North State Journal - Vol 1 Issue 4

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VOLUME 1 EDITION 4

SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 2016

WWW.NSJONLINE.COM

the Sunday NEWS BRIEFING Burr, Ross win primaries, to face off in November Raleigh Incumbent Republican Senator Richard Burr won Tuesday’s Republican primary while Deborah Ross won the Democratic race. Both claimed victory with more than 60 percent of their parties’ votes. Burr is a two-term Senator and the high-profile chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Ross is a former N.C. House member. The Senate race is expected to be one the most watched in the nation.

Second primary filing period opened

PHOTOS BY CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Winston-Salem Filing began March 16 and runs through March 25 for candidates seeking nomination for one state Supreme Court seat and the 13 U.S. House of Representatives seats formed under the new district map, which is still under review by a federal court. The June 7 special primary could also be scrapped if the federal judges rule that the new maps are unconstitutional.

NCSU scientists may have found dino DNA Raleigh Dinosaur DNA may have been discovered by a team of NC State scientists in the fossilized remains of a T-Rex that was pregnant when it died. According to its study, the team found the 68-million-year-old fossil in Montana and discovered medullary bone inside it, which is only found during pregnancy. It is believed that scientists could recover dinosaur DNA, putting the team one step closer to possibly cloning a T-Rex.

Deputies suspended after Trump rally Fayetteville Five deputies have been suspended over their performance at the March 9 rally for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on Wednesday. According to officials, Trump supporter John McGraw punched a protester. The Cumberland County Sheriff’s Office said three deputies were demoted and suspended for five days without pay and two were suspended for three days. The sheriff’s office also was considering a charge against Trump for inciting a riot, but the investigation was later dropped. McGraw was arrested on a misdemeanor assault charge.

Gov. Pat McCrory, below right, toured the state on Wednesday to thank voters following Tuesday night’s passage of the $2 billion Connect NC bond referendum. McCrory visited Jordan Lake State Park, above, along with members of the N.C. National Guard, students and park officials. The park will receive $3 million in funding from the bond, while the National Guard will receive $70 million for three of its readiness centers.

NORTH

STATE

JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION

Trump, Clinton command in N.C. primary By Liz Moomey North State Journal RALEIGH — Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton topped the polls in North Carolina’s March 15 primary. Trump won with 40.24 percent, and Clinton won with 45.59 percent. Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz followed Trump with 36.77 percent. Trump won 78 counties, most notably Mecklenburg and Brunswick counties. Cruz won the remaining 22 counties, including Wake and Guilford counties. Trump gained 29 delegates, Cruz gained 27, John Kasich

gained nine, and Marco Rubio gained seven. Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders received 40.76 percent of the vote. He received the majority of the vote in Orange, Dare and Buncombe counties. Clinton gained 59 delegates, and Sanders gained 45 delegates. Clinton swept the other Tuesday primaries states, which included Florida, Illinois, Missouri and Ohio. Trump won in Florida, Illinois and Missouri. Kasich, who is governor of Ohio, won the winner-takeall Ohio. In a speech after her victorious night, Clinton addressed See PRESIDENTIAL, page A8

UNCW’s thrilling postseason, in photos Sports Setting a well-dressed springtime table the good life

$2.00

Over 2.1 million North Carolina voters cast their ballot in favor of the Connect NC bond referendum during Tuesday’s primary elections, and a substantial majority — roughly 66 percent — ensured its passage. The $2 billion bond program, which will be paid back by the state over the next 20 years, will invest in 129 infrastructure-related projects in 76 of N.C.’s 100 counties. The projects include construction efforts at all 17 UNC system campuses and all 58 of the state’s community colleges, as well as statewide water and sewer repair loans and grants, National Guard upgrades at three facilities, 46 investments in the state park system and statewide local parks for children and veterans with disabilities, state agriculture enhancements, upgrades to the North Carolina Zoo, and funding to the Samarcand Training Academy. Gov. Pat McCrory, the honorary chairman of the Connect NC Committee, spoke to a crowd of bond supporters on Tuesday night at the Raleigh Marriott

infrastructurerelated projects funded by the bond in

76

of N.C.’s 100 counties

See BOND, page A8

McCrory, Cooper race expected to be competitive GREENSBORO — The race between Republican Gov. Pat McCrory and Democratic Attorney General Roy Cooper could be one of the most competitive gubernatorial races in the nation. According to the Cook Political Report, the race for governor is a toss up. Polls by Public Policy Polling have McCrory leading currently, but in January, Cooper was leading — each by 2 percent. According to Politico, North Carolina is predicted to be the second-most contested governor’s race in the country. Money-wise, Cooper has raised $5.7 million while McCrory has raised $4.3 million. At a watch party Tuesday, Cooper addressed the closeness of the upcoming election. “There will be a battle in November,” Cooper said. “We know it is coming.” McCrory decidedly won the Republican primary with 82 percent of the vote. In a press release, his campaign addressed the win: “McCrory’s primary rout erases any doubt

Joel Berry’s throwback PG play spurring Heels on run

20177 52016

By Josh Hyatt North State Journal

By Jill Osborn and Kimberly Johnson North State Journal

INSIDE

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$2 billion bond program approved in referendum 129

McCrory is one of two top gubernatorial targets for Democrats.

See GOVERNOR, page A8

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

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Isabelle Robinson, 5, clutches to her mother Patty as she casts her vote in the North Carolina primary at Fire Station 11 in Raleigh.

Laura Ashley Lamm and Kimberly Johnson report on N.C. General Assembly races On Murphy to Manteo, page A5


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THE BACKSTORY

datebook

1 p.m. Mar. 21-24 Raleigh Graduate Education Week at N.C. State University in the McKimmon Center 9:30 p.m. Mar. 23 Raleigh Joint Oversight Committee DHHS will hold Early Education and Family Support Programs in the Legislative Office Building 9 a.m. Mar. 30 Greensboro N.C. Chamber 74th annual convention at the Grandover Resort & Conference Center

WE STAND CORRECTED To report an error or a suspected error email corrections@nsjonline.com with “Correction request” in the subject line.

88 years later: Obama to visit Cuba Monday

Eric Trump receives threat calling for father’s campaign withdrawal

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama plans to begin a two-day trip to Cuba on Monday, marking the first time a sitting president has visited the Communist-run republic in 88 years. Although President Jimmy Carter has returned to the island nation several times since his presidency, President Calvin Coolidge was the last sitting president to visit Cuba in 1928. Obama will take up to 20 members of Congress with him, which White House officials earlier this month said will include a mix of Republicans and Democrats to underscore bipartisan support for the president’s actions toward normal relations with Cuba. AT&T Inc., Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc., and Marriott

North State Journal and Reuters

Published each Sunday by North State Media, LLC 209 Fayetteville Street, Raleigh, N.C. 27601 Inquiries: 866-458-7184 Annual Subscription Price: $250.00 Periodicals Postage Paid at Raleigh, N.C. and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to North State Journal, 209 Fayetteville St., Raleigh, NC 27601.

Image of U.S. President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro in Havana.

International Inc. are also expected to sign deals to do business in Cuba around the time of Obama’s visit, with the possibility of an expansion of Major League Baseball. The Obama administration hopes that an investment from U.S. companies in Cuba

will help loosen tensions and keep the door open after he leaves office. “The administration wants to do as much as it can unilaterally before the clock runs out,” said a person who has been briefed on Obama’s strategy.

DONALD TRUMP’S DAUGHTER-IN-LAW, LARA WHO OPENED THE THREATENING LETTER. CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | THE NORTH STATE JOURNAL

N.C. GOP

Investigation set on allegations that chairman requested attack on party website

North State Journal ISSN: 2471-1365 Neal Robbins Publisher Donna King Managing Editor Drew Elliot Opinion Editor Will Brinson Sports Editor Jennifer Wood Features Editor Kevin Martin Photo Editor

PHOTO BY ALEXANDRE MENEGHINI | REUTERS

NEW YORK, NY — Donald Trump’s son, Eric Trump, received a threatening letter containing a suspicious white powder in the mail at his Manhattan home. New York City police official said on Friday that Trump’s wife Lara opened the letter, spilling the substance. The letter warned that if Donald Trump did not withdraw from the Republican presidential race, his five children would be harmed. Daughter-inlaw Lara Yunaska Trump is a Wilmington, North Carolina native and graduated from NC State University in 2005.

He has confused people, they don’t know what to believe and who to trust.

By Donna King North State Journal

R

ALEIGH — The North Carolina Republican Party’s governing Central Committee is meeting Sunday after allegations came to light this week that a computer technician was instructed by the elected chairman to crash the party’s GOP convention websites and replace them with alternative websites. In a sworn affidavit obtained by the North State Journal, the computer technician said that Chairman Hasan Harnett asked him to replace the N.C. GOP sites with ones housing a new fundraising system that, if implemented, would have funneled payments for the state convention out of party accounts and into ones under the control of the chairman. “Mr. Harnett then told me that he preferred to do a brute force attack,” reads the affidavit. “I was concerned by Mr. Harnett’s statements because he requested me to hack and potentially damage the North Carolina Republican Party’s website, that he did not want to go through accounting and that he was trying to raise money through an alternative website.” The party launched an internal investigation and contacted local law enforcement. N.C. GOP Executive Director Dallas Woodhouse would not comment on the allegations. However staff said the headquarters received a call on March 1 saying that a cyberattack of the party’s websites was imminent, potentially compromising the party’s financial informa-

tion, vendor and donor databases, and email accounts. The tip resulted in chaos at the party’s Hillsborough Street office in Raleigh as staff members shut down computer systems, contacted high-level donors to reassure them, warned database and financial vendors, and cut off emails of multiple remote users. “When you have a water leak, you have to shut off the water to find out where it’s coming from,” said Central Committee member Dr. Ada Fisher. “The executive director did exactly what I would expect him to do, which is to investigate and shut it down.” Staff members say that the emails of Harnett, Vice Chairman Michelle Nix and Woodhouse were all offline for several hours and disconnected from servers overnight for the next several days. Cutting off of Harnett’s email caused loud protests by the chairman, including emails to news outlets and supporters in which he accused Woodhouse and party staff of undermining his authority because he is the first black party chairman. The allegations appear to be the tipping point in a dispute among the chairman, party staff, and the Central Committee over the convention’s ticket prices. At the N.C. GOP’s convention last year, Harnett was elected chairman, running in part on a promise to offer attendance to future conventions for free or a reduced rate. Fees to attend in 2015 in Raleigh were $75 per person. The Central Committee voted to raise the ticket prices this year to $90, with one committee member saying that lowering the price

was impossible since Harnett has been unable to raise funds for the party. Harnett called the $90 fee a “poll tax.” Harnett decided to send his own “call to convention” with reduced prices via email and followed with letters mailed through the U.S. postal service. Harnett posted images of mailing the letters on his Facebook page. The N.C. GOP’s attorney sent a memo saying that Harnett’s call to the convention, while technically meeting the requirement of a call “unilaterally purported to set fees different from those approved by the Central Committee… In this respect the State Chairman acted beyond his authority.” Amid confusion and in consultation with the Republican National Committee, the party decided to send out another official letter that included the prices established by the Central Committee, saying it had to cover its legal bases should the convention be challenged. “He has confused people, they don’t know what to believe and who to trust,” said a second Central Committee member who wished to remain anonymous. “What bothers many of us is his insistence that the Central Committee is trying to take him down. We want him to succeed, we’ve done whatever we can to help him succeed, but we are a donation entity. We have to keep the lights on.” In the Sunday meeting the Central Committee could take punitive action, which may include censuring the Chairman, petitioning to remove him or restricting his activities until the investigation in resolved.

Collard Greens, bluegrass, baiting your own hook, a fine oyster roast, a good dog, a festival for every vegetable, and barbecue rank high on my list of life necessities.


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BUSINESS & ECONOMY the DASHBOARD

+.69%

WIT TUTTELL

Dow closes up Friday for sixth day in a row

$153,000

Median N.C. home sales price Up 1% from first quarter 2015

1.8 million Jobs in N.C. with 1-99 employee companies

$500 million

Texas federal jury awarded to five plantifs injured by Johnson & Johnson’s Pinnacle hip implant

the

N.C. vacations are all business

BRIEF

OR an industry that runs year-round, tourism has F a huge financial stake in

summer travel. The stretch from Memorial Day weekend to Labor Day accounts for about one-third of the visitation across the state. With prices at the pump averaging about 40 cents less per gallon than at this time last year, we at Visit North Carolina, which serves as the state’s tourism marketing arm, look forward to a monumental 2016 vacation season. If our expectations are met, businesses and workers within the industry will reap tremendous benefits, as will every resident of the state. North Carolina, the sixth most-visited state in the country, has seen a steady rise in visitor spending since 2009. According to the most recent figures available, instate travelers and visitors from across the country spent $21.3 billion on lodging, dining, transportation and recreation in 2014. That spending added $3.2 billion to the tax coffers, including $1.1 billion for the state and $636.1 million for local governments. As a result of visitor spending, each North Carolina household saved $455 in state and local taxes. The number of businesses and size of the workforce offer another way to gauge the importance of the tourism industry. In North Carolina, 44,000 businesses directly provide products and services to travelers, with travelers directly contributing more than 26 percent to their total products and services. Tourism expenditures directly support nearly 205,000 jobs for a payroll of $4.9 billion. By the time travelers pack their bags for Memorial Day weekend, we’ll be able to cite figures for 2015 visitation. For now, monthly lodging reports and other indicators lead us to expect continued growth for the industry. We also expect heightened interest in travel as a result of new offerings in our destinations plus the centennial celebrations of our state and national parks. Along with the N.C. State Parks and the National Park Service, Visit North Carolina is using its marketing reach to generate excitement about these profoundly special places. We hope to see more people build stay-and-play travel plans around trips to explore the wealth of beauty, recreation, and natural and historic landmarks that can be experienced in our parks. Their value might be reflected in visitation reports, but their true worth lies in the stories preserved for all to enjoy.

