fading and failing red plastic seat frames were past their lifetimes. As seen in the accompanying photo, the seats had turned an awful mauve color that not even the ‘80s would have wanted back. Installation of the new seating has begun and will continue throughout the summer, dodging long-scheduled events.
I was able to visit Section 120 recently and saw that not only are the seats a solid, fairly bright red (though not as bright as Memorial Auditorium’s, thank goodness), the new frames for the seats are black, insuring against color slump from exposure to the arena’s bright playing surface lighting. The chairs are the same size as before, however the armrests feel slightly shorter and are bowed slightly.
Sections containing only the large chairs are being replaced first, so I still have not determined what style chair will be used in the upper rows in the end sections which previously contained smaller, less confortable chairs.
While the chairs themselves are a nice replacement, the aisle lighting is emphatically not . The RBC Center has followed the technology bandwagon and installed white LED lighting under the last armrest of the row. Unfortunately the lighting is distractingly bright during a concert and has a yucky, almost blue hue that probably reaches the upper 5000K range of temperature . The lighting from the original seats was an extra-warm amber that was a perfect balance during dark events.
The seating replacement is expected to be completed before the first exhibition game for the Carolina Hurricanes in mid-September.
Jack Astor’s, Foster’s/Nelson’s/Felson’s/Noster’s Close
Restaurant closings are hitting the mid-priced restaurants at these times. Jack Astor’s was simply an easy meal in Cary. Foster’s on the other hand, was an important ITB social spot over the last couple of decades. The brick arches inside were reminiscent of the old Darryl’s on Hillsborough St. Wood from barns out in Wake County was used to fabricate the large doors inside. There were Clarence Foster’s locations in Atlanta, Charlotte, and Wrightsville Beach, but the Raleigh store was bought by the local owners when the chain went down. Later on Ralph Nelson converted the space into an upscale oyster bar and restaurant. The space underwent a massively expensive, and poorly designed renovation. Nelson’s didn’t make it and the space was converted back to Foster’s. Foster’s…man….Faaaahhster’s.
It is hard to imagine that the Fosters space will be kept in its same configuration. Whatever is next is likely to be quite different, and an end to many memories. Along with the Brewery (which has already been torn down), the ITB crowd lost a a pair of fun spots this week.
Weird Al Coming to DPAC
On Sunday, October 9, Weird Al Yankovic will come to the DPAC in Durham. Weird Al is supporting his new CD, Alpocalypse , which features the Lady Gaga send up “Perform This Way”. This is one of Weird Al’s best CDs, actually. The strongest song on the CD is probably The Doors-esque “Craigslist”, but don’t count out “Polka Face”, a brilliant medley of popular songs from the last year played in a polka style.
Tickets go on sale tomorrow (8/5) at 10am at Ticketmaster outlets.
City Council Advises Light Rail Route D6
Note: Mayor Meeker is increasingly difficult to understand in meetings, so it sometimes is hard to gather all of the details in City Council meetings
Tonight the Raleigh City Council hosted a workshop and public hearing regarding proposed routes for light rail trains in downtown Raleigh. In early July the Passenger Rail Task Force presented their recommendation for a rail plan, D6a, that would put light rail trains down Morgan Street and up the Salisbury/Wilmington Street pair so as to best serve state government workers. This plan was re-presented in a pre-hearing “workshop” (I use quotes because it was simply a series of presentations with absolutely no interaction with the general public).
However city planners also presented their recommendation, plain ol’ Plan D6, which brings trains down Morgan Street, and up Harrington Street to the point where it joins the existing rail corridor, then crosses over and follows Capital Blvd.
The problems with Plan D6a include the choice to serve government land parcels in lieu of tax-base bolstering parcels that are ripe for private development. D6a also proposes crossing Dawson and McDowell Streets, a state highway pair, which is apparently blasphemy in the eyes of the State Department of Transportation (why can’t the cars just wait an extra cycle every 20 minutes?). Finally, D6a recommends a bridge flying over Peace Street for the southbound track, adding to costs.
The workshop easily blended into the 7:00 public hearing where a 3/4 full council chamber played ostrich given the opportunity to speak. Only 4 people expressed opinions before the mayor quickly and unclearly closed the public session. The Council moved on to closing comments, and voted to recommend Plan D6 by a vote of 6-2. One dissenting councilor was Bonner Gaylord who prefers route D5, however willingly accepted Plan D6. It appeared that Russ Stephenson was the other dissenting voter, however it was unclear why. Presumably his actions regard his consideration of a D6/D6a plan that would run the Northbound train along D6a and the Southbound train along D6. He postulated that this would put train access to prime private land in the Glenwood South area while serving the government buildings; the best of both worlds.
None of the presenters or councilors seemed concerned by the complete lack of coverage of south downtown , however. The assumption is that riders accessing East and South Raleigh will gladly connect to D6a by riding circulator buses, like the R-line, when coming downtown for events. Unfortunately in real life this won’t happen. People in North Raleigh will not take a park & ride downtown to a circulator bus stop in order to get to Memorial Auditorium. They would walk 3 blocks from a station, but they will not take a 3rd mode of transit.
Also absent from discussion was the long walk between Amtrak and light rail platforms for people carrying heavy luggage. The proposed 2-3 block length is too long. This connection needs to be graceful. Most importantly, missing from discussion were ideas about how to best present the plan to main source of funding, suburban citizens.
While I am happy to essentially see the demise of Plan D6a, I still have big concerns about Plan D6. It is a plan that ignores any entertainment and convention venues. However it is a plan that minimizes exposure to traffic, services museums and government offices reasonably, and one that avoids extremely expensive elevated portions of track.
Don’t be fooled, however. The reality of a light rail system is still many, many years away. I have a strong sense that no progress will occur on this project in the next 12 months, in fact, as there are still uncertainties about the engineering and funding of the plan. With an uncertain political climate and a dismal economy extending beyond the horizon, it will likely be a while, a long while, before significant progress is made.
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