VOLUME 2 ISSUE 45
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2017
‘The nation that forgets its defenders will itself be forgotten.’ Calvin Coolidge, president of the United States from 1923-1929
EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL
James Cox, commandant of the Marine Corps League’s Detachment #733, lights a candle on a table set for one before the Veterans Day Ceremony at Wake Tech Community College in Raleigh on Nov. 7. The place setting symbolizes soldiers lost in service to the country. The ceremony celebrated the more than 1,800 veterans who are now students at Wake Tech.
the Wednesday
NEWS BRIEFING
NC schools chief points out waste at DPI Raleigh N.C. School Superintendent Mark Johnson told the state’s Board of Education that a $1 million audit of the Department of Public Instruction will likely pinpoint more cases of wasteful spending. In a board meeting last week, Johnson said that since taking office from three-term DPI veteran June Atkinson, he’s found a number of headquarters and public relations expenditures that could be spent on classrooms instead. BOE Chairman Bill Cobey praised Johnson’s reform efforts. Results of the audit are due in April.
Western Governors University offers scholarships Raleigh North Carolina’s new nonprofit online university announced this week two scholarship programs. The “Salute to Veterans” scholarships are valued at up to $2,500 per student who is either a military veteran, active-duty or retired military, reservist, or military dependent. In addition, the new “Take Flight” scholarships are valued up to $2,000 per six-month term for general population students enrolled in one of WGU’s 60 online undergraduate and graduate degree programs.
Two NC flu deaths reported Raleigh The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services on Monday announced the state’s first flurelated deaths of the 2017-18 season after two adults died of complications from influenza infection. Flu infections are most common from late fall to early spring, with peak activity in January or February. Visit flu.nc.gov for vaccine information
NORTH
STATE
JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION
Changing the culture of teen drinking The North Carolina ABC Commission is tackling teen alcohol use head-on with a new statewide multimedia campaign to give parents the tools they need By Laura Ashley Lamm North State Journal
KINSTON — It’s a fact that young teens in North Carolina know about or have tried alcohol. “North Carolina has an underage drinking problem, but so do all the other states. We’re just the state that is doing something about it,” said Kat Haney, director of the Initiative to Reduce Underage Drinking. According to recent reports from the North Carolina ABC Commission on the State of Underage Drinking in North Carolina, nearly two-thirds of middle school- and high school-aged youth know people around their age who have tried alcohol. “Our statistics show the first time youth try alcohol is around the age of 14,” said Haney. “We know that at that stage the parents are still thinking of their kid as a little child, and kids are See TALK IT OUT, page A3
INSIDE Reps. Richard Hudson and G.K. Butterfield’s key bill to help paramedics heads to the President Donald Trump’s desk. Jones & Blount
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really looking to their parents for context and guidance. In junior high, our data comes back over and over that parents are the No. 1 influencer.” In an effort to assist parents in discussing underage drinking with their children and to help the state combat the drinking epidemic, the ABC Commission established Talk It Out, a statewide multimedia campaign targeted at middle school parents. How do parents talk with children about alcohol? How does the conversation start? What effect does alcohol have on the growing brain of a teenager? “This doesn’t have to be a production for parents. It just needs to be an open conversation you have frequently, openly and honestly with children,” said Haney. “We want to help move parents into action.” Through multimedia sites like its website, talkitoutnc.org, Talk it Out offers a variety of resources for parents from YouTube videos to visual graphics on the brain, all supported by medical research from doctors. Even Duke men’s basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski donated his time to speak in a vid-
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Veterans Day is every day for these North Carolinians Benefits for veterans in tuition, job training, home loans and money are out there — but many service members don’t even know about it By Donna King North State Journal GARNER — Patriotism ran high on campus at Wake Technical Community College this week as the school took a morning to recognize the nation’s and the state’s veterans. At Wake Tech the Military and Veterans Programs is working to help nearly 2,000 students ease the transition from military service to school, and build a plan for their future. Wake Tech’s Veteran’s Resource Center was built especially for that purpose. “We want them to know how much work they can already get curriculum credit for, but at the same time we want to connect them with the outside agencies that can provide the resources that we can’t such as housing, medical treatment, those kinds of things,” said Dr. Samuel Strickland, senior vice president for Military and Veterans Programs. “The Veterans Center is a hub for those resources. They and their fami-
“Service members are the best our nation has to offer. Regardless of branch, they are the heart and soul of the best nation on the planet.” — Col. Rock Booze, U.S. Army
See VETERANS, page A2
KOJI SASAHARA | REUTERS
President Donald Trump reviews an honor guard during a welcome ceremony with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at Akasaka State Guest House in Tokyo, on Nov.6.
Trump to give North Korea speech, then press China to do more Insiders say the president may crack open the door to diplomacy in an important speech Wednesday By Matt Spetalnick and Steve Holland Reuters SEOUL, South Korea — President Donald Trump will wrap up his visit to Seoul on Wednesday with a major speech on North Korea and then shift focus to China, where he is expected to press a reluctant
President Xi Jinping to tighten the screws further on Pyongyang, U.S. officials say. Trump’s address to South Korea’s National Assembly will come a day after he seemed to take a more balanced approach: threatening to use America’s full military might against North Korea if needed, but also offering it a diplomatic opening to “make a deal” to end the nuclear standoff. While Trump presented no specific solution to his toughest global security challenge, his more conSee ASIA, page A3