Wit Tuttell is executive director of Visit North Carolina, part of the Economic Development Partnership of North Carolina. Established in 2014, the EDPNC is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation that oversees the state’s efforts in business and job recruitment and retention, international trade, and tourism, film and sports development. The mission of Visit North Carolina is to unify and lead the state in developing North Carolina as a major destination for leisure travel, group tours, meetings and conventions, sports events and film production. For more information on planning a trip to North Carolina, go to VisitNC.com.

U.S. sues to stop Tribune Publishing from buying California papers Washington, D.C. The U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit on Thursday aimed at blocking Tribune Publishing Co., which owns the Los Angeles Times, from acquiring papers in nearby Orange and Riverside Counties, saying the acquisition would lessen competition.

BMW unveils new strategy for self-driving car era PHOTOS BY CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

The Merchant family of Lubbock, Texas, including Corie, 11-month-old Britton, Donell, 18-month-old Malachi, Trey and 11-month-old Madden, cheers for Texas Tech during an NCAA Tournament first round game against Butler at PNC Arena in Raleigh on Thursday, bottom.

March Madness means money for Raleigh By R. Cory Smith North State Journal

ARCH is a time for madness, bracket busting, and, for a few special sites, a massive economM ic boost. In the opening round of this year’s NCAA

Tournament, Raleigh was one of only 14 cities to host eight teams at PNC Arena. Aside from just bringing eyeballs to the city on national TV, the tournament also has a vast impact on the economy itself. The last time NC State hosted in 2014, an estimated $4.2 million was generated in visitor spending while 17,720 visitors made their way to Raleigh. That equated to more than 53,000 ticket sales and 10,105 total hotel room nights in the Raleigh area. Of those ticket sales, 29 percent were local while 59 percent came from outside the state. Executive Director of the Greater Raleigh Sports Alliance Scott Dupree noted the exact figures for this year’s tourney won’t be known for another month, but having the NCAA back in town is critical for the city. “Any time we can host the NCAA Tournament is a huge deal for us, with this being college basketball’s signature event,” Dupree said. “This is always our most important event or one of our largest events of the year. It has such a wide-reaching impact that it can’t be overstated how important this is for Raleigh.” The GRSA works to recruit sporting events to the Raleigh area. Whether it’s the Hurricanes, NC State or City of Raleigh itself, the GRSA works to attract tournaments and other huge events to help grow the economy. This is the fourth time Raleigh is hosting in the last 13 years. One of the biggest reasons, Dupree believes, has been the growth of the city and development of downtown. “It helps that the tournaments held here have also been incredibly successful,” Dupree said with a smile. “Having success from the NHL All-Star weekend, Bluegrass Festival and the Rock-And-Roll Marathon helps to also strengthen Raleigh’s reputation and gives back to the city as well.” One of the biggest issues for cities hosting the NCAA tourney tends to be the teams locked into that bracket. Luckily, Virginia and Hampton have a moderately short trip to Raleigh while Providence and Butler are manageable.

Southern Cal and Texas Tech, on the other hand, weren’t expected to be well represented. But after practices on the court were filled with Red Raiders and Trojans fans, it was clear both would make their respective marks. “We drove in all night for 12,092 miles and 18 and a half hours straight,” Jeff Orr, a Texas Tech fan said. “It’s been nine years since Tech made the tournament, so we weren’t going to miss it. … I’m an alumni and have been a fan for 30-something years, so it’s worth every mile of driving.” A 38-hour trip from Los Angeles to Raleigh, on the other hand? Yeah, that’s probably not happening. But Dupree is hoping with the Trojans national fan base they will flock to the City of Oaks. “I don’t know how many fans are going to travel 3,000 miles on a three-day notice,” Dupree explained. “Hopefully there’s a lot of Southern Cal alums from D.C. to Atlanta that will buy tickets. It can be a challenge on fans with short notice, but this is such a huge spectacle that fans will do it. “This is the second-biggest sports event in America besides the Super Bowl in terms of captivating the country.”

Munich German carmaker BMW unveils a new strategy to focus on achieving further advances in electric vehicles, automated driving and develop new services in the field of premium individual mobility.

Fed holds rates steady Washington, D.C. The Federal Reserve decided to stand pat on interest rates at the end of this week’s two-day policy-making meeting. Underlying U.S. inflation increased more than expected in February as rent and medical costs maintained their upward trend which could mean that the Federal Reserve will gradually raise interest rates this year. Other data on Wednesday showed the housing market continuing to strengthen last month.

N.C. unemployment rates up overall in January Raleigh Unemployment rates (not seasonally adjusted) increased in all 100 of North Carolina’s counties from December to January. Hyde County had the highest unemployment rate at 15.5 percent, while Buncombe County had the lowest at 4.5 percent. When compared to January 2015, not seasonally adjusted unemployment rates decreased in 55 counties, increased in 34, and remained unchanged in 11.

China company to purchase Sheraton

Jill Setser sells NCAA merchandise during an first round game at PNC Arena.

Stamford, Conn. Starwood Hotels & Resorts Inc, the operator of Sheraton and Westin hotels, said on Friday it had accepted a raised buyout offer from a group led by China’s Anbang Insurance and would scrap its deal with Marriott International Inc. A successful deal would follow Anbang’s follow its purchase of New York’s iconic Waldorf Astoria hotel last year. It would also be the biggest Chinese investment in U.S. real estate assets.

More people make oneway trips to N.C. Raleigh U-Haul says North Carolina is the No. 1 state for growth based on their study of oneway truck rentals. Virginia, Ohio, Florida and California were Nos. 2 through 5 in state migration rankings. Illinois ranked 50th, having the most departures of any state.


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North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

Murphy

to

Manteo

Jones& Blount jonesandblount.com @JonesandBlount

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton

Charlotte primary sends Autry to N.C. House

Ted Cruz and Hillary Clinton

By Kimberly Johnson North State Journal

Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders Chapel Hill

Ted Cruz and Bernie Sanders

Raleigh Asheville

Charlotte PHOTO BY CHRSTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump yells to supporters as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie watches during a rally at LenoirRhyne University in Hickory, N.C.

Hall upsets Caldwell County primary

WEST Burr pulls out win in N.C. House primary Stanly County

PHOTO BY JASON MICZEK | REUTERS

U.S. Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz speaks during a campaign event at Max Dragway in Concord, N.C.

Incumbent Rep. Justin Burr narrowly won his party’s nomination in District 67. Claiming victory by 242 votes, Burr survived one of the most vicious campaigns in the state. The N.C. Chamber and newlyformed PACs dropped more than $150,000 running mailers against him. Burr ran against House Speaker Tim Moore for the body’s leadership post after Sen. Thom Tillis left for Washington, D.C. He was later involved in highprofile disputes with Moore. Burr launched his re-election campaign with a letter outlining Moore’s “unsuccessful and toxic governing style.” Moore responded, calling Burr “ineffective and irrelevant.”

WFU Law student gains national recognition Winston-Salem Carson Smith is the first Wake Forest University law student to be recognized by The National Jurist as Law Student of the Year. He was recognized for his work as the executive director of the Pro Bono Project. Smith plans to return to his home town of Charlotte as a public defender, providing legal services to individuals unable to afford adequate representation.

PHOTO BY EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Lula Merritt of Raleigh reacts as she meets Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton during a campaign stop on Tuesday.

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Caldwell County Rep. George Robinson lost his primary bid to attorney Destin Hall on Tuesday. Robinson was appointed by the Caldwell County GOP to replace former Majority Leader Edgar Starnes after he resigned last year to become Senior Policy Adviser at the N.C. Department of Treasury.

Former N.C. senator, 72, passes away Forsyth County Former State Senator Earline Parmon passed away Tuesday at the age of 72. Parmon resigned from the N.C. Senate in 2015, but also served five terms in the N.C. House. During her time as a lawmaker, she worked on the state’s eugenics compensation legislation and the Racial Justice Act, which allowed defendants on death row to appeal if they argued that race was a factor in their conviction.

PIEDMONT House races may be headed for recount Mecklenburg County Two Charlotte-area races from Tuesday still aren’t decided. Incumbent and House Republican Conference Leader Charles Jeter (R-District 92) beat challenger Tom Davis by less than 28 votes on Tuesday while Democrat Rochelle Rivas only won by ten votes against Noah Lieberman. The winner of that race faces incumbent Bill Brawley (R-District 103) in November. Provisional and absentee ballots will now be counted with results due on Tuesday. If the margin is still less than one percent the losers can request a recount.

Wilmington

Fireman missing after Tar River swim

State rep. dies on the day of his primary loss Greensboro N.C. Rep. Ralph Johnson (D-Greensboro) died Tuesday after suffering a stroke earlier this month. On the same day, his primary opponent Amos Quick won the primary election and faces no Republican opponent in November. The Guilford County Democratic Party has not announced who they will nominate to fill Johnson’s seat until Quick takes office in January.

Rep. Dollar defends House seat in primary Apex Rep. Nelson Dollar narrowly won his primary on Tuesday after serving nearly two decades in the N.C. House. Dollar, a chief budget writer, came under public scrutiny and internal criticism during the past few budget cycles. Dollar reportedly spent more than $230,000 defending his seat. He will face Democrat Jennifer Ferrell and Libertarian Brian Irving in November’s general election.

Cabarrus chamber gets new leadership Cabarrus County The Cabarrus County Chamber of Commerce has selected a new executive director after a nationwide search. Barbi Jones will leave her post as chief communications officer at the United Way of Central Carolinas to head the chamber.

Judge Greer to leave N.C. Court of Appeals Raleigh Judge Martha Greer announced this week that she will leave the bench of the N.C. Court of Appeals and returning to private practice. She will head a new Raleigh-based law office of Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll PLLC, a national plaintiffs’ law firm headquartered in Washington, D.C. Greer served on the C.O.A. for 13 years. Her vacancy is an opportunity for Gov. Pat McCrory to appoint a replacement that would then face re-election in November.

EAST Governor breaks ground for Bonner Bridge Outer Banks Gov. Pat McCrory participated in a groundbreaking ceremony at Oregon Inlet this week to mark the beginning of a $246 million construction project that will build a new Bonner Bridge over the inlet. While onsite construction will begin this month, the bridge is slated to be open to traffic by November 2018, and the project will reach completion by September 2019.

Recount possible in Johnston Co. race Johnston County The Democratic primary for the N.C. House seat from Johnston County may face a recount following Tuesday’s primary. Patricia Oliver (D) currently leads opponent Jimmie Massengill (D) by just 44 votes. Under N.C. election law, the second place candidate can ask for a recount if the difference is less than one percent of the vote. The winner will face Republican Larry Strickland in November.

Princeville Officials continued searching for a missing volunteer fireman in Edgecombe County. Anthony Burnet, 20, went fishing with friends Sunday when he decided to take a swim in the Tar River near Shiloh Landing on U.S. 258 outside of Princeville. Burnet went under water and never resurfaced. Crews are still searching the river.

Hammocks Beach State Park to expand Swansboro The passage of the Connect NC $2 billion bond referendum comes at a seasonable time for Hammocks Beach State Park. Nearly 300 acres of undeveloped property was bought last year, which makes way for the expansion of the state park in Swansboro. Of the bond, $1.125 million will be available to Hammocks for a project that will enhance public water access by creating a public boat ramp.

CHARLOTTE — Primary voters confirmed Democrat John Autry, a long-time Charlotte city councilmember, will be the next District 100 representative in the N.C. House. Autry beat challenger Billy Maddalon for the seat left vacant by Tricia Cotham, also a Democrat, who did not seek re-election. Autry’s win in the primary assures his position in the House since no Republican ran for the seat. Autry’s win was an interesting twist in that Maddalon spent more money and most people thought he had a more active campaign, said University of North Carolina-Charlotte political science professor Eric Heberlig. “Autry has represented basically the same area on the city council for a number of years, so starts off with big advantage with name recognition,” Heberlig said. The real surprise in the region, however, was the presidential winner, Heberlig said. In Mecklenburg County

Trump took 32 percent of the GOP vote, compared to Cruz’ 30 percent. John Kasich took about 22 percent, and Marco Rubio 12 percent. Hillary Clinton’s victory was even more pronounced in the Charlotte area, claiming 60 percent of the Democrat vote. Some of the results confounded traditional political logic. “The Republican voters here [in Charlotte] are wealthier, more highly educated than many others around the state, yet Trump was the winner,” Heberlig said. Kasich did twice as well in Mecklenburg County in comparison to the rest of the state, Heberlig said, adding that Kasich and Rubio would have been the candidates he would have thought would have done well in Charlotte. The Trump victory in North Carolina is also interesting based upon historical exit polls, said Davidson College political science professor Susan Roberts. Seven out of 10 voters say in state exit polling that they would consider themselves evangelical, she said. “Well that didn’t materialize when they voted for Donald Trump,” Roberts said.

Close race for Newton’s vacant seat By Laura Ashley Lamm North State Journal WILSON, N.C. - Voters in Eastern North Carolina flocked to the polls to cast their ballot in the highly contested N.C. Senate District 11 and N.C. District Court Judge for District 7 races. Newcomer Ben Horner beat out Benton Sawrey 52 percent to 48 percent for the Republican nomination for Buck Newton’s N.C. Senate seat, which represents Johnston, Nash and Wilson Counties. Newton did not run for re-election, winning the Republican primary for N.C. Attorney General on Tuesday. “The race was a lot closer than I thought it would be,” said Horner. “I’m grateful for the win.” Horner, 58, is originally from Nash County and moved to Wilson County in 2009. He served 20 years working in the securities industry before spending these last 9 years in commercial insurance. He served 14 years on the Nash-Rocky Mount Board of Education with four terms as chairman. Sawrey provided strong competition for Horner. At 29, Sawrey, an attorney from Smithfield, is also a newcomer to the political arena. “This has been a great experience and I look forward to helping

CHARLOTTE | WINSTON-SALEM 877-NC-JEWEL WINDSOR-JEWELERS.COM

Republicans win in November,” said Sawrey. Another highly contested race included that of District Court Judge for District 7, serving Edgecombe, Nash and Wilson counties. Lamont Wiggins, a Rocky Mount city councilman, and Beth Freshwater-Smith, an assistant district attorney emerged as primary winners and will move forward to November’s general election. According to election returns, Wiggins had 35 percent of the vote over Andrew Whitley of Wilson County. FreshwaterSmith took 32 percent of the vote. “My goal moving forward is to help people understand the court system, to help people get to know me as a person, and for me to get to know the citizens in each community,” said Wiggins. Other top races in the East included Sen. Angela Bryant, D-4, sweeping a win with 81 percent over her opponent James Mills. Incumbents in the N.C. House of Representatives Larry Bell, D-21, William Brisson, D-22, Jean Farmer-Butterfield, D-24, and Michael Wray, D-27, will all be moving forward to the November ballot without Republican opposition.


