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Julius Jones

Two of the high-powered assault rifles belonging to the North Carolina Division of Alcohol Law Enforcement are missing, according to a story in The (Raleigh) News & Observer today. The ALE is the only state agency, including the State Highway Patrol, that provides every officer with an high-powered assault riffle, despite the relatively few situations ALE officers encounter where deadly force is needed.

“Wow, I didn’t know they had those,” State Sen. Ed Jones, a Democrat from Enfield who is a retired state trooper, told The News & Observer in an interview. “I’m sitting here trying to think of a good reason to justify why ALE would need that much firepower, but I’m having some trouble.”

Read the article in today’s News & Observer here.

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Sen. Ted Kaufman, Engineering ‘60 and a senior lecturing fellow in the School of Law, wrote a letter urging Security and Exchange Commission chairwoman Mary L. Schapiro to undertake an in-depth review of the mechanisms in place to oversee a wide range of  issues under the agency’s jurisdiction, according to The New York Times DealBook blog.

“What I am doing right now is standing in the middle of the road waving a red lantern saying, ‘There’s a problem,’” Kaufman said in an interview with DealBook Monday. “Before we careen into another problem, we have to take a hard look at these things — and looking at them in piecemeal is not going to do it.”

The Delaware Democrat has been highly critical of the S.E.C. since taking his Senate seat in January, Replacing then-Sen. Joe Biden, who resigned his seat to become vice president of the United States. Many have blamed lax financial oversight by the S.E.C. as a principle cause of the financial collapse in September 2008.

Read Sen. Kaufman’s letter to S.E.C. Chairwoman Mary Schapiro here.

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11:03 AM The event is running currently behind schedule as guest and visitors still file into the Duke Chapel.

11:05 AM John Whittington Franklin, son of the Franklins, has called the program to order and introduced a soloist from the Fisk Jubilee Singers to sing in honor of his mother.

11:08 AM Members of the Links, Inc., and historical civic organization for black women of which Mrs. Franklin was a member, are preforming a service in her memory.

11:24 AM The Fisk Jubilee Singers are now performing. Both Dr. and Mrs. Franklin attended Fisk.

11:31 AM “John Hope and Aurelia were extraordinary people, a marvelous couple and fantastic team…. My parents created a peaceful home environment that encouraged generosity, learning and public service.” — John Whittington Franklin

11:35 AM “Aunt Aurelia had a deep, quiet power and part of her legacy lives with us and the things she loved and shared”— Cynthia Gibbs Wilson, niece of John Hope and Aurelia Franklin.

11:40 AM Emily Mann, director, McCarter Theatre, Princeton, N.J., said that Aurelia was her “heart,” John Hope was “like a second father to her” and John Whittington “like the brother she never had.”

11:51 AM “We dubbed him the sex symbol of the 30’s” — Vivian Mildred Corbett Bailey, speaking of her childhood friend Dr. Franklin.

11:55 AM “John Hope was know for his Bar-B-Que and his Louisiana-style Gumbo and Aurelia made chicken and dumplings the best you ever put a tooth to, if you ever heard that old expression.” — Vivian Mildred Corbett Bailey

11:59 AM Eric Pritchard, a violinist from Duke, is performing “Aurelia, In Memoriam” (1999) by T.J. Anderson

12:01 PM James Ketch from The University of North Carolina is performing a Trumpet solo entitled “In Memoriam, John Hope Franklin” (2009) by T.J. Anderson.

12:03 PM Genna Rae McNeil, a professor of history at The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, is speaking on behalf of all of the students who studied under Dr. Franklin.

12:05 PM “To be a student of John Hope Franklin was to be, form his perspective, at the center of his professional life.” — Genna Rae McNeil

12:15 PM Duke professor of African and African America studies Thavolia Glymph speaks of the contributions of Dr. Franklin in the advancement of African Studies in academia.

12:19 PM A Side Note — for those hoping to watch the event on UNC-TV, the network is not currently broadcasting the event of its station.

12:23 PM “Because of [From Slavery to Freedom ], the contributions of black people no longer stands at the back door of American history.” — Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, professor, Harvard University and co-author of the 9th edition of “From Slavery to Freedom”

12:35 PM “He never stopped fighting, for equality, fairness and peace.  Aurealia encouraged him every step of the way, and they were locked together…. His wisdowm was invaluable, as were his judgment and wit” — Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans, trustee emerita, Duke University

12:40 PM “Though I did not meet John Hope Franklin until he was 90, I too knew him in his prime. And it was one of the great fortunes I have experienced in my life that he made the path to friendship so easy” — Richard H. Brodhead, president, Duke University

12:52 PM To measure the life, work, accomplishments and meaning of John Hope Franklin is as if one would take a thible and try to empty the ocean…” — attorney Vernon Jordan

12:53 PM “Something vast and noble has psassed from among us, it is like a mighty oak has fallen leaving an empty and gaping and glaring space against the sky.” — Vernon Jordan

12:55 PM “John Hope taught and mentored me as he did so many here in this chapel, at our dining room tables, on numerous telephone calls, at various conferences in between meetings, and one of our best mentor/mentee sessions was in the Atlanta airport eating friend chicken at Pascals’ Brothers restaurant and I can’t recall a time in his presence when I did not learn from him.” — Vernon Jordan

12:59 PM A Side Note: The program is being broadcast on UNC-TV’s digital cable channel, UNC-NC.

