VOLUME 2 ISSUE 56
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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM |
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 2018
Inside Understanding Duke’s annual January lull, Sports
LAUREN ROSE | NORTH STATE JOURNAL
The marching band from Bear Grass Charter School opened Tuesdays School Choice Week rally by playing the national anthem at North Carolina Museum of History in Raleigh on Jan. 23.
the Wednesday
NEWS BRIEFING
2 students dead, 12 others wounded by gunfire in Kentucky high school Benton, Ky. A 15-year-old boy opened fire with a handgun in his high school Tuesday, killing two fellow students and wounding a dozen other students before being arrested, the state’s governor and police said. The shooting began shortly before 8 a.m. at Marshall County High School, about 130 miles northwest of Nashville. Authorities offered no information on the motive behind the shooting. The teen, who faces multiple charges of murder and attempted murder, knew the victims.
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Trump signs solar panel tariff Washington, D.C. President Donald Trump signed into law a 30 percent tariff on imported solar panels on Tuesday. The tariff is among the first unilateral trade restrictions imposed by the administration as part of a broader protectionist agenda intended to help U.S. businesses struggling to compete with companies producing lower-priced goods overseas. China, the world’s biggest solar panel producer, complained the decision would undermine global trade. The administration also introduced a tariff on imported washing machines.
Magnitude-7.9 quake off Alaska sparks brief West Coast tsunami fears Anchorage Tsunami alerts were lifted on Tuesday for the West Coast after a magnitude-7.9 earthquake struck in the Gulf of Alaska shortly after midnight, sending the state’s coastal residents inland to seek shelter from possible tidal waves. Officials had warned residents as far south as San Francisco to be ready to evacuate coastal areas, but by 5:15 a.m. the U.S. National Weather Service had lifted all tsunami advisories.
Families, teachers rally at state capital for school choice Parents and policymakers come together to advocate for N.C.’s educational options By Donna King North State Journal RALEIGH — The rain on Tuesday morning did not dampen the spirits of more than 100 parents, students, teachers, and other supporters of school choice in N.C. Just as the skies were clearing, the crowd piled into the auditorium at the N.C. Museum of History for a rally to recognize national School Choice Week. The event was one of 1,025 events across the state this week to raise awareness and celebrate the growing prominence of charter and magnet schools across the state. “We participate in Nation-
al School Choice Week to bring awareness to those who live in our seven-county service area. NSCW is a great way for schools to market themselves and show communities that they do have a choice in educating their children,” said Jason K. Wynne, head of school at Lawrence Academy, a private independent school serving 231 students in grades K-12 in Merry Hill, NC. N.C. is among the states with the fastest growing public charter school system, particularly after a cap on the number of public charter schools was lifted last year. At the beginning of the 2017-2018 school year, 90,000 of N.C.’s students attend one of the state’s 173 public charter schools. Organizers of School Choice Week say the week is not political and not just about public charter schools, but See SCHOOL CHOICE, page A2
JOSHUA ROBERTS | REUTERS
Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. Jan. 23.
U.S. Attorney General orders probe of FBI agents’ texts Lawmakers call for a second special counsel as FBI loses key part of investigation timeline By Donna King North State Journal WASHINGTON, D.C. — While much of the nation turned its attention to the 3-day government shutdown over the weekend, members of Congress were stunned to find out that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has lost about five months’ worth of text messages between two staffers under congressional investigation. The controversy triggered a Department of Justice investigation announced by Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Tuesday. The two FBI staffers, agent
Peter Strzok and lawyer Lisa Page, worked on probes into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's emails and possible collusion between Russia and President Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign. Congressional investigators have focused on them in recent weeks after learning the two had exchanged more than 50,000 texts, many of them anti-Trump, on their work-issued cell phones during the time they were assigned to the cases. Republicans have said earlier batches of texts, which referred to Trump as an "idiot" and a "loathsome human," raised concerns of bias against Trump and favorable treatment for Clinton. Some messages alluded to a “secret society” within the bureau See FBI, page A2
LAUREN ROSE | NORTH STATE JOURNAL
Parents showed their support at a rally organized by the N.C. Association for Public Charter Schools.
INSIDE N.C. lawmakers say they will appeal redistricting order to the U.S. Supreme Court Jones & Blount
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