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north STATEment Neal Robbins, publisher | Drew Elliot, opinion editor | Ray Nothstine, deputy opinion editor OUR EDITORIALS

Protecting campus speech is non-negotiable JAMES MADISON SAID that free speech was “the only effectual guardian of every other right.” While threats to this linchpin of liberty should be That many unimaginable, that is exactly what is happening colleges and on college campuses across the country and North universities Carolina. can no longer Fortunately, Lt. Gov. Dan Forest is offering leadership to safeguard the rights of speech and be trusted to protect speech conscience at public colleges and universities. Unfortunately, it’s always a bad sign for the rule of law is more than and rights of the citizenry when legislation has to be a troubling introduced to protect the Bill of Rights — however, it’s essential to do so. educational While the details of Forest’s proposed legislation crisis. have not been finalized, it aims to disarm agendadriven administrators from having absolute control over the free dissemination of ideas. The proposal, a no-brainer, will create enforcement mechanisms that champion free speech at the 16 UNC system campuses. Students and administrators actively tearing apart a fundamental right guaranteed to all will be held accountable. The rise of safe-spaces, silencing of dissent, and abuse of power has been a norm for too long. Many schools have absurdly set up so-called “free speech zones,” seemingly unaware that the whole country is a free speech zone. Increasingly, Americans are familiar with headlines and news reports of bullying and intimidation not just by students, but administrators bent on squelching opinions and views outside of the narrowing views deemed acceptable by campus overseers. North Carolina is a leading state for higher education in its region and the nation. It is time to set the example nationally in reaffirming basic rights for students and citizens alike. This is an essential principle for Margaret Spellings to affirm as the new president of the university system. President Barack Obama defended the rights of free expression last fall, when he chided those on the left at America’s universities for not “listening to the other side.” He then forcefully denounced those “that have to be coddled and protected from different points of view.” That many colleges and universities can no longer be trusted to protect speech is more than a troubling educational crisis. When those values bleed over into mainstream society tyranny takes root. Protecting speech requires more than mere legislation, but a culture that cherishes rights. There’s no reason to align against rights that transcend government.

Soaring Seahawks UNC WILMINGTON HAS HAD quite the success story lately. One of our youngest state universities – the UNC school on College Road was founded in 1946 and joined the UNC system in 1969 – the Seahawks are on a roll, Wilmington according to statistics compiled by UNC Chapel Hill’s deserves a Office of Institutional Research and Assessment. statewide Out of the 16 campuses of the UNC system, round of Wilmington ranks second only to Chapel Hill in its six-year graduation rate. The 15,000-student campus applause is third in the four-year grad rate, quite impressive for its when one considers all the distractions with which its achievements. students must contend at a campus nestled between the Cape Fear River and Wrightsville Beach. And not to be missed is the fact that UNC Wilmington is doing more with less taxpayer support: the campus, led by new Chancellor Jose Sartarelli, ranks 14 out of 16 in state appropriations as a percentage of revenues, at 33 percent. Wilmington does well in the rankings, too. Among Southern regional universities, U.S. News and World Report ranks UNCW sixth, trailing only Appalachian State (third) in that category among UNC institutions. As the icing on the cake, the Seahawk men’s basketball team had a marvelous year, winning their conference and making the NCAA tournament field for the first time since 2006. UNC Wilmington deserves a statewide round of applause for its achievements. The Seahawks are flying high; may they continue to soar.

BE IN TOUCH Letters addressed to the editor may be sent to letters@NSJonline.com or 209 Fayetteville St., Raleigh, NC. Letters must be signed; include the writer’s phone number, city and state; and be no longer than 300 words. Letters may be edited for style, length or clarity when necessary. Ideas for op-eds should be sent to opinion@NSJonline.com.

Quicker trials to moot death penalty argument

HEN we received your newspaper last week, I read it eagerly. I was W wondering if you would provide an

alternative to the daily propaganda we already received. Having read your second issue, the jury is still out. I would, however, like to comment on the March 6 Guest Opinion by Mia Harrison (“The death penalty is under attack nationwide. It should go in N.C.”). When people discuss the death penalty, they often do so in the abstract — they talk about it as if it is something other than punishment for a heinous crime. Fortunately, few people are ever touched directly by the death penalty or the crimes for which it is the sentence. I believe that allows others the luxury of disassociation and encourages them to talk about the “cost,” the “efficiency,” or the “sanctity of life.” These are all great topics, but ill suited to this discussion. The Constitution establishes the right to a speedy trial for the accused. It does not mention that the families of the victim(s) have the right to see justice carried out in a reasonable time, but it should! With the technology available today, there is no reason for 20-plus years to pass between sentence and execution. The endless delays and constant appeals force the victims’ families to suffer again and again. That is inhuman and should stop. Once the jury votes to convict “beyond a reasonable doubt,” and the sentence is execution, that sentence should be carried

out in a timely manner. That makes the financial issue moot! Could an innocent person be executed? That merits further discussion, but I would submit that in criminal law today, the scales of justice are tilted in favor of the accused. Further, criminal science has been highly developed and factors such as DNA limit the possibility of mistakes. John E. Lane Charlotte

Thanks and encouragement

that the typical letter to the editor is intended to provide a reaction ItoTHINK a specific article or viewpoint that has

previously appeared in the publication. This is not one of those letters. This letter is an expression of thanks and encouragement to all at the North State Journal. In just a few short weeks you have already provided a clear answer for those seeking a statewide glimpse at news and culture in North Carolina. There is so much to be aware of, and excited about, in North Carolina today — but it is not all happening in one particular city or region. I admire the ambition of the NSJ to try to capture the breadth of our entire state in a single news publication. It is a brave time to start a print newspaper. Thank you for taking the chance and for all you have added already to Sunday morning in North Carolina. Peter Bove Charlotte

VISUAL VOICES


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

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GUEST OPINION | SAMUEL SON Akiel Denkins’ mother Rolanda Byrd, left, mourns for her son during his funeral service on Friday, March 4, at Bible Way Temple in Raleigh.

CLARENCE PAGE

Protect Trump’s free speech, as he threatens yours URING a weekend of violence at some of Donald Trump’s rallies, I received a flurry D of angry emails, all playing the same game of

MADELINE GRAY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Not just another black man shot by another white cop

‘I A person’s story is too complex to be summed up by any single incident.

DON’T GET IT? Why isn’t it blowing up there in Raleigh as it did in Ferguson or right here?” my high school friend in New York called a week after Akiel Denkins was shot dead by officer D.C. Twiddy. There are many differing factors in this Raleigh incident, as is the case of every shooting. But our minds and newspapers prefer reductionistic thinking since it is more dramatic: another black man shot by another white cop. But events are not reducible to headlines, and lives certainly cannot be simplified into symbolizations. A few days after the shooting, Raleigh Police Chief Cassandra Deck-Brown knocked on the doors of Rolanda Byrd, the mother of the victim, held her hand and consoled her for the lose of her son. Though her title went with her, thus representing the city of Raleigh, it was as a mother that she held another mother’s hand, and in that moment, Denkins was recognized as person, a son who was the hope and joy of a mother. That the police chief was an African-American woman was not the decisive factor. There are many shootings of black men by black cops that fall into racial targeting, as in the case of Prince

Jones who was shot dead in front of his fiancé’s home in Prince George County by a black cop who went back to work the next day. There is a systemic devaluing of the black body. When Decker-Brown went to Byrd, the criminal record or the contested events of the incident did not play a factor. A human life, no matter the court record, is of great value. A person’s story is too complex to be summed up by any single incident. A death of a human person is to be mourned. If it turns out that Denkins pulled out a gun then is his death deserved? The cop might be justified in shooting in selfdefense, but that does not imply a deserved death. It is the sanctity of one life that will guide us out of the darkness of racism and any other oppression that devalues a person into a category for easier social organization. For sure, we need laws that will deal with injustices at systemic levels. But laws cannot do surgery on what is ultimately a heart issue, our instinct to turn the other person into an “it.” This objectification is easier when there are visible differences, color of skin: language, sex, sexual preferences and religion. And it is lot easier to hate and destroy an “it.” But if you see that black

man as a person like you with complex consciousness, and the white officer as a person like you with desire to do good, then we can have a conversation that is not only civil, but transformative. The way forward is to move from the relationship of “I and it” to — borrowing from the philosopher Martin Buber — an “I and Thou” relationship. Drawing a pistol more readily on a black man turns a person to an “it.” Turning a cop into a white racist turns a person to an “it.” So does talk about making a person’s death mean something, which for its own reasoning wants the incident to have blatant injustices. Movements and deep changes can be quiet, though not less monumental. It starts with me, committed to treating the other as a full human being by seeing myself in the other. It is the simple but revolutionary call once made by a Jewish prophet summing up his tradition: “love your neighbor as yourself,” which requires such imagining of the humanity of the other. It begins by holding another person’s hand the way I want my hands to be held if I had just lost a son. Samuel Son is lead pastor at New Life Triangle Church in Raleigh.

GUEST OPINION | FRANK DOWD

Obama’s legacy: a poorer nation survives a history of firsts HE end of the Barack Obama era cannot come soon enough T for America. By any number of

Obama has more than doubled the national debt in just seven years to an astronomical $19 trillion.

measures, Obama’s presidency has left the United States a poorer, more fractured, more threatened and more fearful nation than at any time in the last 50 years. What will be Obama’s legacy? He has presided over an economic recovery that, seven years in, still feels like a recession. He has drowned American job creators in wave after wave of heavy-handed regulation, flooding the engine of our economy. Older Americans remember the economic “malaise” of the Jimmy Carter years and the last seven years have felt very familiar. He forced on us a federal takeover of our healthcare system that a majority of Americans opposed (and still do). Every promise he made about Obamacare was wrong or a lie. Obama has more than doubled the national debt in just seven years to an astronomical $19 trillion. He will have racked up more debt in his two terms than all 43 presidents who preceded him combined, a generational theft that should have Millenials furious over how their future has been mortgaged.

He has abandoned allies like Israel and Ukraine and embraced enemies like Iran and Cuba. The Middle East is on fire, with ISIS ascendant and terrorists targeting Europe and America. As president, however, Obama has achieved a number of historical “firsts.” He is the first president to refuse to even negotiate with political opponents in Congress, instead pursuing a scorched-earth, zero-sum game. He wins, you lose. He ignores settled law and rules by executive fiat. He will do whatever it takes to further his ideological goal of “fundamentally transforming the United States of America,” regardless of public opinion or constitutional constraints. He is the first president to intentionally polarize Americans. It’s disgraceful that a man who pledged to unite America and change our political discourse has instead used his “communityorganizing” skills to cynically divide us along racial, religious and class lines. Finally, he is the first president to no longer make much pretense of caring about national security. One needs look no further than our wide open borders or the turmoil in the Middle East for evidence of his fecklessness.

Obama’s geopolitical strategy of “leading from behind” signaled weakness to our friends and enemies alike and has diminished our strength and prestige abroad. Obama is one of those people who is often wrong but never in doubt. In an interview with ABC News the day before the deadly Paris attacks, Obama famously declared that ISIS had been “contained” due to his strategy of doing very little. Days later, while the San Bernardino terrorists were still at large, Obama told CBS News that America was safe from the threat of ISIS attacks. It will be a joy and a relief when we have a new president, God willing, who genuinely loves this nation and sees it as a force for good throughout the world. When we have a leader who will help America turn back to its founding principles and believe in itself again. A president who will fulfill his sworn oath to uphold the Constitution and provide for the common defense. January 20, 2017 can’t come soon enough. Frank Dowd IV is chairman of Charlotte Pipe and Foundry Company, a 115 year-old U.S. manufacturer of cast iron and plastic pipe and fittings, with seven plants around the country.

“How would you feel?” How would you feel, I was asked in one note, if a group of Ku Klux Klansmen broke up a Bernie Sanders rally? That’s a round-about way of referring to the violence that erupted at Trump rallies, particularly in Chicago, where the Republican frontrunner’s rally was called off after crowds of protesters grew exceptionally large. Early announcements that police had called off the event were withdrawn after police denied it. Some protest organizers insisted they were intent on making noise, not shutting down the event, although they joined the cheering after the event was shut down. I could argue against false equivalencies here. You may disagree, but I don’t see the potpourri of blacks, whites, Hispanics, Arab-Americans and others who gathered to peacefully protest as the moral equivalent of organized Klansmen. Still I won’t deny that some young pseudoanarchists and other hotheads would delight at shutting down Trump’s events and those of anyone else with whom they disagree. So, make no mistake: Muzzling your opposition makes you no better than Trump, a guy who likes free speech as long as it’s his own. Sure, he cries out for free speech when his own is threatened. He promised at a late-February event in Fort Worth to “open up” libel laws if he is elected, so that when journalists write “purposely negative horrible and false articles, we can sue them and win lots of money.” Since libel laws already hold journalists accountable when they publish false and defamatory information, whether it is out of negligence or intent, one wonders with

Early announcements that police had called off the event were withdrawn after police denied it.

dismay what Trump has in mind. Free speech for him, perhaps, but not for me? Adding apparent injury to insult, Trump disputed charges filed by Breitbart reporter Michelle Fields against his campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, with police in Jupiter, F.L. In the incident, witnessed by another reporter, Lewandowski allegedly grabbed her roughly by the arm. It is more than enough for Trump to corral reporters in the back of the room and mock them in his speeches. His staff members don’t need to manhandle them, too. Free speech is not entirely free. Even Trump must avoid sounding too provocative or he could be charged with incitement to riot. As a result, he denies condoning violence even as he justifies and encourages it. “I’d like to punch him in the face, I’ll tell you.” “In the good old days this doesn’t happen, because they used to treat them very, very rough.” “I love the old days. You know what they used to do to guys like that when they were in a place like this? They’d be carried out on a stretcher, folks.” “If you see somebody getting ready to throw a tomato, knock the crap out of them, would ya?” He said at one rally. “Seriously. Just knock the hell out of them,” After he promised to “pay for the legal fees” of anyone who did that, he would “take a look at” paying the legal fees of an elderly white man who sucker-punched a black protester who was being escorted out of a North Carolina rally. When you have offered to pay the legal fees of those who “knock the hell out of ” protesters, it’s pretty hard to argue that you are blameless when riots break out. Yet Trump plays the victim with complete indifference to contrary evidence, including his own words. Unbowed, Trump boasted about “how well we handled” those earlier confrontations. Surrounded by police, Secret Service agents and other security, Trump taunted: “Do we have a protester, anyone?” and “Is there a disrupter in the house?” Yes, as much as I deplore much of what Donald Trump has to say, as a famous old saying goes, I will defend to the death his right to say it. But if you poke a stick at a grizzly, you should not be surprised that the grizzly strikes back. Clarence Page, the 1989 Pulitzer Prize winner for Commentary, is a columnist syndicated nationally by Tribune Media Services and a member of the Chicago Tribune’s editorial board. E-mail him at cpage@tribune.com.


