North State Journal Vol. 7, Issue 5

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VOLUME 7 ISSUE 5

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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 2022

AP PHOTOS

UNC coach Hubert Davis and Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski will meet for the third time this season when the Tar Heels and Blue Devils play in the NCAA Tournament for the first time in a Final Four matchup Saturday in New Orleans.

Unrivaled game: DukeCarolina meet in the Final Four NC Values Coalition poll shows Budd leading Senate primary Raleigh A poll of Republican primary voters commissioned by the NC Values Coalition gives three-term U.S. Rep. Ted Budd the edge over former Gov. Pat McCrory and former U.S. Rep. Mark Walker in the May 17 Republican U.S. Senate primary. The poll of 504 respondents gave Budd the edge with 32% of the vote, McCrory at 29% and Walker at 12%. “We strongly encourage evangelical, Catholic, and Republican voters to vote for candidates who will support human life, allow marriage and families to flourish, and protect our religious liberty,” said executive director Tami Fitzgerald. NSJ STAFF

US job openings, quitting at near record high in February Washington, D.C. Job openings hovered at a near-record level in February, little changed from the previous month, continuing a trend that Federal Reserve officials see as a driver of inflation. There were 11.3 million available jobs last month, matching January’s figure and just below December’s record of 11.4 million, the Labor Department said Tuesday. The number of Americans quitting their jobs was also historically high, at 4.4 million, up from 4.3 million in January. More than 4.5 million people quit in November, the most on records dating back two decades. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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The best rivalry in sports meets on its biggest stage ever By Shawn Krest North State Journal Sorry America, but you’re going to hear a little bit about this game. Again. Carolina-Duke is always the most hyped series of any basketball season, as the two regular season showdowns at Cameron Indoor Stadium and the Dean Smith Center are preceded by a week of analysis, speculation, smack talk and a steady stream of classic games and highlights on

television. The hype ends with a game that almost always lives up to the attention. Three weeks ago, we thought we saw the Carolina-Duke hype to end them all as the teams played in Coach K’s final home game, with UNC springing an improbable upset to ruin the party. It turns out that circus was a mere appetizer for the smorgasbord of attention the Tar Heels and Blue Devils will attract over the next few days. After 257 Duke-Carolina games, the two teams will meet for the first time on basketball’s biggest stage — the Final Four. Both programs are familiar with the Final Four. Coach K is

Meet the 24-year-old North Carolinian behind a national movement for a “race-blind America” By A.P. Dillon North State Journal RALEIGH — Color Us United, an organization based out of Morrisville, North Carolina, is behind a national effort advocating for a “race-blind America.” According to the group’s website, “We are the voice of those who oppose dividing America by race, religion, sexual orientation or any other characteristic. We resist those who divide Americans in the name of “racial equity” — in government, schools, corporations, journalism, or social media.” At just 24 years old, Kenny Xu serves as the president and main spokesperson for Color Us United. In an interview with North State Journal, Xu noted the debates going on in the public discourse about what the appropriate response to race relations should be in this country and he says that the best response is “race blindness.” “We should not use it [race] to hire. We should not use it to promote. We should not use it to admit either for or against anybody,” Xu said. “We should strive

returning for the 13th time, setting a record for most Final Fours by a college coach. North Carolina is headed back for its 21st trip, more than any other program in basketball history. The teams have combined to cut down the nets at the Final Four 11 times, winning the title an average of one out of every eight years. Since 1991, Duke and UNC have combined to win nine of the 30 titles — or just about one every three years. Transition game Many fans have dreaded this game — North Carolina and Duke meeting in the Big Dance

— out of fear of being the team to come out on the short side and suffer the ultimate loss in bragging rights. In many ways, however, this is the perfect time for the two teams to meet with all the marbles at stake. It’s a period of unprecedented transition for the rivalry. Duke is in the last season under its Hall of Fame coach, while Carolina is in its first since its own Hall of Fame coach retired. The Tar Heels reached the Final Four under rookie head coach Hubert Davis, a former UNC player and longtime assistant to Roy Williams. The last first-year coach to reach the Final Four was another longtime UNC assistant who took over from a Hall of Famer. In 1997, Bill Guthridge became head coach of the Tar Heels after 30 years as Dean Smith’s assistant. The Tar Heels made the See DUKE-CAROLINA, page A2

New Leandro judge sets criteria for responses ahead of NC Supreme Court deadline

to treat people as individuals.” Xu is the author of the book An Inconvenient Minority, and the host of the podcast Inconvenient Minority, which does deep dive investigations into race, identity, and culture. “The current narrative, unfortunately, is propagating a very divisive view that says that we need to use race in everything and furthermore that America is a racist country and they use the racist country to justify that,” said Xu. “And I think both of those tenants are seriously questionable and need to be taken down, which is why we [Color United] started.” Xu is a graduate of Davidson College with a major in math and minor in philosophy. He currently resides in Raleigh. Before leading Color Us United, Xu worked at Young America’s Foundation before writing his book. “I fell in love with NC while at Davidson and always knew it would be the place to make my home and build a national nonprofit based upon the ordinary goodness of Americans,” said Xu

RALEIGH — The newly appointed judge in the long-running Leandro case gave instructions to both parties in the case ahead of the April 20 informational deadline imposed by the N.C. Supreme Court in a March 18 order. Special Superior Court Judge Michael Robinson was appointed to oversee the case on March 21 by Chief Justice Paul Newby. Robinson was first appointed to the seat in 2016 by former Gov. Pat McCrory and was re-appointed in 2021 by Gov. Roy Cooper. The N.C. Supreme Court’s March 18 order instructed Robinson to examine the impact of the 2021 biennial budget on his predecessor retired Judge David Lee’s funding order. Lee’s order directed three state agencies go around the legislature to transfer $1.7 billion from the state’s coffers. The N.C. Court of Appeals blocked Lee’s transfer order in December of 2021. Robinson has instructed the defendants to provide his court with their assessment by April 4 of just how much of the $1.7 billion is impacted by the 2021 budget. House Speaker Tim Moore (R-Kings Mountain) and Senate Leader Phil Berger (R-Eden) filed to become intervenors in the case last December. The attorney rep-

See RACE, page A2

See DEADLINE, page A2


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