North State Journal — Vol. 1., Issue 27

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VOLUME 1 ISSUE 27

www.NSJONLINE.com

the Sunday News Briefing

SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 2016

night at the museum From left, Kait Siegel and Erin Vining look at a reconstruction of a giant ground sloth in the prehistoric North Carolina exhibit during the third annual Natural Selections event on Aug. 19 at the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences. The event featured panel discussions, hands-on science of beer activities and beer samples from more than 20 North Carolina breweries.

Agencies investigate police shooting of deaf motorist Charlotte The Mecklenburg County District Attorney, North Carolina Highway Patrol and State Bureau of Investigation are investigating a fatal officerinvolved shooting of a deaf man in Charlotte. Motorist Daniel Harris, 29, was shot during a traffic stop Aug. 18. The State Highway Patrol stated a trooper tried to pull over a motorist on Interstate 485 for speeding. The driver fled and after a pursuit pulled over and got out his car. The statement added there was an “encounter” with the officer and a shot was fired killing the driver. According to multiple reports, the Highway Patrol trooper is identified as Jermaine Saunders.

Man pleads not guilty to aiding terrorists Asheville A Morganton man has pled not guilty to charges of plotting an ISIS-inspired terror attack. Justin Nojan Sullivan, 20, was arraigned Wednesday on charges which include providing material support for terrorists, transporting and receiving a silencer in interstate commerce with intent to commit a felony and receipt and possession of an unregistered silencer. Authorities said they arrested Sullivan last year before he was able to carry out a mass shooting at a concert, bar or club. According to court documents, Sullivan converted to Islam in 2014 and began watching ISIL videos of beheadings on the internet. His trial was set for Oct. 31, and he faces the maximum penalty of life in prison.

UNC study shows promising treatment for peanut allergies Chapel Hill, N.C. Researchers at the UNC School of Medicine found that nearly 80 percent of peanutallergic preschool children were successfully treated with peanut oral immunotherapy (OIT), allowing them to safely stop treatment and incorporate peanut-containing foods into their diets. The phase two clinical trial results, published online this week in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, show that one month after completing the OIT protocol, trial participants achieved “sustained unresponsiveness,” the highest rate yet reported. Researchers anticipate that peanut OIT can offer protection against potentially life-threatening anaphylaxis caused by peanut exposure.

INSIDE Born without a leg, follow one Raleigh girl’s path to Rio for the Paralympic games

See more on page C4. CHRISTINE T. NGUYEN | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

NORTH

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JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION

minor league baseball

Kinston calls on fanbase to name new team By Josh Hyatt North State Journal KINSTON, N.C. — Five years after the Kinston Indians’ departure for Zebulon, professional baseball is back in business at Grainger Stadium. But before the Kinston team can take to the historic field in the 2017 season, it needs a name — and it’s giving fans a chance to submit team names until Friday. Minor League Baseball announced Monday the Texas Rangers have entered into a 12year agreement with the City of Kinston to provide a team, which the Rangers will own, to play at the town’s storied Grainger Stadium. The Kinston club is slated to begin play in April of 2017. Team names, which can be submitted through Sept. 2 on KinstonBaseball.com, have already started to flood in. After hosting an event at Grainger Stadium for the fans on Thurs-

day, BJ Murphy, the mayor of Kinston, said that more than 500 names had already been submitted. Although he’s not sure exactly how many people showed up, he knows the hungry fans, in true N.C. spirit, consumed more than 1,400 hot dogs and cold Pepsis. Kinston and the Rangers have invested roughly $1.6 million in Grainger, the second-oldest stadium in the Carolina League, with features such as wall padding, upgrades to existing field houses, and cosmetic updates to the ticket booth, entrance area and concession area. “We really want to focus on the safety of our players and secondly the experience for the fans,” Murphy said. Born and raised in Kinston, Murphy told the North State Journal just exactly what baseball means to his eastern N.C. town of roughly 22,000 folks. See Kinston, page A3

B1 How Marvin Gaye helped inspire Team USA to gold B1 Sports The marriage of agriculture and business results in sweet success in Eastern N.C. C1 the good life

vote 2016

Presidential campaigns talk small business with locals By Liz Moomey North State Journal RALEIGH — At two small businesses in Raleigh, Donald Trump’s and Hillary Clinton’s campaigns advertised their economic plans on Tuesday. Lara Trump, who campaigned for her Republican father-inlaw, talked at the historic Briggs Hardware, in downtown Raleigh. And at Trophy Brewing at Maywood, former North Carolina Treasure Richard Moore spoke about the democratic presidential candidate, joining small business owners Trophy’s Chis Powers, Barn and Ivy’s Catherine Woyee-Jones and Reify Media’s Sarah Glova. Hillary for North Carolina also hosted a roundtable with latino and women small business

leaders in Raleigh. Wake County Commissioner Jessica Holmes, Centro owner Ángela Salamanca, CEO of Pixbit Saúl Flores and cofounder of Craft Habit Taylor Lee participated. According to various polls, the economy is the top concern for voters heading into the November election. Forbes also recently ranked Raleigh as the second and Charlotte 14th for best place for businesses and careers, making the economy an important talking point for North Carolina residents. North Carolina is home to more than 800,000 small businesses that employ 1.6 million people. To read more about the small business plans for Trump and Clinton, see A8.

business

Christine T. Nguyen | north state journal

Gov. Pat McCrory answers questions during the Triangle Business Journal’s Power Breakfast on Friday.

McCrory makes his case to Triangle business leaders By Jeff Moore North State Journal CARY, N.C — Gov. Pat McCrory participated in a discussion with Triangle area business leaders on Friday to discuss the economy and make his case for reelection to a second term. The breakfast event, hosted by the Triangle Business Journal at the Prestonwood Country Club in Cary, covered a range of economic topics ranging from H.B. 2 effects on business to corporate recruiting incentives, infrastructure and taxes. The question-and-answer discussion with business leaders was originally intended to include Democrat gubernatorial nominee and current Attorney General Roy Cooper, as well. However, according to the Triangle Business Journal’s event planning team, Cooper never accepted their invitation for the pro-

“If I’m reelected as governor, I’m going to bring it right back up to the legislature.You know the growth is going to continue at a pace, which is going to be much beyond our interstate capacity. We’ve got to plan for that network now.” Gov. Pat McCrory posed event on economic issues in front of local business leaders. McCrory was greeted by a standing ovation before pointing to progress in economic and government efficiency he has helped realize since taking office in 2013, evidenced by the state’s approxiSee business, page A3

Courtesy of Woody Spencer

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Grainger Stadium hosted a free event to celebrate the announcement of Minor League Baseball coming back to Kinston, North Carolina on Thursday. The Texas Rangers announced Monday that the team will have an affiliate playing in Kinston by next year.

Endorsements start rolling in for the governor’s race On Murphy to Manteo, page A5


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