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

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NATION& WORLD U.S. student Otto Warmbier is led away from North Korea’s top court, in this photo released by North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang

SUPREME COURT

Garland nomination sparks showdown RESIDENT Obama’s U.S. Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland is P getting scrutiny from business groups for

N. Korea sentences American student to 15 years

Religious liberty bill passes Georgia state legislature

Seoul, Korea This week North Korea’s supreme court sentenced American student Otto Warmbier, who was arrested while visiting the country, to 15 years of hard labor for crimes against the state. Warmbier, a 21-year-old University of Virginia student, was detained in January for trying to steal an item bearing a propaganda slogan from his hotel in Pyongyang, North Korean media said previously. “The accused confessed to the serious offense against the [Democratic People’s Republic of Korea] he had committed, pursuant to the U.S. government’s hostile policy toward it, in a bid to impair the unity of its people after entering it as a tourist,” the state-controlled KCNA news agency reported, using the acronym for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. Warmbier was at the end of a fiveday New Year’s group tour of North Korea when he was delayed at airport immigration before being taken away by officials. North Korea has a long history of detaining foreigners and has used jailed Americans in the past to extract highprofile visits from the United States, with which it has no formal diplomatic relations. While most tourists to North Korea are from China, roughly 6,000 Westerners visit annually, although the United States and Canada advise against it.

Atlanta A religious freedom bill passed the Georgia state legislature Wednesday, but Republican Gov. Nathan Deal has not indicated whether he will sign it. The measure, called the Religious Liberty Bill, is designed to protect pastors and churches from being forced to perform same-sex marriages and religious groups from having to serve or employ people with conflicting beliefs. Critics call it discriminatory against same-sex couples.

Australian government accused of ‘wasteful’ wombat diplomacy

decisions made over his 19 years on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. “We have great concerns about this nominee’s record,” said Juanita Duggan, president of the National Federation of Independent Business, which represents small business owners. The group cites several cases, including one from 2003 in which the appeals court ruled against a developer challenging a finding that the federal government had authority to force it to take measures to protect an endangered toad on the property under the federal Endangered Species Act. Garland’s nomination is creating a showdown between Obama and Senate Republicans, who say they will not give any of the president’s picks for a lifelong seat a hearing or vote this close to the November presidential election The White House has hired a team of legal scholars to sell Garland to lawmakers and the public, calling him a moderate on the appeals court.

“He’s a modest judge in that he really does try to stick to Supreme Court precedent,” said Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law. Democrats say they hope to capitalize on the conflict to win back the Senate, where Republicans hold a 54-46 majority, by launching a national campaign to target Senate Republican Senate with demonstrations and television ads. Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) on their target list as the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, but they plan to take the fight to Senate races in Missouri, New Hampshire and North Carolina, where Senator Richard Burr is challenged by former state House member Deborah Ross. Independent analysts say Democrats still face an uphill climb, trying to rally their members behind a 63-year-old white male candidate. Some conservative groups are fighting too, saying Garland would push the court to the left on gun rights, government regulations and other key issues. Conservative groups have sent more than 500,000 emails urging Republican senators to stick to their position. U.S Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) (L) meets President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland (R) on Capitol Hill.

Sydney Australia’s opposition Labor Party’s launched a “Waste-pedia” booklet and Waste Watch website on Thursday, accusing the coalition government of over-lavish spending — including $400,000 on “koala and other marsupialrelated events.” “This government is obsessed with hugging koalas. We’ve had $400,000 which included (foreign minister) Julie Bishop paying $133,000 to fly four koalas to Singapore Zoo,” opposition minister Pat Conroy said outside parliament. GARY CAMERON | REUTERS

PRESIDENTIAL from page A1

BOND from page A1

the differences between her and other candidates. “We should be breaking down barriers, not building walls,” Clinton said. “We are not going to succeed by dividing the country between us and them.” Trump addressed criticism of his supporters’ anger in a press conference. “There is anger,” Trump said. “They are not angry people, but they want to see the country properly run. They want to see borders. They want to see good health care. They want to see things properly taken care of.“ Florida senator Rubio dropped out of the race after losing in his home state. Trump received 46 percent of the vote compared to Rubio’s 27 percent. Florida is a winner-take-all state. In a Florida press conference, Rubio thanked his supporters. “I want to congratulate Donald Trump on his victory, big victory in Florida,” Rubio said. “We live in a republic and our voters make these decision, and we respect that very much, and it was a big win.” Rubio also asked voters to remain hopeful about the future of the country. “I ask the American people, do not give in to the fear,” Rubio said. “Do not give in to the frustration. We can disagree about public policy. We can disagree about it vibrantly, passionately. But we are a hopeful people, and we have every right to be hopeful.” North Carolina had an earlier time slot for voting. In 2008, the state’s primary date was May 6, and in 2012, the date was May 8. The voter turn out for Tuesday’s primary was 35.35 percent, compared to 34.66 percent in 2012 and 36.86 percent in 2008. Sarah Stohle, a volunteer with Democracy N.C., said she was glad the primary date moved up. “Thank goodness this year we have a voice,” Stohle said. “This is an intense year.” William Dunlap of Raleigh said he was encouraging others to get out and vote, saying he was worried about one candidate doing well at the polls. “I detest one candidate so much,” Dunlap said. “I’m concerned the person I detest will have good results.” This was the first election after the voter I.D. laws were passed. Voters had to show an acceptable photo I.D. at the polls. Stohle helped voters who were having problems at their polling place. She said some voters were not in the correct precinct, not registered to vote, or forgot or lost their I.D. “We were prepared for them,” Stohle said. “I know some people don’t like it, but accepted it.” Carol Anders of Raleigh said she was in favor of the voter I.D. law. She said people have to show their I.D. to get on a plane, so voters should have to show their I.D. to vote. “I love that,” Anders said. “I think you have to be accountable.” Anders said she forgot her I.D. and had to go home to get it. In North Carolina, teens who will be 18 by the time of the November general election can vote in the primary. Catherine Sugg, 17, of Raleigh said some of her friends are old enough to vote but have not gotten a driver’s license yet.

City Center, saying the bond’s approval was a “historic night,” for the state, which has not approved a bond to update its infrastructure since 2000. Matthew Hebb, the Triangle Regional Field Director for the committee, spoke to the North State Journal on why that 16-year gap is a big deal for N.C. “I think there’s a lot of infrastructure that we need to have to invest in our future as a state. We’ve gained over 2 million new residents since the last bond 16 years ago — 2 million — that’s the population of Nebraska,” Hebb said. Starting her third week in the position, new UNC System President Margaret Spellings showed support on Tuesday for the diversity of projects that will be affected by the bond program’s funding, 49 percent ($980 million) of which will go to the UNC System. “$1.3 billion of this bond will go to support our universities and community colleges and the bond will benefit every single county in North Carolina and every single UNC campus, especially the STEM fields that are driving our vibrant economy here,” Spellings said. “It is a great day for education in North Carolina and it is a

GOVERNOR from page A1 about his solid support among Republicans.” McCrory took office in 2013 as the first Republican governor in 20 years. He was later joined by a majority Republican General Assembly, working to reduce taxes and streamline state government. With the passage of the Connect NC bond, the governor and his campaign said they hope this encourages citizens to support him for re-election. “The 2016 race for governor is a referendum on Gov. McCrory’s first term,” his campaign said. “Now, thanks to an improving economy, his leadership on the budget and Connect NC, he has plenty of feathers in his cap to impress persuadable voters.” Cooper won the Democratic primary with 70 percent of the vote. During his victory speech Tuesday night, his strategy against McCrory became clearer. Cooper asked supporters if

President Larry Wooten spoke Tuesday on the importance of agriculture for not only the state but the country as a whole. “North Carolina, through this initiative, will lead the world in tackling some of the toughest problems facing agriculture and our food system,” Wooten said. “The North Carolina Department of Agriculture, also the lab updates that were in this bond is-

sue, will help ensure that we have a safe, wholesome food supply. Together, these investments in agriculture will strengthen our food security. And I think all of us agree that food security is the biggest part of our national security.” David Jennette, a Connect NC Committee co-chair who retired from the North Carolina Army National Guard in 2012 at the rank of brigadier general following decades of service, says the funding will help the National Guard further its interest and be ready when the citizens of N.C. ask them to serve. “The guard’s going to benefit by enhancing several of our readiness centers, mostly in the central and western part of the state,” he said. “And it’s going to take a lot of our facilities and modernize them and get us where our readiness can increase because of that.” National Guard Readiness Centers in Burke, Guilford and Wilkes counties will each receive an equal share of $70 million of the funding, while an additional $8.5 million is earmarked for the Samarcand Training Academy for corrections and law enforcement training. A complete breakdown of the Connect NC bond’s funding can be found at connect.nc.gov.

they were ready for a Donald Trump – Pat McCrory ticket. The audience answered with a no. Their campaigns have a lot in common,” said Cooper. “Our state is going to be looking for positive leadership and a North Carolina that works for everyone,” Cooper said. “North Carolina needs a new set of priorities, helping everyone in this improving economy.” Cooper beat out Durham lawyer Ken Spaulding for the Democratic primary, Cooper has been attorney general since 2001, but has been in politics since 1986, when he was elected to the state House from Nash County. McCrory beat out former state House Rep. Robert Brawley, who took just more than 10 percent of the vote, and pastor Charles Moss, who claimed around 7 percent. “I’ve already talked to the governor and congratulated him on winning. As far as the results go, I got out, worked

hard, recognizing I was an underdog. The way I interpret it, the folks who said I didn’t have enough money were right,” Brawley said. “I think he would make a much better governor than Roy Cooper.” Brawley spent about $60,000 on his primary campaign, two-thirds of which he said came from his own pocket. The 71 year-old said he enjoys campaigning, and says he wouldn’t rule it out again in the future. “Sitting incumbents are generally the safe bet. Unless there’s been a scandal or low approval ratings, they’re going to win the party’s re-nomination,” said Catawba College political science professor J. Michael Bitzer. With the general election now underway, McCrory is one of two top gubernatorial targets for Democrats. He and Indiana Gov. Mike Pence are in for battles funded in part by out-ofstate money. However, 50 of the last 53 gubernatorial races across the country came out in favor of the incumbent.

thrill to experience firsthand the citizens of this state uniting around this mighty engine that is the University of North Carolina.” On the key front of agriculture, $85 million of the bond funding is allocated for a Plant Sciences Research Complex to bolster NC State University’s Plant Sciences Initiative, The bond projects also include $94 million in funding for a new lab facility for the North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. North Carolina Farm Bureau

“In order for us to continue to have the economic growth that we’ve gotten used to, we have to invest in the infrastructure in the state.” Matthew Hebb, Triangle Regional Field Director


the Sunday SIDELINE REPORT 1. UNC Asheville eliminated in first round of NCAA Tournament by Villanova

CAROLINA BASKETBALL

How Joel Berry is spurring another Tar Heels run

2. Kemba Walker named Eastern Conference POY as Hornets keep climbing in Southeast standings 3. UNC Wilmington’s bracket buster attempt spoiled by Duke in Round 1 of NCAA Tournament 4. Roy Williams passes Dean Smith on all-time NCAA Tournament win list 5. Jaqawn Raymond, MTSU stun No. 2 Michigan State in opening round upset

@DanWolken Average net worth of the Yale-Duke crowd on Saturday might be higher than the GDP of some small countries. @itstonybennett I wanted to let all my fans know that Im ok. Glad to hear UVA coach Tony Bennett is fine after his fall. Congrats @ UVAMensHoops on the win! @ButlerBlue3 Much love for the @ PNCArena staff. They were great to me. Not their fault it’s NCAA protocol to not let me in.

CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

North Carolina guard Joel Berry II (2) runs the ball during a first round men’s college basketball game against Florida Gulf Coast University in the NCAA Tournament in Raleigh, Thursday, March 17, 2016. North Carolina beat Florida Gulf Coast 83-67.

SPORTS DUKE BASKETBALL

NFL

Jonathan Cooper headed to Boston Chandler Jones was dealt to the Arizona Cardinals, but North Carolina faithful saw a familiar name heading to New England. Jonathan Cooper, a former first-round pick out of UNC, is heading to the New England Patriots along with a 2016 second-round pick for Jones.

NASCAR

Patrick throws shade at boyfriend Stewart-Haas Racing driver Danica Patrick was asked by Fox Sports Radio about who’s a better driver between herself and boyfriend Ricky Stenhouse Jr., “Me. That would be me.” Stenhouse has two top-15 finishes this year while Patrick has none.

COLLEGE ATHLETICS

Paige nominated for Arthur Ashe Award North Carolina guard Marcus Paige and Queens University of Charlotte soccer player Corey Brown were named as finalists for the Arthur Ashe Male Athlete of the Year Award. Established in 1992, the award honors “undergraduate students of color who exemplify the standards set by Arthur Ashe.”

