WILSON LIBRARY N C COLLECTION P 0 BOX Q890 CHAPEL HILL UNC-CH NC SS90 ILUME 94 - NUMBER 29 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, JULY 25, 2015 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913 PRICE: 50 CENTS Woman found dead in Texas jail was excited about new chapter bove, Aspiring Scientists rk Alongside Astronaut. conMobil Bernard Har- | Camper reviews his Mars Iider project for accuracy DCCU. During the ExxonMobil rnard Harris Summer Sci- le Camp at North Carolina Bitral University, nearly 48 jangle area middle-school idents strengthened their ence, technology, engi- ering and math, or STEM, towledge and skills under. J direction of college pro- ■ors and science profes- >nals, including Dr. Ber- Id A. Harris Jr., the first Rican-American to walk in ce. See story on page 2. )r. Bernard Harris at right arber leads effort to unify Charlotte as trial looms By Jason KeyseR and Michael Graczyk HEMPSTEAD, Texas (AP) - A woman whose death in a Texas jail is under investigation was thrilled to be returning to her alma mater to begin a com munity outreach job after years of bouncing between temp work back home in Illinois, leaving friends doubting authorities who say she killed herself. Interviews with friends as well as Sandra Bland’s own words in online videos about racial injus tice and police brutality present a picture of a young woman on. the cusp of finding her niche in life. She landed a perfect job. She had just gone on a joyful road trip to Memphis with her mother. She had a voice and a following on social media and was active in her community. Even after an online video surfaced showing the 28-year- old talking in March about de pression and post-traumatic stress disorder, those who knew her said she would not have tak en her own life - not even over the ' confrontational traffic stop that led to her arrest, which mir rored the ones she railed against online. “She was in good spirits. She was looking forward to what was next,” said close friend and men tor LaVaughn Mosley, 57, add ing that he was unaware of any struggles with depression. “She was making plans for the future, so there’s no way she was in a suicidal state.” About 100 protesters marched from the jail to the courthouse July 17 in Hempstead, Texas, in cluding other friends of Bland’s who were also in disbelief. Bland grew up in Naperville, Illinois, 30 miles southwest of Chi cago. Known in her family as Sandy B, she was the fourth of five tight-knit sisters. She was active in her family’s church and was the only one of her sisters to go to college out of state. She studied at the College of Agriculture at Prairie View A&M University, a histori cally black school 40 miles northwest of Houston (Continued On Page 3) MS Sandra Bland By Tom Foreman Jr. tHARLOTTE (AP) - As North Carolina’s larg- lity braces for the trial of a former police officer Used in the killing of an unarmed black man, an ikely coalition of barbers, clergy and law en- sement is working to improve relations between Black community and police in Charlotte - and lad off possible violence once the trial ends. Fury selection began July 13 in the trial of ex- |•lotte-Mecklenburg police officer Randall Ker- ■ who is charged with voluntary manslaughter he September 2013 shooting death of Jonathan tell. ■he 24-year-old Ferrell, who is black, was in- ved in a car accident and had gone to a house, Irently to search for help. A person at the house Id police, and three officers responded. Inves- prs say Kerrick fired 12 shots, 10 of which hit I'll. Kerrick was the only officer who fired his Shaun Corbett, who owns a barber shop on ■lotte’s north side, the case drew immediate Dels to another shooting: the 2014 killing of ■tanned black teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, I white police officer. The case touched off a Inal debate over the way police conduct them- 1s when confronting minorities. t also touched off destructive riots that erupted la grand jury decided not to indict the Fergu- police officer in the death of 18-year-old Mi- el Brown. fearing the same violence could erupt in Char- I Corbett said he told himself that something Jo be done, especially as barbers have a “re- nsibility” to look after the community. ‘Back in the day, a barber was a prestigious po- p in the community. That’s where you came to the information. That’s where you came to get nsel. That was the cornerstone of the commu- , and I think we got away from that,” Corbett JONATHAN FERRELL. Ie brought the issue to the N.C. Local Barbers pciation, where he is a member of the board, the "Cops and Barbers” program was born, rhe group organizes town hall forums so com- lity members can talk to police. The program I Urges officers to get to know the places they by getting out of their cruisers and meeting residents. The youth are advised on how to handle encounters with police. The first event was held on Super Bowl Sunday, and Corbett said more than 200 people showed up. "Whatever the outcome is with the trial, I think the foundation and the groundwork we’ve laid is going to make that difference,” he said. “I think that it’s actually that we have the opportunity to have an honest dialogue. That’s what the 'Cops and Barbers’ movement is about.” Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Det. Garry Mc Fadden, who is active in the group, shares the op timism that there will be calm during and after the trial. “We can’t say what’s going to be the verdict and what’s going to be the jury, but I think that when it comes to the community, we have a good rela tionship with the community people here, and that makes for a much better advantage for us,” Mc Fadden said. In the aftermath of the Civil War, Charlotte - (Continued On Page 3) 2 Confederate monuments vandalized in North Carolina By Emily Masters RALEIGH (AP) - A vandalized Confederate monument in Charlotte, North Carolina was removed from Old City Hall on July 16 and relocated to a city warehouse for cleaning. “Right now there are plans to put it back, but that’s a decision that needs to be made by city council.” said Charlotte’s corporate spokesman Ken Brown. It is unknown how long the clean ing will take or what it will cost, he said. The city manager’s office ordered the monument moved but did not respond to requests for comment. The vandalism comes as the nation debates the appropriateness of the Confederate battle flag and Confederate monuments after the shooting of nine worshippers at a historically black church in Charleston, S.C. The suspect in that case, a white man, has been seen posing in pho tographs with the Confederate flag. While there have been numerous Confederate monuments vandalized across the South since the shooting, most monuments have been cleaned and reopened without having to be moved. “The vandalism, in some cases, will give city officials a much welcomed excuse for tak ing them down,” said James W. Loewen, an American sociologist who researches Confederate memorials. “This gives them an excuse to say we’re taking it down because it is a point of contention and to save the city trouble and money. Then they don’t have to take a stand on the underlying cause itself.” The North Carolina legislature is moving forward on legislation that would protect Confeder ate monuments. In April, the Senate passed a bill banning state or local authorities from remov ing “objects of remembrance” from public property without state legislative action. A House committee approved the bill July 15, sending it to the full House. The monument at Old City Hall was one of two Confederate monuments to be defaced in Charlotte on July 15. Police are investigating both acts of vandalism. No arrests have been made. At Old City Hall, someone spray-painted “racist” on a memorial that honors Confederate soldiers and was placed in 1977. Liquid cement was smeared on another Confederate memo rial monument located near the Grady Cole Center. The monument is owned by Mecklenburg County and was unveiled in 1929. County spokesman Rick Christenbury said the county will pay a private company to repair the damage for $300. Workers covered the monument with black trash bags July 16, so rain would not harden the cement further. The cement covered the carved inscription, two battle flags and the word 'Confederate.’ The inscription states that Confederate soldiers “preserved the Anglo-Saxon civilization of the South,” which Loewen called an “overt" white supremacist message. The United Confederate Veterans raised funds with Charlotte citizens to pay for the monu ment and erected it in 1929. The Old City Hall monument was donated by the Confederate Me morial Association of Charlotte and the city council voted to allow its 1977 placement, Brown said.