DAVI7 12/01/16 **CH ILL. UNC-CH SERIALS DEPARTMENT DAVIS LIBRARY CB# p O BOX 8B90 CHAPEL HILL a Cimes VOLUME 95 - NUMBER 15 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 2016 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913 PRICE: 50 CENTS UNC president: Transgender law could hurt schools By Emery P. Dalesio RALEIGH (AP) - A new state law blocking anti-discrimination policies that would protect the LGBT community could turn away promising faculty and stu dents, University of North Caro lina President Margaret Spell ings said April 8, a day after issuing a memo to campus chan cellors saying the schools would comply with the law. Spellings said she wanted to address the issue again to clarify that her memo was “in no way an endorsement of this law.” “That’s not my job,” she told reporters in a conference call. “I’m a state office holder who is charged with upholding the laws of this state. We are not in a po sition to pick and choose which laws.” Theh April 7 memo points out that complying with the law means doing nothing differently in the system’s 16 universities, and that campus non-discrimi nation policies protecting LGBT people would remain intact. It also notes there is no way to confirm that transgender people are using only public bathrooms matching their biological sex, one of the law’s requirements. Consequently, Spellings said April 8, there won’t be any en forcement efforts. Universities already have signs designating separate public restrooms for the sexes, and need only to notify faculty and students about the new law, the memo said. That could change, however, depending on the outcome of a HB2 More Stories on Page 2, 3 and 8. President Barack Obama and Page Harrington, executive director of the Sewall- Belmont House and Museum, view artifacts from the Sewall-Belmont House and Museum at the Belmont-Paul Women’s Equality National Monument in Washing ton, D.C., April 12. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza) Law on discrimination, bathrooms aids campaign fundraising By Gary D. Robertson RALEIGH. (AP) - Signed only two weeks ago, North Carolina’s new law blocking anti-discrimi nation rules covering the LGBT community has become an issue in one of the nation’s most contested gubernatorial elections. The campaigns of Republican Gov. Pat McCrory, who signed the law, and challenger Democratic Attorney General Roy Cooper, who has refused to defend it in court, have been citing the conflict over the law as they seek donations. Cooper and McCrory won their respective March 15 primaries the week before the General As sembly held a special session to block a Charlotte City Council ordinance that extended protections for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people at hotels, restaurants and stores. The two are expected to run in one of the most expensive and competitive gubernatorial races this year, so every extra donation is important. National Democrats consider North Carolina their best chance to knock off a Republican incumbent. The two campaigns already have raised more than $13 million, with Cooper ahead in the money chase through the end of February. Criticism of the law and McCrory has led to a federal lawsuit and vocal protests outside the gover nor’s mansion and on cable television news. Social conservatives are holding prayer vigils and rallies supporting McCrory and other Republicans, who say Charlotte crossed the line when the ordinance allowed transgender people to use the rest room aligned with their gender identity at public accom modations. Both candidates “are going to try to raise the money from the red-hots,” said Gary Pearce, a long- time consultant in North Carolina Democratic politics. “That’s what anger is always a good motivator for - contributions on both sides.” McCrory has said he’s been unfairly treated by the national media and with an orchestrated cam paign of misinformation about the law. “The White House attacked us. The ACLU sued us. And Attorney General Cooper won’t try to stop them from stripping the basic expectation of privacy and safety North Carolinians have when they or their children use the restroom,” said a McCrory campaign email signed by campaign manager Russell Peck while asking for $25. The state law went further by preventing others counties and cities from enforcing similar rules and requiring public schools and universities and government agencies to limit multistall bathrooms to people of the same biological sex only. Cooper has said McCrory inserted discrimination into state law and created a “national embarrass ment” that will lose the state jobs. More than 130 corporate executives - the latest include those from General Electric Co., Oracle and LabCorp.