MLB

White Sox considered boycotting game Adam LaRoche retired this week reportedly after a dispute with White Sox management about his son being allowed into the clubhouse on a daily basis. In response, ESPN’s Karl Ravech reports the team were convinced by manager Robin Ventura to play a spring game against the Milwaukee Brewers after .

By Brooke Pryor North State Journal ALEIGH — Sitting in the locker room after another R North Carolina win, sophomore guard Joel Berry’s eyes are bloodshot again.

He’s staring straight ahead, answering the questions as they’re directed his way with the same intense expression on his face that’s been there for the last 40 minutes. The red hue comes from hard contact lenses that irritate his eyes, but make no mistake: it is merely an inadvertent addition to a le- “He doesn’t say gitimately fierce aura. much. He’s just His answers are short, full of clipped confidence and directness stemming kind of a coldfrom the man charged with running blooded dude. the high-octane offense of top-seeded That shows up North Carolina. That’s just Berry, the latest in a on the court too.” long line of Roy Williams’ five-star, blue-blooded point guards. Marcus Paige, “He’s always on edge,” said senior about Joel Berry II Marcus Paige, who preceded Berry in UNC’s point guard lineage. “He’s always intense. He’s always ready to go. And he doesn’t say much. “He’s just kind of a cold-blooded dude. That shows up on the court too.” To those outside of Chapel Hill, Berry’s rise to ACC Tournament MVP feels improbable. Shouldn’t the Tar Heels be living and dying by Paige’s production at the point? For those paying attention, Berry’s success — and the cascading effect on Carolina’s team — isn’t a fluke. “He’s been the same Joel to me, just everyone else recognizes him,” said Theo Pinson, Berry’s roommate. “Dude’s been balling all year. I haven’t seen anything different. We just got on a bigger stage, championship and then won the MVP. I wasn’t shocked. Nobody on the team was shocked. The guy, he’s a ball player.” From the opening game of the season where he put up 14 points in his first career start, the sophomore inserted himself as an integral cog in UNC’s wheel. “I would probably say he has been our most consistent player all year long,” Williams said. “Just with each and every See CAROLINA, page B6

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Duke center Marshall Plumlee (40) reacts as he blocks a shot by North Carolina-Wilmington center C.J. Gettys (23).

The two faces of Plumlee’s game By Shawn Krest North State Journal ROVIDENCE, R.I. — With P less than four minutes left in the first half of Thursday’s NCAA

Tournament opener, Duke trailed upset-minded UNC Wilmington by three points. Marshall Plumlee, with his two points and one rebound, had seen enough. As the team came out of the under-four-minute timeout, Plumlee stepped on the floor. Sick of struggling, he stormed back to the bench and slammed the mask to the ground. Removing the plastic had a reverse Samsonian effect on the big man, who caught fire out of the timeout. Plumlee immediately grabbed a rebound. Thirty

seconds later, he threw down a dunk. By the time the day was over, the senior center had scored a career-high 23 points, blocked three shots—all in the second half, sans mask—and pulled down eight rebounds. “There’s no excuse for my play,” Plumlee said, “facemask or not.” Maybe not, but the difference is clear. In just over 31 minutes of playing time over his last two games, Plumlee had scored a total of four points and grabbed two rebounds. The lack of production dated back to when he started wearing a clear plastic mask to protect his broken nose. “He basically told us at halftime that he was going to be a See PLUMLEE, page B3

INSIDE

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

SEAHAWKS’ WILD RIDE From the highs of Selection Sunday after winning the Colonial Athletic Association conference championship to the lows of a close NCAA Tournament loss to Duke, UNC Wilmington experienced it all this offseason, including a brief flirtation with Cinderella during the first round of the Big Dance. Relive the ups and downs of the Seahawks’ wild ride in photographic form. (B4 and B5)


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

B2

NS J beyond the box score

03.20.16

Sean Miller: Former NC State assistant, current Arizona coach sweated through two shirts in NCAA Tournament loss to Wichita State. Kevin Durant: Oklahoma City Thunder MVP says “Tradition of being a Boston Celtic is second to none,” during ESPN interview. John Henson: Former UNC player, current Milwaukee Bucks forward ejected from NBA game, followed into locker room by Matt Barnes. Arkansas-Little Rock: Cinderella team upset Purdue in the first round, pulling off the most shocking upset of the first round in NCAA Tournament. Dwight Howard: Houston Rockets star to reportedly hire Perry Rogers as his agent — a recommendation from Shaquille O’Neal. Kawhi Leonard: San Antonio Spurs star still drives a 1997 Chevrolet Tahoe because, “It runs and it’s paid off.” Jim Boeheim: Syracuse coach calls out analysts after openinground win, “Nobody that says we didn’t deserve to be in knows anything about basketball. They were just doing it to be cute.”

POTENT QUOTABLES

FIRST-TEAM TAR HEEL

UNC forward Brice Johnson scored 18 points, seven rebounds, a career-high eight blocked shots — a Tar Heels NCAA Tournament record — and three assists in a win over Florida Gulf Coast. That’s a pretty solid night after learning his jersey will be in the rafters as a First-team All-American.

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

“We don’t have any McDonald’s All-Americans. We do pass a lot of McDonald’s when we go home.” UNCW coach Kevin Keatts on the talent difference between the Blue Devils and the Seahawks in the NCAA Tournament.

KEVIN MARTIN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

YOUTH MOVEMENT

25.7

Weighted average age of the Carolina Hurricanes roster, currently the youngest in the NHL. Only three players on the current roster — Nathan Gerbe, Ron Hainsey and Cam Ward — are over the age of 28. With seven draft picks in the first three rounds of the 2016 NHL draft, the roster is about to get younger.

BIRTHDAY BOY

24

Stephen Curry currently ranks 24th in career threepointers made in the NBA. At the age of 28 — his birthday was on March 14 — Curry already holds the top-three marks for most three-pointers in a single season.

PASSING A LEGEND

DOWN TO THE WIRE

CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

North Carolina’s win over Florida Gulf Coast was a monumental one for Roy Williams, who passed Dean Smith with his 66th career NCAA Tournament victory. He still trails Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski on the all-time list, but passing Smith in any category is an impressive feat for Williams.

USA TODAY SPORTS

Kevin Harvick pulled off an unforgettable win over Carl Edwards at Phoenix International Raceway by a final margin of 0.010 seconds — tied for the closest finish this season. It was Harvick’s sixth win at the track in the last eight attempts.

TALE OF THE TAPE

The two stars for Duke and UNCW shared a common last name, albeit no family ties. Here’s a breakdown of how each player fared in the NCAA Tournament opener.

BRANDON INGRAM vs. DENZEL INGRAM 39 minutes — Playing time — 39 minutes 20 — Points — 17 9 — Rebounds — 4 58.3% — Shooting percentage — 40%


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

B3

NCAA TOURNEY

UNC Asheville falls short in upset bid against Villanova By R. Cory Smith North State Journal WAYNE Sutton and Dylan Smith led the way D for No. 15 UNC Asheville, as they have all year, but the effort wasn’t enough against No. 2

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

UNC Wilmington guard Chris Flemmings (1) is embraced by a member of the coaching staff as he walks off the court after the NCAA Basketball Championship first round game against Duke.

Wilmington’s tourney run short but inspiring By Shawn Krest North State Journal

“They’re extremely well-coached, not just in strategy but in effort and togetherness. You could tell right away.” Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski

ROVIDENCE, R.I. — On P the way to the podium to discuss Duke’s 93-85 win

over UNC Wilmington in the first round of the NCAA Tournament Thursday afternoon, Coach Mike Krzyzewski stopped. Walking through the bowels of the stadium he came across the UNCW contingent, trudging back to the locker room area after their stint at the podium. Coach K turned around and caught up to junior guard Chris Flemmings and senior Craig Ponder. He spoke to the two players at length, congratulating them on their effort and wishing them luck. “They’re really good,” Krzyzewski said, eventually reaching the podium. “They’re extremely well-coached, not just in strategy but in effort and togetherness. You could tell right away. We watched on tape and had a very good appreciation for them, but when you see them in person, you can actually see their belief in one another and their strength.” K would know. The Sea-

PLUMLEE from page B1 beast in the second half,” Grayson Allen said. “Then he went out and did it.” The second half also featured six of Plumlee’s eight dunks for the game. “Marshall is our rock,” Matt Jones added. “We need him to have a ferocious attitude out there, on defense, blocking shots, and on offense, dunking the ball.” One of the keys to his attitude? An absolute utter lack of concern for his own well-being. Asked if there anyone on the team medical staff tried to prevent him from ditching the mask, Plumlee confirmed he just did not care. “Yes,” he said, “but it’s one loss and you’re out.” He gestured toward his nose, the unnatural slant, courtesy of a Matt Jones elbow in the ACC Tourney opener, still very visible. “There’s nothing I should be saving for,” he said. “I just put it all out there.” He laid it all out at halftime too. Facing the potential end of his career at Duke, Plumlee uncorked a scale-shattering motivational talk. Duke players are more than familiar with fiery halftime diatribes from Mike Krzyzewski, including one prior to Plumlee’s halftime outburst on Thursday. How did Plumlee measure up

hawks took the four-seed Blue Devils to the brink on Thursday before falling just short of an alltime upset bid. The Seahawks led by as many as seven points in the first half and took a three-point lead to the break. But there were no moral victories for the Wilmington side. “They believe they’re going to win,” Krzyzewski said. “I know a lot of people are surprised, but being up three and possibly could have been up six at halftime, you know, we expected that,” Wilmington coach Kevin Keatts said. “Obviously we have a lot of respect for Coach K and the program that he’s built and the players on the team, but my guys expected to win the game. When I walked into the locker room at the end of the game, I knew the program was going in the right direction because nobody wanted a moral victory. “Those guys were upset because we lost.” Flemmings, a native of Cary, NC, scored 18 points on 7-of-16 shooting. A day earlier, he spoke of growing up in a Duke household. “She’s been a Duke fan since before I was even born,” he said of his mother. “She was a longtime Duke fan, even when like Grant Hill and ballplayers

with Coach K at his angriest? “Marshall kind of breaks the scale,” Grayson Allen said. “You’ve seen him on the court after he gets an and-one. He has the same kind of emotion and intensity when he talks to us.” That intensity drove him to leave his mask behind and go out unprotected. “I know he’s been frustrated with it for a couple games now,” Jones said. Despite missing all four free throws in last week’s loss to Notre Dame, Plumlee denied that the mask was hurting his play. “It was more of a mindset than anything,” he said. Rather than worrying about protecting his fragile face, Plumlee found protection in being ultra-aggressive. “What Marshall learned today, I think, in the second half is not to pace [himself],” Krzyzewski said. “I think there was 17:08 left in the second half. He just played those three minutes, almost three minutes, and he was exhausted and he asked to come out. He’s never done that.” Part of the reason for Plumlee’s full-speed-ahead pace was the presence of Chase Jeter, the freshman big man who is now reliable enough to spell Plumlee for stretches in the game. The bigger part, however, was a change in attitude.

like that were there.” At game time, however, he was ready to take the Blue Devils down. “We didn’t work hard all season to just give up just because of the name,” he said. “That’s kind of our team thing. We’re going to fight every game no matter who we’re playing.” Ponder, who poured in 22 against the Blue Devils and led the team with four assists, added, “Our motto is pretty much we don’t worry about the name on the back of our jerseys, and we don’t care about the name on the front of yours.” True to form, the Seahawks kept battling, even after Duke pulled ahead by 12 late in the second half. In the final three minutes, UNC-W went on a 7-2 run to cut the Blue Devil lead to five, and the Seahawks had a good look at a three-pointer to cut Duke’s lead to two. The shot was off the mark, but their effort and performance were undeniable. The Seahawks earned every bit of respect that Duke’s Hall of Fame coach sent their way. “It’s really beautiful to watch,” Krzyzewski said. “It’s more beautiful if you don’t have to play against them.”

Villanova in an 86-56 loss for the Bulldogs at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. Villanova closed out the first half strong, fueled by Ryan Arcidiacono’s 14 points on 4-of-6 three-point shooting. Daniel Ochefu controlled the paint with 17 points, 10 rebounds, four assists and three blocks with only two missed shots the entire game. Meanwhile, Sutton and Smith combined for 25 points in the opening-round loss. Only Sam Hughes (10 points) finished in the double digits as no other player had more than six points against Nova. The Bulldogs kept the Wildcats within striking distance throughout much of the first half. Kevin Vannatta hit a three pointer with 5:34 remaining in the first half as UNC Asheville trailed 2219. Villanova coach Jay Wright even showed his frustration, earning a warning after swearing at an official. That’s when Nova turned on the jets. Ryan Arcidiacono sandwiched two shots from behind the arc in between a Jalen Brunson three to put an exclamation point on a 16-4 run to close out the half. Asheville trailed 40-26 heading into the locker room in a game that was all but over before it took the court in the second. Matters quickly compounded for Asheville as the deficit was too much to overcome for the No. 15 seed. The rout was on for Villanova as Ochefu took authority under the basket with 12 of his 17 points in the second half. As a result, Nova closed out the 30-point win with five players in double digits on the score sheet and 20 team assists. The Wildcats won in nearly every statistical category, including 32-26 on the boards, forcing 14 turnovers and shooting 13-of29 from three-point range. Friday’s blowout wasn’t the showing Asheville wanted on the big stage, but the future for the Big South regular season and tournament champions looks dazzling. Sutton, Smith, Vannatta and Ahmad Thomas — the team’s top four scorers — are all part of a young core for the Bulldogs. Sutton and Thomas also happen to be the leading rebounders for the team while Vannatta and Smith were two of the most consistent shooters from behind the arc. Coach Nick McDevitt has already led the team to its highest seed in NCAA Tournament history at No. 15, but the ceiling hasn’t been reached. Equipped with a plethora of solid scoring threats and a defense that held Nova at bay for almost an entire half, Asheville should have another crack at the Big Dance in 2017.

ANTHONY GRUPPUSO | USA TODAY SPORTS

Dwayne Sutton (22) of UNC Asheville defends Ryan Arcidiacono (15) of Villanova.

