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Entries in Durham Magazine (5)

Friday
11Dec2009

Durham Magazine Makes a Great Gift, Julienne Fries

So forgive the shameless plug, but please allow us to suggest that a subscription to Durham Magazine would be a perfect gift for the Durham-lover in your life.

It slices. It dices. It stores easily. And clean-up is a snap!

Act now, because the next 100 subscribers get six issues for the low, low price of $24. (Disclaimer: deal may be extended beyond the next 100 subscribers.)

In all seriousness,  we have heard from many devoted readers who were eager to share Durham Magazine with their friends. Many have purchased gift subscriptions for Durham ex-pats living in other parts of the country, seeing our mag as a great way for them to keep tabs on what's going on in their former home. Of course, it'd be a great gift for your neighbor down the street. If you're unsure if they already receive the magazine, we can help.

Call 933-1551 for that information and/or to subscribe by phone. Click here to get a gift subscription online.

If that's not of interest, but you're still scratching your head about a few folks on your holiday shopping list, check out our gift guide in the latest issue of the mag.

A shameless plug within a shameless plug! WIN!

Tuesday
13Oct2009

What Do You Love About Durham?

I am working on a story for our Bull Session column in Durham Magazine that asks our readers to tell us specifically what they love about this eclectic city.Scott Ritchie at Whiskey, who was recently featured in the "Stuff We Love" about Durham column. Photo by Briana Brough.

 I’ve already received a few e-mails on this, but I have to tell you, they are focused on food. Not like that’s a bad thing, but I prefer to have a range of people, places and things to showcase in Durham. Anyone have other submissions? In our last issue, we professed Durham-love for bartender Scott Ritchie at Whiskey with his cool handlebar mustache. We also mentioned the carousel at Northgate Mall, and the joy of hacking away at Hillandale on a fall afternoon.

Please e-mail me this week at: lisarossi@durhammag.com for a chance to have your favorite thing mentioned in the mag. Be specific, be effusive and be descriptive. Include your name and age and any other information you’d like to share about yourself.

Thursday
02Jul2009

Colin Firth Mania Continues

I never knew about the Colin Firth-fever before Durham Magazine put the British boy on the cover of the June/ July issue. Our operations manager, Marnie Anderson, the one who makes sure those who want the magazine get it, has been swamped with inquiries for a copy of that particular magazine. Fans from 10 different states, including California, Nebraska and Vermont have ordered copies, and international requests have streamed in as well. We now have readers in Canada, Germany and the UK.

The e-mails Marnie has received from magazine-seeking fans are the most fun.

Here’s one from a Firth fan in Montreal, Canada. “[I] understand that you have an interview with the amazing Brit HUNK Colin Firth in your June/July issue coming out first week in June. I'd love a copy.”

Also, one lady from Georgia quizzed Marnie extensively on her Colin Firth knowledge, and told her a tale of how she wanted to come up for the screening, but she stepped on a toothpick embedded in her carpet, which then broke off in her foot and she had to have surgery to remove it.

It goes without saying her need for the magazine was great.

Are there still readers out there who want a copy of the July issue? It’s $4 and available at the Durham Magazine office at 115 N. Duke St.; Parker and Otis, 112 S. Duke St.; The Regulator Bookshop, 720 Ninth St.; Duke University StoreDuke University; and the Durham Regional Hospital Gift Shop, 3643 N. Roxboro Road.

Tuesday
02Jun2009

New issue makes its debut!!

It's the most wonderful time of, uh, every other month here at Durham Mag, when we get to roll out the brand-spanking new issue.

There's plenty to love, if we do say so ourselves, starting with our cover story on Colin Firth.

Our Community & Events Editor Dana Lange got up close and personal with the British actor while he was in town filming Main Street, a film that we hear doesn't exactly portray Durham in the most favorable light. Dana found out that Firth fell in love with our city quite unexpectedly, and she got him to contrast the movie version of Durham with the real thing. Read all about it.

But there's much more.

Free-lance writer and former N&O reporter Danny Hooley looked at the trends in the Durham real estate market and why the overall stability in prices, while a good sign for our overall economy, made for a short-lived buyers' market. We also take you inside three homes that recently sold for around $300K (pretty impressive) and tell you the stories of the folks who bought them.