1:00 PM “Vernon, you did everything but pass the plate, there’s not much left for me to say.” — President Bill Clinton

1:02 PM “He was a man of astonishing dignity, and detmermination who every day just by the way he carried himself reminded of something my grandmother told me as a little boy, which is you cannot be humiliated unless you give someone permission to do it.” — President Bill Clinton

1:05 PM “He was a genius at being a passionate rationalist and an angry happy man. A happy angry man.” — President Bill Clinton on how Dr. Franklin dealt with racial discourse.

1:11 PM “We are a different country now, we have been working for 10 years to become a communitarian country and his life’s work in no small measure helped produce some of that” — President Bill Clinton

1:17 PM After President Clinton’s remarks, John Whittington Franklin invites the Fisk Jubilee Singers up to sing the alma mater of Fisk to end the program.

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Following his speech Monday evening, journalist John Carroll spoke with me about his professional career, which spans more than forty years. The former Los Angeles Times editor discussed the future of print media and the Internet, ethics and conflicts of interest as well as advice for aspiring journalists. Carroll also reflected on a personal conflict concerning his coverage of the 1969 death of Mary Jo Kopechne in a car accident with Sen. Edward Kennedy.

Look out for full coverage of Monday’s speech in tomorrow’s paper.

(Click on the small play button to play; to pause, click it again.)

Click the play button to listen to interview

UPDATE by Alex Klein / Editor for New Media: Duke’s DeWitt Wallace Center for Media and Democracy at the Sanford Institute has posted the lecture in video format here.

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Newark Mayor Cory Booker spoke to a full Sanford crowd at Duke today. Afterward, Booker spoke to me in an exclusive interview. As we walked through a strong headwind along the Bryan Center Plaza, Booker discussed a wide range of subjects, including the direction he wants to lead Newark, criticism of him as a celebrity and the national notoriety of being an up-and-coming young, black politician featured in journalist Gwen Ifill’s new book, The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama.

Look for the complete article covering Booker’s speech in Thursday’s issue of The Chronicle. (Click on the small play button to play; to pause, click it again.)

Click the play button to listen to interview

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US Airways flight 1549 from New York’s LaGuardia airport crashed into the Hudson River approximately 20 minutes after taking off at 3:26 EST. The Airbus A320 plane, on it’s way to Charlotte-Douglas International Airport, hit a flock of birds and experienced engine trouble soon after take-off. U.S. Coast Guard crews began rescue operations to remove the over 140 passengers and 5 crew members not long after the plane went down, according to FAA officials. It was below 20 degrees at the time of the crash. Stay tune for updates on this breaking news story.

Update, 4:44 pm EST / filed by Julius Jones: According to reports on the Huffington Post, all passengers and crew members were evacuated safely.

Update, 6:36 pm EST / filed by Alex Klein: The New York Times’s City Room, the news blog that broke this story, is updating this post on their blog as news comes in. Much has been said about how the city’s agencies and the plane’s pilot handled this situation excellently, with effusive accolades coming from New York City’s Mayor Bloomberg and New York state’s Governor Paterson. We’ll leave you with a few bits of North Carolina-related quotes from that live blog.

Governor Paterson said he spoke with a retired police officer from Charlotte, N.C., who was on the plane, and the officer said that “he’d participated in these types of rescues and he’d never seen anything this magnificent.”

And if you can figure out what this clip is saying, you, too, deserve accolades.

Mr. Bloomberg said he had spoken to the mayor of Charlotte and offered to but him talked to mayor of Charlotte and offered to buy him a drink. “I pointed out this is not normally the way people arrive in New York City,” he said. “But as long as everybody got out safely I think everything else is secondary.”

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Obama winning N.C. by slim margin

November 5, 2008

Filed at 1:27 a.m.
Unofficial vote totals from the N.C. State Board of Elections show President-elect Barack Obama winning N.C. over Sen. John McCain by only 0.27 percent. All 100 precincts have been counted. It’s unclear whether the small margin will result in a recount.

Read the full article →

BREAKING: OBAMA WINS PRESIDENCY

November 4, 2008

Posted at 11:00 pm EST
News outlets have projected that Sen. Barack Obama has won the state of California, its 55 electoral votes and has been elected the 44th President of the United States.

Read the full article →