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

North Carolina-Wilmington guard Jordon Talley (4) is fouled by Duke center Marshall Plumlee (40) as he dives for a basket. “It’s something that happens gradually,” Plumlee said of lifting the team’s effort level. “You can’t take solace in having one good play. You’ve got to string plays together. And even then, you can’t

sit and reflect on what you’ve done. You keep moving forward.” Plumlee and the Blue Devils did just that Thursday. Don’t expect a certain piece of clear, protective plastic to come along.


B4

North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

B5

Duke center Marshall Plumlee (40) and North Carolina-Wilmington forward Devontae Cacok (15) pursue the ball.

North Carolina-Wilmington guard Chris Flemmings and North Carolina-Wilmington guard Craig Ponder (0) react after a 3-point basket by Flemmings

The North Carolina-Wilmington bench erupts after a 3-point basket in the second half.

North Carolina-Wilmington fans react in the first half of the NCAA Basketball Championship first round game against Duke.

North Carolina-Wilmington players embrace after losing to Duke during the first round of the NCAA Basketball Championship.

Duke guard Grayson Allen (3) reacts as he is fouled by North Carolina-Wilmington guard Craig Ponder (0) as he drives to the basket in the first half.

When March goes mad UNC Wilmington put together an incredible run in March, winning the Colonial Athletic Association tournament to secure a berth in the NCAA Tournament. What awaited them was a local surprise and a national delight: a matchup against Duke. The Seahawks never backed down, taking the Blue Devils to the wire in a brilliant battle of teams with 158 miles of I-40 between them. Duke’s 93-85 victory was closer than it looked and it impressed one of the all-time great college coaches.

PHOTOS BY EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

North Carolina-Wilmington head coach Kevin Keatts’ son Kaden, 7, sits with the players as they watch a season recap video during an NCAA Selection Show watch party at Trask Coliseum in Wilmington, North Carolina, Sunday, March 13, 2016. The Seahawks were picked to play Duke in Providence, Rhode Island, in the first round of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship for their first appearance in 10 years.


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

B6 NCAA TOURNEY

Tyler Lewis can’t shake North Carolina ties By R. Cory Smith North State Journal ALEIGH — Tyler Lewis R remembers making the call on whether he’d finish out his

career at NC State. Ultimately, the Statesville point guard decided to head to Indianapolis for a chance to thrive in a new environment. “It was one of the hardest decisions of my life,” Lewis explained. “It was to see if I had a better opportunity to play somewhere. It took a lot of praying and a lot of faith.” Now a member of Butler, Lewis is playing in his second NCAA Tournament. His second March Madness stint is an ironic one, taking place in the PNC Arena, a place he called home for two seasons while playing for NC State. Lewis may have left the Wolfpack, but he can’t seem to avoid his Raleigh ties during the NCAA Tournament. Butler made the tournament last season and ended up in Pittsburgh for regionals — the same location as State. The Pack didn’t make a postseason tourney this year, but Lewis still finds himself close to his former teammates. “NC State’s a place I fell in love with when I was a sophomore when I committed,” Lewis said. “It’s very ironic that we were in Pittsburgh last year at the same time, and it’s ironic that I get to play here again. It’s like a circle in life. It just keeps coming back. Honestly I love it.” Despite leaving Raleigh, there’s no animosity toward his former team. When he heard about the regional location being at PNC Arena, Lewis immediately reached out to both Lennard Freeman and Cat Barber. Barber and Lewis may have competed for playing time at NC State, but he said both maintain a close relationship. Even before learning Butler’s fate following the Big East Tournament, Lewis said he spoke with Barber during the ACC Tournament in Washington, D.C. “I remember my sophomore and his freshman year,” Lewis explained. “A lot of people

“It’s very ironic that we were in Pittsburgh last year at the same time, and it’s ironic that I get to play here again. It’s like a circle in life. It just keeps coming back. Honestly I love it.” Tyler Lewis

thought we were just competing for that spot. It kind of just made us closer as friends because people wanted to see us compete for the job, but we knew it was more about the team.” During his final year with State, Lewis averaged 4.4 points and 3.8 assists, averaging 19.9 minutes per game. The undersized point guard showed a smooth touch with the basketball, helping off the bench in his two years with the Pack. The most memorable moment spent in Raleigh? That’s an easy one for Lewis. “A great memory was when we beat Carolina and Duke here my freshman year,” Lewis said. “It’s always great to beat the blue bloods here, especially when you’re wearing the red. Those are the two biggest games … it was fun to be on top.” A concussion suffered midway through the Big East schedule kept Lewis out of four games. He’s also seen his minutes gradually reduced from 23.6 per game prior to the injury down to 12.8 minutes in the last nine games. “He’s obviously been an important part of our team this year and has been instrumental in some very important wins,” Butler coach Chris Holtmann said. “ … He’s returned and really given us some really important and valuable minutes.” Regardless of the playing time he receives, Lewis will get a chance to shine in front of family and friends — thanks to some extra tickets from his teammates. Back in PNC Arena one last time, he’s simply hoping for two wins and a trip to Chicago in his future.

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Former NBA player and NC State star, Julius Hodge, left, talks with University at Buffalo guard Jarryn Skeete (10). Hodge is the director of player development for the Bulls under coach Nate Oats.

Hodge returns to NCAA Tourney in different role as Bulls’ mentor “It’s going to be a tough challenge, but upsets happen every year at the NCAA Tournament. So just enjoy the moment. It’s okay to be nervous, at first. Just play through it.” Julius Hodge

GEOFF BURKE | USA TODAY SPORTS

Butler Bulldogs guard Tyler Lewis (1) dribbles the ball as Texas Tech Red Raiders center Norense Odiase (32) defends during the first half at PNC Arena.

CAROLINA from page B1 game I thought he got more confidence and more confidence and more confidence. He can play the total game.” Berry handling point guard duties gives Williams the freedom to shift Paige off the ball more often, giving Paige more room to find his offense. And on defense, Berry flourishes with the tough assignments, holding the point guards of Pittsburgh, Notre Dame and Virginia to under 10 points apiece in the ACC Tournament. “My coaches want me to be the one who starts the defense, and I think I can do that by picking up the point guard in the backcourt,” Berry said. “I try to do that. In this last part of the season, I try to do

that a little bit more. I think it’s helped us a lot.” Once the ACC Tournament hit, Berry ascended into a hallowed category of Tar Heel point guards, sparking the team to three consecutive victories with his lockdown defense, efficient shooting and reckless abandon driving the lane, evoking memories of Ty Lawson’s ability to lead the team during the 2009 NCAA Tournament. Berry made 17-of-24 shots in those three games, missing only three 3-pointers. He finished with eight assists and only three turnovers — all three of which came in the first game against Pittsburgh. After averaging 1.5 steals per game during the regular season (7th in the conference), Berry averaged 1.8 thefts per game in the Tar Heels’ first four postseason games.

By Shawn Krest North State Journal ROVIDENCE, R.I. — A relatively P anonymous No. 14 seed from New York, the University of Buffalo rolled into

its NCAA Tournament site with all the authority of a top seed in the tournament. Credit Julius Hodge, the man who knows everyone. “Jules!” Arizona assistant coach Emanuel Richardson shouted after Hodge grabbed him in a hug outside the Wildcats’ locker room. Hodge immediately kicks off an animated conversation — which is really just a regular conversation for the former NC State star — with Richardson, eventually drifting into the open Arizona locker room door. A few Buffalo players making an uncertain journey from the bus to their own locker room start to follow Hodge in before realizing it’s the wrong locker room. They don’t seem too surprised. Richardson eventually passes Hodge off to Arizona coach Sean Miller, whose brother Archie, coach of Dayton, was teammates with Hodge in Raleigh. “Nate!” Julius yells as Buffalo coach Nate Oats walks by. “Come on in here.” Oats makes a detour in to meet a friend of Julius. He is not surprised either. It’s been 11 years since Julius Hodge has been to the NCAA Tournament, but he is right at home. “He’s a fun guy,” says Buffalo freshman forward Nick Perkins. “He brings enthusiasm to the players. He keeps everybody motivated — a good welfare guy.” Hodge played with the Wolfpack from 2001 to 2005 and will let you know he never missed the Big Dance during his career. Now wrapping up his first season as UB’s Director of Player Development, Hodge is also quick to point out he’s keeping his streak alive — five tournaments and counting. “He talked to us about it,” Perkins says. “Goofing on us about all that NC State stuff.” After a brief pause, Perkins smirks and adds, “He told us the Chris Paul story.” Hodge was the first victim of Paul, who has gained a reputation as a serial belowthe-belt puncher, during an NC StateWake Forest game. Buffalo’s players know that Hodge was far more than just a punching bag. The former ACC Player of the Year was a firstround NBA Draft pick and wrapped up a decade of professional ball in 2014. “I was a little too young to remember him,” Perkins says, “but I know he was a pretty good player.”

His attacking style of play is a departure from UNC’s previous point guards like Kendall Marshall, who had a penchant for being a pass-first guard with 9.8 assists per game in his sophomore season. Instead, as the team’s second-leading scorer with 12.7 points per game and 3.5 assists, he echoes the play of Lawson, who had a knack for relentless scoring and averaged 16 points and 6.6 assists in 2009. “He’s a little bit more of a scorer that has done a good job of assisting when people converge on him,” said Paige, who held the point guard reins for his first three seasons. “I think his mentality is to attack, attack, attack at all times and to get to the basket and score. And he’s also done a great job of

Hodge, in the next phase of his professional life, hopes his work with the Bulls eventually leads him to the practice floor and bench. “I think my biggest challenge is not being able to get on the court and coach,” Hodge says. “I know this is just my first year, and it was meant for me to gain this experience — to do it and learn this side, not only on the court but also academically.” His role with Buffalo is part babysitter, part scout, part motivator — basically everything except coaching. “Julius Hodge! That’s my man,” guard C.J. Massinburg says. “I talk to him a lot. I text him when I need to go to the gym at night. He picks me up. He’s really like our skills doctor. He really just critiques our game. He tells us on ball screens, what the reads are and what to look for. He really just pays attention to detail.” Coaching is on Hodge’s mind, however, and although he spent the year in Western New York, he still keeps in touch with his support system in Raleigh and makes no secret of his desire to eventually help his alma mater. “On Twitter, Wolfpack Nation is always reaching out to me, saying they can’t wait until I’m able to come back home,” Hodges says. “I tell them the same.” As a high school player, Hodge was recruited by some of the country’s top programs. As a fledgling coach, he wasn’t able to jump right into the ACC. Instead, he’s in a new position — working his way up from the bottom. “I have a really good relationship with Coach Gottfried,” Hodge says, “and especially with [Athletic Director] Debbie Yow. I try to speak to her weekly. She’s just a great person. When Coach [Kay] Yow, her sister was still with us, and I was playing at State, I would always go into her office and talk basketball with her, as well as life. Now, for me to have a good relationship with Dr. Yow is very special to me.” Before Hodge can think about a path that leads him back to NC State, he needs to help the young Bulls navigate their path through the tournament. He’s been happy to share his experience with them. “I was in their ear a little bit while we were coming up here, and letting them know,” Hodge says. What did he tell them? “It’s going to be a tough challenge, but upsets happen every year at the NCAA Tournament. So just enjoy the moment. It’s okay to be nervous, at first. Just play through it. Play through the adversity. Hopefully, we can get a win.” Spoken like someone who’s been there before, and has the giant network of friends to prove it.

shooting the ball. So I think he’s less Kendall Marshall than he is Ty Lawson in that sense.” With the top-seeded Tar Heels trying to build for both short term and long term success, Berry’s breakout could be the X-factor necessary to push the team from being the best in the conference to the best in the country. “I think at the beginning of the year if you said that, a lot of people would be surprised but the way he’s been playing the last three weeks or so, he’s really been balling,” Paige said. “He’s probably been our second-best player other than Brice [Johnson] these past couple of games so it’s not too much a surprise … “He’s playing with more confidence than he’s had in his whole career.”


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

B7

UNC BASKETBALL

Tar Heels turning traditional three-point play into tourney gold By Shawn Krest North State Journal ORTH Carolina’s run N to the ACC Tournament championship nearly ended

before it began. But the Tar Heels, sometimes labeled soft, used a signature, physical style of attacking the hoop to overcome an early deficit. In their first game of the conference tourney — eerily similar to their win over Florida Gulf Coast in the NCAA Tournament — the Tar Heels needed some time to find their legs. Pitt took advantage, jumping out to a 8-0 lead in 90 seconds. Carolina chipped away at the lead, but one play — with just under eight minutes into the game — exhibited their toughness. Nate Britt took a pass from the post. He took one dribble from the top of the key and drove the right side of the lane. Britt exploded past his man, Pitt’s James Robinson, and jumped to put up a short floater. Chris Jones saw Robinson in distress and left his man to help out. He fouled Britt, who hung in the air, adjusted his arm, and lofted the shot, which went through the hoop, for a “traditional” threepoint play, a.k.a. an “and-one”. Britt then knocked down the free throw to give Carolina its first lead of the game, 16-14. The Tar Heels believe they fought a “soft” label all season long. To hear talk of UNC, it’s a team loaded with talent but short on grit, shying away from contact and floor burns. “I may have said it,” coach Roy Williams said after winning the tournament. “I think we are the most criticized really good basketball team I’ve ever coached, and least appreciated.” The results agree with Williams’ assessment of his team. The Tar Heels shook off contact and muscled up shots more than any other team during the ACC regular season (TABLE 1). Complementing the Tar Heel players’ ability to score through contact is a smart defensive approach, either avoiding fouls or fouling hard enough to prevent an opposing shooter from converting the basket. The Heels ranked near the bottom of the ACC in and-one fouls committed. The Tar Heels’ top and-one player was ACC Player of the Year runner-up Brice Johnson. The senior big man had a dozen andones in conference play during a breakout season (TABLE 2). Johnson committed just six and-one fouls. His net of plus six and-ones (six more received than committed) led all ACC big men. Among all ACC players, only Young (plus nine), Allen (plus eight) and Barber (plus seven) were better. The rest of the Tar Heel big men didn’t give Johnson much

CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

TABLE 1:

TABLE 2:

ACC and-one team leaders

ACC and-one individual leaders

Team

And-ones

Player

Team

And-ones

North Carolina

41

Brice Johnson

North Carolina

12

Notre Dame

39

Marcus Georges Hunt

Georgia Tech

12

Pittsburgh

37

Michael Young

Pittsburgh

12

Virginia Tech

36

Bonzie Colson

Notre Dame

12

Florida State

34

Cat Barber

NC State

11

Duke

33

Zach Auguste

Notre Dame

11

NC State

33

Grayson Allen

Duke

11

North Carolina forward Brice Johnson (11) reacts after scoring and getting fouled during the second half of a first round men’s college basketball game in the NCAA Tournament in Raleigh. The Tar Heels beat Florida Gulf Coast 83-67.

