WILS 08/20/95 **CHII 1 WILSON LIBRARY N C COLLECTION -• UNC-CH P 0 BOX 8890 CHAPEL HILL NC 27515-8890 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2015 OLUIVIE 94 - NUMBER 43 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913 PRICE: 50 CENTS Obama defends Black Jves Matter movement By Darlene Superville WASHINGTON (AP) - De eding the Black Lives Matter )vement, President Barack >ama said Oct. 22 the protests re giving voice to a problem ppening only in African- nerican communities, adding, fe, as a society, particularly iven our history, have to take lis seriously.” Obama said the movement, lich sprung up after the deaths unarmed black men in Florida, Missouri and elsewhere, quickly awe to be viewed as being op- |jsed to police and suggesting hat other people’s lives don’t natter. Opponents have coun tered that “all lives matter.” ■At the conclusion of a White Ruse forum on criminal justice, Rama said he wanted to make l final point about the nexus of ace and the criminal justice sys- em before launching into his de fense of the movement. ■“I think everybody under stands all lives matter,” Obama said. “I think the reason that the organizers used the phrase 'Black Lives Matter’ was not be- Ese they were suggesting no- gdy else’s lives matter. Rather, Bat they were suggesting was here is a specific problem that’s Opening in the African-Amer- can community that’s not hap- gning in other communities. ■“And that is a legitimate issue hat we’ve got to address.” ■Police relations with minor- ■ communities and the deaths Bunarmed black men have been bpics of great interest since the footings of 17-year-old Tray- fon Martin in 2012 in Florida Ind 18-year-old Michael Brown I 2014 in Ferguson, Missouri. Bose deaths, and others ofblack women, have inspired protests ffound the country under the ‘Black Lives Matter” moniker. ■Obama paired his defense of the Black Lives Matter move- ihent with praise for police and Kher law enforcement officials. Some police groups have been Inhappy with Obama’s response to the deaths of the unarmed black men. The president lately gems to be making the extra ef fort to publicly praise police of- Bers for willingly taking on a dangerous assignment., I He did so while participating in a forum on drug abuse Oct. 21 ■Charleston, West Virginia, and Hext week he’s scheduled to ad dress the International Associa tion ofChiefs ofPolice. At the White House, Obama said there are specific concerns ibout whether blacks in certain ireas are treated unfairly or are pore frequently subjected to ex cessive force by police. I But the president said peo ple should also “understand the overwhelming majority of law enforcement’s doing the right Ing and wants to do the right ling” and “recognize that po- ce officers have a really tough ob and we’re sending them into Iy tough neighborhoods that etimes are really dangerous they’ve got to make split- •nd decisions.” Ie said people shouldn’t be 1 sanctimonious” about situa- s that can sometimes be am- lous. But having said all that, we i society, particularly given history, have to take this seri- y,” Obama said. “And one of he ways of avoiding the politics phis and losing the moment is everybody just stepping back for [second and understanding that 'he African-American commu- ftty is not just making this up.” President Barack Obama holds two youngsters while posing for a photo with them during halftime of the Chicago Bulls-Cleveland Cavaliers basketball game at the United Center in Chicago, Ill., Oct. 27. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza) Republican Christie: Black Lives Matter ‘create’call to kill officers WASHINGTON (AP) - The Black Lives Matter movement is creating an environment that can put police officers at risk, Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie said Oct. 25, accusing President Barack Obama of supporting the movement, encouraging “lawlessness” and not backing up law enforce ment. “I don’t believe that movement should be justified when they are calling for the murder of police of ficers,” Christie said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” Told that some individual members have been recorded calling for the deaths of officers, Christie replied that the environment is “what the movement is creating.” Black Lives Matter was established after the 2012 shooting of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed teen, by a neighborhood watch enthusiast, and has become an issue in the 2016 presidential campaign. The group said on its Facebook page in September that conservatives are trying to turn the movement into a danger to officers. “We’re targeting the brutal system of policing, not individual police,” the movement said in its state ment. “The Black Lives Matter Network seeks to end the system of policing that allows for unchecked violence against black people.” Police groups have bristled at that comment and pointed out people in marches drawing awareness to the issue have been recorded chanting for the deaths of police officers. During a protest outside Minne