We had intended to run our package of stories about Durham's green economy last issue to coincide with Earth Month, but we had to make room for our special downtown section. So we figured environmental consciousness musn't be confined to one month. We're rolling out our look at five businesses already profiting from the burgeoning green economy, taking you behind the scenes of the Durham Farmers' Market to show you where your food comes from (an awesome photo essay by our own Briana Brough), and presenting some facts and tips about going green in Durham courtesy of Tobin Freid, the city/county sustainability coordinator.

Senior Editor Noor Shehzad conceived, wrote and produced our fashion components for this issue. She highlighted recessionista wear, i.e. ways to turn a single outfit from work-appropriate to date-night-ready with a few minor adjustments. She also found this year's hot nail polish colors for three different skin tones. A must-read summer fashion spread. Noor also explored the latest technological trends being used for business presentations, leading into our guide of Durham meeting spaces compiled by intern Iesha Brown.

Iesha also put together our full calendar of events and recounted the nuptials of two Durham newlyweds.

All this plus new columns from Noor, Bull City Rising blogger Kevin Davis and wine expert Arturo Ciompi, a comprehensive directory of area retirement communities, a profile of legendary local orthopedic surgeon Ralph Coonrad, a guide to 200+ Durham restaurants and a look inside the area's most fabulous fundraisers and parties.

Subscribers should start seeing the mag in mailboxes in the next day or so, if they're not there already. Not a subscriber but would like to be? Click here.

Newsstand copies will be available soon at Parker & Otis, The Regulator, Barnes & Noble, Borders, Harris Teeter, Food Lion and Whole Foods.

Monday
01Jun2009

Sotomayor at Duke

There's an interesting, if somewhat tenuous, Durham connection to the upcoming confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor. One of her past public statements now coming back to haunt her was said before a group of Duke law students during a panel discussion on campus in 2005. Props to Duke Law School for a) recognizing Sotomayor as a rising star and b) recording the discussion.

The entire video is available here, though you'll need RealPlayer to see it.

Your friendly city magazine has done you a favor, watching the entire (often rather dry) video and just picking out the parts where Sotomayor, who, at 54, is vying to become the first Latina member of the high court, speaks at length.

We'll start with the controversial statement, which came toward the end of the discussion at around the 43-minute mark. It was addressing the advantages of clerking for an appeals court judge versus a district court judge.

"All of the legal defense funds out there, they're looking for people with court of appeals experience because court of appeals is where policy is made," she said. (My emphasis.)

This, of course, has exposed her to the charge of "judicial activism," anathema to conservatives who believe judges should strictly interpret, not make, law.

Sotomayor immediately recognized the statement as a gaffe, glanced at the two judge colleagues to her left and said sheepishly, "And I know this is on tape and I should never say that because we don't make law, I know."

There was some nervous laughter before she continued: "I'm not promoting it, I'm not advocating it, I'm, you know. OK," she concluded to more nervous laughter.

Many of you might have heard that clip already. But she explained herself further, and it'll be interesting to see whether that explanation will appease critics or give them more ammunition.

"Having said that, the court of appeals is where, before the Supreme Court makes the final decision, the law is percolating, its interpretation, its application. When you're on the district court, you're looking to do justice in that particular case. So you're looking much more to the facts of the case than you are to the application of the law because the application of the law is non-precedential. So the facts control.
"On the court of appeals you are looking to how the law is developing so that it will then be applied to a broad class of cases. So you are always thinking about the ramifications of this ruling on the next step in the development of the law."

I can see that "development of the law" phrase being troublesome to conservatives, or at least being exploited by folks who want to run the nominee through the ringer for whatever reason.

Should make for interesting discussion on Capitol Hill come August.

Meanwhile, what say you? Do these remarks give you pause at all about the person who very likely will become a Supreme Court justice? Or is this making a mountain out of a mole hill?

Here's a quick guide to other sections where Judge Sotomayor speaks:

2:55 - 7:50 — On her working relationships with clerks: "I seek a recommendation from my law clerks as to what the outcome should be. There are some judges who don't want that, who simply want an explanation of the law."

19:20-23:00  — On why she regrets not clerking after law school.

32:00-36:42 — On what she looks for in a clerk. "I look, for example, for people with journalism experience, because I find that they keep things simple." (Hey, good news for all those newspaper folks who jumped ship for law school.)