SOURCE: NSJ RESEARCH

help inside when it came to scoring in traffic. Neither Kennedy Meeks nor Joel James picked up an and-one during ACC play. Isaiah Hicks — America’s choice to replace Meeks in the starting lineup — had six, but he more than erased them by finishing fourth in the ACC in and-one fouls committed, with eight. (Cody Martin,

Ricky LeDay, and DaJuan Coleman had nine each.) The Tar Heel post players were the only members of the team, other than freshman Kenny Williams, to have negative and-one net statistics. Still, the Heels as a team were plus 13 on and-ones, second only to Pitt in that category.

“The game of basketball is pretty simple,” Williams said. “Put the ball in the basket more.” And if someone tries to stop you, just out-tough them and put it in anyway. “Coach tells us all the time,” ACC Tournament MVP Joel Berry said. “If you’re going to shoot the ball, put it in the basket.”

Angels Among Us 5K! l a u n n A rd

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Supporting brain tumor research at the Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center at Duke

Saturday, April 23, 2016 Run Through the Beautiful Duke Campus angelsamongus.org

Angels

Among Us


STILMAN WHITE

ANTHONY GILL

LAWRENCE COOKS

Team: Hampton Hometown: Charlotte High school: Northside Christian “With Dionte [Adams] and me, it’s all love. We basically call each other brothers we’ve been together so long. I love being able to share this with him. I love North Carolina, my home state. I just want to make my family proud.”

8

Team: Virginia Hometown: High Point High school: Charlotte Christian “Anytime my family can be here and help me kind of motivate me to play the best I can play I think that really gets me going. And I guess it is kind of special being here in North Carolina, only because I am born and raised here, but I’m just blessed to be in the position that I’m in.”

5

Team: North Carolina Hometown: Wilmington High school: Hoggard “It’s pretty nice traveling-wise. Only had to take a 20-minute bus ride to get here instead of the whole road trip thing, getting on a plane and stuff. I think that’s definitely an advantage that we had. We just got to practice at the Smith Center today.”

2

THEO PINSON

RICKY COUNCIL II

DIONTE ADAMS

Team: Hampton Hometown: Charlotte High school: Northside Christian “It’s a blessing because a lot of people in our conference don’t get the chance to dance, much less this close to home. Especially as a senior, I know a lot of guys who didn’t even get to play in their championship game. We don’t take that for granted.”

9

Team: Providence Hometown: Greensboro High school: Moravian Prep “It’s a blessing actually. It’s something I never thought would happen, going away to Providence. My main goal, and I went to Providence because they’re a winning team and a winning culture. So coming back here and actually playing in Raleigh right down the street from my house is amazing.”

6

Team: North Carolina Hometown: Greensboro High school: Wesleyan Christian “It’s a really cool feeling to invite my family to see a different level of basketball. The stakes rise so much on this stage, so to have them here is crazy. We also tend to play well [in PNC Arena], so that helps too.”

3

The selection of Raleigh as a location for the opening round of the 2016 NCAA Tournament meant a short drive for No. 1 seed North Carolina. But it also brought a lot of young folks back home. The Tar Heels own the most North Carolina-born players on their roster (natch) with eight players total. But there were a whopping 17 different native North Carolinians suited up for the eight teams in the Raleigh regional.

KENNEDY MEEKS

ISAIAH HICKS

JERVON PRESSLEY

Team: Butler Hometown: Statesville High school: Oak Hill, VA “It’s amazing to be back. I’m very excited but I know there will be a lot of nerves. N.C. State is a place I love deeply. … As soon as I pulled up on the bus there were a lot of memories. This is an awesome place and an awesome environment.”

10 TYLER LEWIS

Team: Hampton Hometown: Charlotte High school: E. E. Waddell “It feels great to be able to share this experience with my family here in NC. We deserved to get here this year after maybe lucking out last year. We put in the dedication and earned the right to play close to home, so us Charlotte guys are just excited to get this chance.”

7

Team: North Carolina Hometown: Oxford High school: J. F. Webb “Since this is like a home game, a lot of us from North Carolina, our families can come up and see us. Especially for me, my family has never been to an NCAA game. It’s kind of cool to be able to stay in North Carolina and play here for two games.”

4

Team: North Carolina Hometown: Charlotte High school: West Charlotte “It’s fun [to play in North Carolina] just to know we got that No. 1 seed. To play in front of most of our fans because they’re so close is something they deserve for hanging in with us.”

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Raleigh regional an NCAA homecoming

NCAA TOURNEY

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GEOFF BURKE | USA TODAY SPORTS

CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

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CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Team: North Carolina Hometown: Raleigh High school: Broughton

17 JUSTIN COLEMAN

Team: North Carolina Hometown: Huntersville High school: Hough

16 LUKE MAYE

Team: North Carolina Hometown: Asheville High school: Christ School

15 SPENSER DALTON

Team: North Carolina Hometown: Clemmons High school: West Forsyth

14 TOBY EGBUNA

Team: Virginia Hometown: Raleigh High school: Woodberry Forest

13 CAID KIRVEN

Team: Hampton Hometown: Charlotte High school: Carlisle School

12 AKIM MITCHELL

Team: Florida Gulf Coast Hometown: Charlotte High school: Northside Christian

11 RAYJON TUCKER

B8 North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016


old haunts Firmly established in Raleigh since 1940, The Roast Grill serves nothing but hot dogs, coke, baklava, and pound cake. But for the regulars who eat here, there’s nothing better. Continued on page C4

the good life IN A NORTH STATE OF MIND

flourish

NS J SUNDAY

3.20.16

playlist March 25-26 2016 Southport Spring Festival Southport Welcome spring in style at the Southport Spring Festival, a tradition for more than 25 years. This festival features a wide variety of activities such as musical entertainment, handmade arts and crafts, children’s activities, azaleas and other plants for sale, and food vendors. There will also be a 5K run/walk. downtownsouthport.org/ spring-festival/ N.C. Herrring Festival Jamesville For nearly 70 years, crowds have gathered in Jamesville to celebrate the arrival of spring with friends, family, food, and fun! The Herring Festival has grown to include a Friday night band and street dance plus carnival rides. Saturday brings a morning pancake breakfast followed by a unique parade, a huge egg hunt complete with live bunnies, talented singers and musicians throughout the afternoon, and an evening street dance with sunset fireworks. ncherringfestival.com

March 26 LIZ CONDO FOR THE NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Easter table setting by Quintessentials featuring Vw dinnerware and tole flowers by Chapel Hill’s Tommy Mitchell.

a springtime table A properly set table is the first step to a truly enjoyable meal, and a pastel palette featuring North Carolina items makes it blossom. By Jennifer Wood North State Journal A WELL-DRESSED TABLE sets the tone for any meal. In North Carolina blooms are bursting forth all around. Celebrate the beauty unfolding outside by incorporating nature-inspired objects into your tablescape. We visited Quintessentials in Raleigh, The Fisherman’s Wife in Wrightsville Beach, and The Cottage Shop in Nags Head to help us with our cheery N.C. table decor. “Spring is definitely the time for new tabletop,” shared Chrissie Spillars, store manager at Quintessentials where North Carolinians have sought the advice of the staff for over two decades. The tablescape they styled for us delightfully incorporates a North Carolina feel. Chapel Hill artisan Tommy Mitchell's lifelike tole flowers, the Vietri stemware place setting, and a new farm-to-table line of serving pieces add dimension. What they have created is a vignette with seasonal staying power. For Easter Sunday all you have to do is mix and match a few different elements for a festive garden-inspired holiday look. If Easter finds you on the coast this year, a strategically placed bunny or lamb from The Cottage Shop in Nags Head or The Fisherman’s Wife in Wrightsville Beach is just the thing to complete your theme. See SPRINGTIME, page C6

Inside

Catawba Valley Pottery Festival and Antiques Festival Hickory The festival is a juried event with more than 115 potters and vendors offering their wares and antiques. Items include historical pottery, textiles, baskets, furniture, and miniature items; with contemporary potters selling items ranging from coffee mugs to amazing works of art. Saturday includes special programming featuring pottery videos, demonstrations, and a guest speaker. catawbavalleypotteryfestival. org N.C. State Parks 100 Year Celebration at Cliffs of the Neuse State Park Seven Springs

WILL PAGE FOR THE NORTH STATE JOURNAL

A seasonal accent from The Fisherman's Wife in Wrightsville Beach.

ANTIQUES

Learn from the best as antique shop owners and auction goers share their tips for finding just the right heirloom item for your home. See page C3

Join in for a variety of centennial events all day! A ranger-led paddle trip will depart at 9:00 a.m. on the Neuse River and the group will take-out at the park just before noon for lunch and will then continue downriver to Seven Springs. A four-mile fun run event will begin at the Visitor Center at 10 a.m. ncparks.gov


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

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necessities thrive!

Resolution reset

B

Y NOW, many of us have already dropped our 2016 resolutions. Here is your chance to stick with it (or get back to it) with some proven methods to make even the most difficult changes become habits. — Alton Skinner

Remember why you are doing it Motivation is an important ingredient in forming any 1habit. Having a compelling reason will help prevent you from burning out or quitting.

Link your new habit to an an old activity

2

Consider your goals and how it can coincide with your current routine. For example, drink water every time you get up from your desk or lay out your exercise clothes before going to bed so you have no excuses in the morning.

Anticipate your reward Think about how good you will feel when you have lost 3 the weight you wanted or about the relief and freedom you will have when you are debt-free and use these feelings to keep you moving forward.

Create action steps Once you start thinking longer than 90 days out 4 then that becomes a vision

instead of a goal. Your brain is wired to work in small manageable pieces. Make smaller goals for two-week blocks that work together to help you reach your one big goal. With each small action completed, your brain is rewarded and pleased. The more you accomplish, the better you feel; the better you feel, the more you want to accomplish.

Establish accountability

5

Find a friend, coach, or community that can encourage and inspire you to keep working towards your goals. A Harvard study found forming habits in groups makes significant change more believable — and therefore possible. By working together you will reinforce positive behaviors, which reduces how difficult the goal feels and encourages you to stick with it even when you want to quit. Alton Skinner is a health and fitness expert with over two decades of experience training athletes and author of The Golfer’s Stroke Saver Workout.

just a pinch

history marked

spring-flowering pollinator plants to get things humming in your garden

March 21, 1840 Raleigh and Gaston Railroad work was finished on this day. One week after completion, the Raleigh depot received 20 bales of cotton from Petersburg, Virginia, the line’s first commercial shipment on record heralding an era of unprecedented prosperity. March 25, 1524 Giovanni da Verrazano anchored his expedition off the Outer Banks. Verrazano’s was the first European exploration of the North Carolina coast. Verrazano likely explored the area around the Bogue Banks before charting his course for the Outer Banks. The geography convinced him that the Outer Banks was an isthmus, beyond which he believed he would find the Pacific.

Alyssum

Nasturtium

Verbena

Carpet of Snow

Double Dwarf Jewel Mix

Lanai Twister Purple

trend vs. staple Trends come and go — they’re fun to try and work into your wardrobe, your home decor, or to test your culinary prowess. In the trend vs. the staple we compare tempting trends and standby staples. This week we examine the ever-present family gathering side dish, green bean casserole. Who’s bringing it this year North Carolina?

Information courtesy of N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources

turn the page Bring on the adventure with a book! Thanks to The Country Bookshop in Southern Pines, N.C., here are a few new children's books for you to check out at your local bookstore.

“Little one” by Jo Weaver for ages 3-7

released March 1, 2016

“Surf’s Up” by Kwame Alexander

the trend

Sauteed green beans. Shake things up this season and go beyond basic green beans by adding garlic and toasted pine nuts. Toss the green beans with olive oil just until softened and top with toasted pine nuts for a fresh presentation. The recipe is simple but the flavor is not.

the staple

for ages 3-7

Green bean casserole. This standard side of green beans starring cream of mushroom soup topped with french fried onions has made an appearance at many a family assemblage. Sticking with the staple ensures you'll leave with an empty Pyrex, and that's always a good thing.

released February 1, 2016

“Where’s the party” by Ruth Chang for ages 3-7

released April 5, 2016

“Night Gardener” by Terry Fan for ages 3-7

released February 16, 2016

“Just My Luck” by Cammie McGovern for ages 8-12

released February 23, 2016

Voices

Contributors to this section this week include: Margaret Almeida Warren Bingham Samantha Gratton Laura Ashley Lamm Alison Miller Amy Richards Alton Skinner

Tell us

Know a North Carolina story that needs telling? Drop us a line at features@nsjonline.com.

faith. family. By Rev. Margaret Almeida For the North State Journal

W

HEN is Easter this year? That is a question many of us begin asking as January rolls into February. Easter can fall anywhere between March 22 and April 25, so this year Easter is almost as early as it can possibly be. Residents throughout the state of North Carolina are very fortunate this year. Even though Easter is early, from Murphy to Manteo there are signs of spring as the trees bud and flowers bloom, and we see signs of rebirth and renewal. Today is Palm Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week. Jesus entered the city of Jerusalem to a mob praising him with shouts and songs of “Hosanna.” This same mob then gathered only a few days later to mock him with curses and insults of “Crucify Him.” How can this be? The mob is made up of people using

their words both to praise and curse all in the same week. People just like us. We use words to build people up and to tear them down. We use words to unite us and divide us. We use words to help and to hurt every day. Many of us are unaware of the way our words hit like stones or jab like swords. Even to those we love the most; maybe especially to those we love the most. During this Holy Week many will gather on Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter Sunday. Several will say the familiar words, “We will lift up our hearts unto the Lord!” This year, may we also lift up our words. Rev. Margaret Almeida is a pastor at Second Presbyterian Church in Salisbury, N.C.