sota’s state fair this summer, for example, some marchers were recorded chanting to fry police “like ba con.” Earlier this month, the parents of slain black men and women were featured speakers at the “Justice or Else” march marking the 20-year anniversary of the Million Man March in Washington. President Barack Obama last week defended the Black Lives Matter movement, noting protests are giving voice to a problem happening only in African-American communities. “We, as a society, particularly given our history, have to take this seriously,” Obama said. The movement has become an issue in the presidential campaign. Some have taken its name as an implication that other people's lives don’t matter, and respond by saying, “All lives matter.” Democratic presidential hopeful Martin O’Malley initially took that tack but apologized last summer. At the Democratic presidential debate earlier this month, he joined the party’s other presidential hopefuls in giving a nod to the movement. African-Americans overwhelmingly vote for Democrats. “Black lives matter, and we have a lot of work to do to reform our criminal justice, system, and to ad dress race relations in our country,” O’Malley said. With new SEC nominees, 4 of 5 commissioners would be women By Marcy Gordon WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama is nominating two women, both attorneys and aca demics at Washington-area universities, as members of the Securities and Exchange Commission. If they are confirmed by the Senate, four of the five SEC commissioners will be women, a first for the agency; The nominees, announced Oct. 20, are Lisa Fairfax, a Democrat, who teaches law at George Washing ton University, and Hester Peirce, a Republican, who heads a financial markets program at George Mason University and was formerly a Senate aide. The independent agency oversees Wall Street and the financial markets. It is headed by Mary Jo White, a former federal prosecutor and attorney in private practice. White is an Independent. The other two com missioners are Kara Stein, a Democrat, and Michael Piwowar, a Republican. Fairfax is a law professor and director for programs at George Washington University’s Center for Law, Economics and Finance. She also has taught at Georgetown University Law Center and the Uni versity of Maryland School of Law. From 1995 to 2000, she was an associate at the law firm Ropes & Gray. Fairfax is an expert in corporate governance and held positions at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, the securities industry’s self-policing body. If confirmed, she would become the third African- American commissioner in the SEC’s history. (Continued On Page 12) Ms. Tania Butler Davis Eagle Soars High In Aeronautics North Carolina Central University alumna Tania Butler Davis was honored with a National Aeronau tics and Space Administration (NASA) Space Flight Awareness Award for her work at Johnson Space Cen ter. The award was presented in New Orleans on August 12,2015, in recognition of Davis’s accomplishments at NASA in her role as lead procurement analyst. In this position, she develops procurement strategies, selects key procurement milestones for headquarters review, reviews draft and final solicitations and provides guid ance for critical acquisitions. Davis obtained a bachelor’s degree in biology from NCCU in 1994 and a master’s in business administra tion from Johns Hopkins University in 2000. After graduation, Davis began a federal government career as an acquisition intern with Naval Air Systems Command in 1994. Prior to her appointment at NASA, she worked at the Naval Air Systems Command and the Internal Revenue Service. Davis has also served as an adjunct professor at Bowie State University. Davis became a life member of the NCCU Alumni Association in 2001. She served two terms from 2010 - 2014 as NCCU Alumni Association national presi dent. Prior to her election as president she was elected national vice-president. Davis was also Ms. Alumni 1995-1996. In addition to being an active alumna, she is a mem ber of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc., National Con tract Management Association, NAACP and the Na tional Black MBA Association. Comey: FBI used aerial surveillance above Ferguson By Eric Tucker WASHINGTON (AP) - FBI Director Jim Comey says the agency used its aircraft above Ferguson, Missouri, last year to help local law enforcement keep track of unrest on the ground. Comey did not go into details during a House Homeland Security Committee hearing on Oct. 22, including how long the surveillance lasted. But in response to questioning, he did say that the FBI uses air planes during investigations of specific suspects in criminal, terror ism and espionage investigations and to help local police during emergencies. He said the FBI never uses its planes for mass surveillance. When planes are flown above large crowds and gatherings at the request of local law enforcement, the purpose is to look for violence and trouble spots. A plane was also flown above riots in Baltimore last April.