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

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timeless antiques remain a southern staple

PHOTOS BY MADELINE GRAY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

By Laura Ashley Lamm North State Journal

S

EARCHING through boxes in a warehouse for hand-painted china plates, placing bids to buy the ornate French vase, or passing down an old 1920s mahogany vanity that belonged to great-grandmother have long been part of Southern tradition. Antique shopping and collecting brings with it a share of heritage, bargain hunting, and pure joy as the jewel seeking unfolds. “The best part about treasure hunting is finding something you’ve never seen before,” said April Williams, owner of Pretty Rugged Designs in Tarboro. “Selecting antiques is all about personal taste. It’s OK if it doesn’t match. You can blend styles and find a way to bring the pieces together,” she added. Williams offers three tips to help green thumb beginners carve out their niche in the vast array of collectables, furniture, and accessories when shopping. “As a starter, if you’re looking for furniture, research for style to decide what type is best for you. You may find you enjoy one style over the other, may it be Empire, Victorian, or Colonial,” said Williams. “Secondly, research prices as it’s the easiest way to shop around and determine if you’re getting a bargain. Lastly, be open to new things. You never know what you’ll find, and if you’re looking for something in particular, ask your local antique store for advice,” she added. For many, antique shopping on a whim provides a sense of surprise when the perfect piece is found, but for others it's bidding at a live auction that provides the most thrill. “Very seldom do you get a greenhorn at an auction,” said Bobby Langston, owner of Bobby Langston Antiques in Wilson. At 80 years old, Langston knows a thing or two about auctions. His business has been serving antique lovers since 1977, and he suggests buyers come in prior to the auction to familiarize themselves with merchandise noting the piece's condition, age, and quality. “Make sure you come to an auction with a budget in mind,” said Langston. “I tell people, ‘Don’t get nervous making a

bid. The only person watching you is the auctioneer.’” All auctions have set opening bids and monetary increments for buyers to follow. It’s always wise to abide by the rules of the auctioneer. Langston said auction etiquette is simple. “Don’t talk. Pay attention to the auctioneer,” he added. Whether the antique piece was purchased or inherited, the owner may be curious to know the history in order to make decisions about keeping, selling or donating. Having an appraisal can provide the information needed. “The first thing you need to do is think about what you’re looking for in an appraisal — is it for insurance, a division of assets, liquidation, charitable contributions, or divorce?” said J. Robert Boykin, III, owner of Boykin Appraisals in Wilson. Once the purpose is clarified, the appraiser can offer details important to the piece. “The appraiser can look at the item, tell you where it’s made, the style, country of origin, age, and condition of the piece," said Boykin. Boykin is in his 36th year of appraising antiques locally, statewide, and nationally. He has most notably been the appraiser for Tryon’s Palace in New Bern and the North Carolina Museum of History. “If you have any information or province of history to the piece, either written or oral, those items should be gathered for the appraiser as it will make a difference in value,” said Boykin. For example, if you own a chair once sat in by George Washington, an appraiser cannot tell that fact by looking at the chair. If the owner can provide letters or documents describing Washington did indeed sit in the chair, the historic and financial value of the chair will rise, noted Boykin. “Seeing different items — art, furniture, silver — each item has its own standard of good, better, and best. The diversity of antiques and appraisals makes each piece interesting,” added Boykin. It’s the diversity of antiques, from the historic to the eclectic to the unusual, that will continue to make shopping, buying, and collecting a beloved tradition of the South.

Left, Doug Boone, of Wilson, packs a mirror to get it ready to send to Ireland. Right, Allison Mann organizes items at her mother’s antique store, Marcia Stancil Antiques Unlimited, in Wilson. Marcia Stancil has run the antique store out of a house on US-301 for over 20 years.

Top, Furniture hangs from the ceiling and is stacked high on the floor in a back room at Jean's Antiques in Stantonsburg. The antique store opened in the 1970s and now sprawls through the many rooms of a house-like building that used to be a doctor's clinic. Left, A Charlie McCarthy doll sits on a shelf at Jean's Antiques.


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

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North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

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Rio Gaines, 5, right, and his sister Ila, 3, left, of Livingston, Montana, start to chow down on hot dogs with their grandparents Willis and Susie Gaines, of Raleigh, at the Roast Grill.

Coke bottles and other memorabilia grace the walls at the Roast Grill.

Freeda Poniros, daughter of the original owners and mother to the current one, finally sits down at the end of the day to eat a hot dog after hours in the Roast Grill in downtown Raleigh. The Roast Grill has been a Raleigh staple for more than 75 years. Opened in 1940 by Greek immigrants George Charles and his wife Mary, the restaurant has only ever served a limited menu of hot dogs, coke, baklava, and pound cake. No ketchup allowed though, Mary refused to let it ruin her chili, and the rule has stood ever since. Instead, you can get the grilled dogs with mustard, chili, slaw, and onions, all for $2.50 a piece. The tiny restaurant that used to be a front porch is now run by the couple’s grandson, George Poniros.

old haunts The Roast Grill | Raleigh Every town has an old haunt, a place that only the locals seem to know about. The place you make a beeline for when you visit your hometown. Our collective memories are mixed up in the sights and smells of these restaurants, just a footstep over the threshold and you’re home again. To launch the series Eamon Queeney takes us to Raleigh’s Roast Grill.

Sarah Chrisant, of Durham, blows out a hot dog candle as her bachelorette party members sing her a happy wedding song.

The Roast Grill. Many Raleigh residents reference this spot as “Hot Weiners,” which is fitting since that’s what they have been serving since 1940. Hot dogs and Coke in a bottle — when you go you’ll know that’s all they really need to offer. You can find a spot along the wall at a table but try the counter, you never know who you'll be seated next to. And really, when you want to experience the vibe of a town, it is best to enjoy a meal shoulderto-shoulder with the local banker, lawyer, farmer, or shopkeeper. Take cash and do not order ketchup. Above, hot dogs cook on the original grill in the Roast Grill in downtown Raleigh. Right, obituaries of regular customers grace the walls of the Roast Grill in downtown Raleigh near a Miller High Life sign

George Poniros gets ready to close for the day.


North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

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eat! the plate Edamame hummus with curry pickled raisins In a handsome two-level dining room on Main Street in his hometown, Chef Jason Reasoner delivers flavors from around the globe. You’re as likely to delight in a beloved dish like pimento cheese as you are to fall for one you’ve never met.

WILL PAGE FOR THE NORTH STATE JOURNAL

SPRINGTIME from page C1 Spillars brings up a valid point about family heirlooms, “Especially in the South we like to pass things down. Holidays are a time to use those place settings, but you can incorporate new pieces to make the setting unique to you and your style while keeping the memory of your inheritance.” It’s the little things. Whether you’ve put forth the effort to whip up a three-course meal and invited a bevy of guests, or you are having a simple Sunday supper, a properly set table will elevate your gathering. Go the extra mile by trying a fancy fold or incorporating a sprig of greenery tucked in your napkin rings and welcome spring with panache.

Start to finish: 1 hour Servings: 8 Hummus 3 cups frozen shelled edamame ½ cup tahini 4 garlic cloves 2 teaspoons cumin 1 cup ice water 2 ounces lemon juice Salt and pepper

Blanch edamame in salted water, then shock in ice water. In a food processor, puree edamame, tahini, garlic, and cumin. Scrape sides and pour in as much ice water as needed to achieve desired consistency (but prevent ice from getting in). Season with lemon juice, salt, and pepper. Transfer to storage container and refrigerate for 20 minutes. Curry Pickled Raisins 2 cups golden raisins 1 cup sugar 1 cup white wine vinegar ½ cup water Pinch of saffron ½ teaspoon turmeric 2 teaspoons curry powder 2 teaspoons yellow mustard seed 2 teaspoons brown mustard seed Pinch of salt ¼ cup finely diced shallots ½ cup small diced celery

SUSAN DIXON FOR THE NORTH STATE JOURNAL

WILL PAGE FOR THE NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Bunnies add a festive air from The Cottage Shop in Nags Head. Above right: Additional decorative pieces found at The Fisherman's Wife in Wrightsville Beach.

Simmer raisins, sugar, vinegar, water, saffron, turmeric, curry powder, mustard seeds, and salt until raisins are plump and mustard seeds have softened, about 20 minutes. Remove from heat and chill for 30 minutes. Just before serving, stir in shallots and celery. Assembly Scoop hummus onto each plate, then press a spoon in the middle to make a small well. Fill with raisin mixture. Garnish as desired and serve with crostini, crackers, or raw vegetables. (Recipe by Jason Reasoner at Postero in Hendersonville.)

SUSAN DIXON FOR THE NORTH STATE JOURNAL

A table styled at The Cottage Shop, Nags Head.

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$1,500 Festival Travel Package Want to enjoy the highlights of the Azalea Festival and need a place to stay? Don’t want to drive while you are here…we have that covered too! Visit ncazaleafestival.org/festival-hotel-package/ Or call 910.794.4650 to talk to your personal travel agent


Sunday Story North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

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Washington’s Southern Tour By Warren Bingham EDITOR’S NOTE

Stories have power. They amuse, enchant, teach, and transport us to another time and place outside of our own. Today’s story picks up where we left off last Sunday along George Washington’s North Carolina travels.

I

N TARBORO, Washington, who relished pomp and ceremony, recorded in his diary that the town gave him a worthy salute despite being limited to a single cannon. However, the president was impressed that the small town had a bridge over the Tar River. In 1791, bridges were luxuries. On the way to New Bern, the president witnessed aspects of the naval store industry and saw tar in the making near Greenville. He then groused that the horses had to stay outside overnight near present- day Ayden; Washington constantly worried about the health and comfort of his horses. North Carolina’s population was 400,000 and New Bern, with about 3,000 souls, was the largest town. At the confluence of the Neuse and Trent Rivers, New Bern was a place of commerce and the home of a newspaper. Washington enjoyed the New Bern waterfront, good lodgings, and a dinner and ball at Tryon Palace. And the president admired an ancient bald cypress that still stands today. Legend has it that in the early eighteenth century, the town’s Swiss settlers made an uneasy peace with Native Americans under the “Treaty Tree.” Washington’s entourage left New Bern for Wilmington. Travelling past long stretches of longleaf pine forests through present-day Jones, Onslow, and Pender Counties, the president opined, “The whole road from Newbern to Wilmington (except in a few places of small extent) passes through the most barren country I ever beheld.” Washington actually found the appearance of the land agreeable, but GW the farmer, just could not relate to such a flat sandy place. The president arrived in Wilmington on Easter Sunday. Fascinated with its commerce and port activities, Washington expressed concern that careless and lazy census takers had probably undercounted the population of the bustling town, suspecting the Port City had more than the 1,000 accounted for in the 1790 census.

ILLUSTRATION FOR THE NORTH STATE JOURNAL | AMY RICHARDS

After successful weeks in South Carolina and Georgia, Washington returned to North Carolina via Mecklenburg County in late May. The president’s host in Charlotte was Thomas Polk, a former Revolutionary War officer and arguably the Queen City’s leading citizen and proponent. Notably, Polk would become the great uncle to future U.S. president James K. Polk, who was born in Mecklenburg in 1795. Though Washington was pleased that Charlotte had been a hotbed of patriotism during the Revolution, he was less impressed with the appearance and commerce of what he saw on his visit. A ramshackle wooden courthouse stood in the middle of Trade and Tryon Streets, and Washington referred to Charlotte in his diary as a “trifling place.” When the president arrived in Salisbury, a parade ensued, and he spent the afternoon at a ladies’ tea. In Salem, now Old Salem, Washington was much impressed with Moravian industry, orderliness, and their music. And, in Salem, North Carolina governor Alexander Martin met with the president, and assured him that the citizens were generally accepting the new federal government and were even coming around on accepting the new federal tax on

distilled liquor. Washington’s last nights in North Carolina were at Guilford Courthouse, near present-day Greensboro and, finally, north of Yanceyville in Caswell County near the Virginia border. Ten years earlier, Guilford Courthouse had been the scene of a prominent battle of the Revolution. Though the British won at Guilford Courthouse, their victory came with considerable physical and emotional loss, and arguably helped set the stage for the British fall at Yorktown. Washington’s Southern Tour covered 1900 miles and took 3 1⁄2 months, and North Carolinians should appreciate having been a part of it. Other early presidents never visited. John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and John Quincy Adams never came to the state. President James Monroe, traveling by water, did visit a few coastal areas, but not until Andrew Jackson took office in 1829 did another president have a good feel for North Carolina as a place. George Washington was the consummate American. His tours were a remarkable physical accomplishment, and did much to unite the young republic. Let us never forget that he came to North Carolina.

COMING UP in the good life Edenton, N.C.

Frolic your way through this great state of ours by learning more about the towns and cities we love so much. We're headed to Edenton, where so much of our state’s history first began.

Bravehearts

We will share the stories of those who have faced adversity and used that experience to help others, starting with Bruce Ham, widower and father of three.

Feel the Music

Our photographers give you a glimpse of the moving music found at the 81st Annual Highfalls Old-Time Fiddlers’ Convention held in Robbins, N.C.


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North State Journal for Sunday, March 20, 2016

pen & Paper pursuits I reckon . . .

Your guide to what’s what, where, why, and how to say it.

Shallotte

COLOR AWAY!

In North Carolina the shadbush is one of our first signs of spring. Arriving just ahead of the cherry trees and aptly named, its bloom coincides with the springtime fish runs of the shad.

Considered the center of commerce for Brunswick County, this fine town is thought to be one of North Carolina’s best nontouristy places to visit. Don’t mistake this center of the Brunswick Islands as a rhyming partner for the Queen City, it’s pronounced shə-LOHT. JANRIC CLASSIC SUDOKU

SOLUTIONS TO PUZZLES FROM 3.13.16

ILLUSTRATION FOR THE NORTH STATE JOURNAL | AMY RICHARDS


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