- have signed a letter demanding McCrory seek the law’s repeal. “Together, we can take a stand against this law. Together, we can make our voices heard and say we won’t stand for bigotry and discrimination in North Carolina,” said the email fundraising plea, signed simply, “Roy.” The state Democratic Party and state Senate leader Phil Berger also have tapped into anger about or defense of the ordinance with their own email and online donation pleas. Pearce anticipates the controversy would benefit Cooper’s campaign finances more and expects he’s targeting cash support from business leaders in Charlotte, where McCrory was mayor for 14 years. Republican consultant Dee Stewart, who is not working in the gubernatorial race, said he expects both candidates will benefit but the issue will motivate “low-dollar donors” more. He cautioned the shelf life of raising money off the law is limited and gubernatorial candidates will move to the next big thing that gets media attention. “That’s just the nature of politics,” Stewart said. lawsuit aimed at overturning the law that was filed by a UNC- Greensboro student and a UNC- Chapel Hill employee, both of whom were born female and consider themselves to be male. The new law says they must use restrooms and locker rooms des ignated for women. The univer sity system is named as one of the defendants in the suit. The law, which was intro duced, adopted and took ef fect on March 23, was “hast ily drawn, perhaps without fully considering all of the implica tions that were at hand,” Spell ings said. “Those implications include leading prized students and faculty to think, Tf this is a place that is unwelcoming to that particular class of people, what does it mean to others?’” Other provisions of the law exclude sexual orientation and gender identity from the state’s anti-discrimination policy and also bar people from filing em ployment discrimination law- suits in state courts. In response, states and major cities have banned public em ployees from optional travel to North Carolina, PayPal reversed plans to open a 400-employee operation center in Charlotte, and more than 100 corporate CEOs signed a letter urging legislators to repeal the law. On April 8, Bruce Springsteen canceled a show scheduled for April 10 in Greensboro, saying in a statement on his website that “some things are more important than a rock show and this fight against prejudice and bigotry - which is happening as I write - is one of them.” UNC students also have protested the law, staging dem onstrations on campuses April 7 and 8. The North Carolina NAACP said it will organize sit-ins at the General Assembly if the law isn’t repealed. Supporters of the law are also speaking out, announcing a prayer vigil April 9 in Jack sonville and a rally outside the state Capitol in Raleigh on April 11. In Tennessee, Republican lawmakers are advancing simi lar legislation that would re quire public school students to use restrooms corresponding to the gender listed on their birth certificates. Nashville Mayor Megan Barry said passage could come with a cost to busi nesses there. Barry, a Democrat, said three groups have said they will cancel bookings for Nashville conventions if the bill becomes law, leading to the loss of $9 million in direct spending. An other nine groups have said they won’t go through with future booking plans, causing a loss of another $49 million in spending. Spelling said she will ask law makers to change parts of the North Carolina law when they start their annual session April 25. But she said she also hoped university officials would get guidance before then from the U.S. Department of Education regarding how the state law holds up against federal rules that bar sex discrimination. Spelling served as education secretary to President George W. Bush. UNC schools received about $1.4 billion in federal funds in Fiscal Year 2014-15, including veterans’ educational benefits, research grants and loan funds, university system spokeswom an Joni Worthington said. Associated Press writer Erik Schelzig in Nashville, Tennes see, contributed to this report. Voters stand by Trump as champion of political incorrectness By Adam Geller and Bryna Godar Donald Trump’s inflammatory statements about Mexican immi grants, Muslim refugees and women who get abortions may eventu ally be his campaign’s undoing, some analysts say. But don’t tell that to the many supporters such as Titus Kottke, attracted to the Republi can front-runner specifically because he shoots from the lip. “No more political correctness,” said Kottke, 22, a cattle trucker and construction worker from Athens, Wisconsin, who waited hours last weekend to see the candidate in a line stretching the length of a shopping mall. Trump is “not scared to offend people,” Kottke said. He agrees with some of the views Trump expresses but likes the fact that the candidate shows the confidence to reject the dogma of political cor rectness. That “takes away your freedom of speech, pretty much. You can’t say anything.” For years, conservatives have decried political correctness as a scourge of orthodox beliefs and language, imposed by liberals, that keeps people from voicing uncomfortable truths. Now, some Trump supporters - many white, working-class voters frustrated with the country’s shifting economics and demographics - applaud him for not being afraid to make noise about the things that anger them but that they feel discouraged from saying out loud. “It’s a cultural backlash,” said Steve Schmidt, a Republican po litical strategist who ran Sen. John McCain’s 2008 presidential cam paign. “Millions and millions of people in this country, blue-collar people, feel that their values are under assault, that they’re looked down upon, condescended to by the elites.” Trump rival Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, who has quit the 2016 race, are among the candidates who also have outspoken in decrying political correctness. But Trump has made defiance of the manners usually governing politics a signature of his campaign. “The big problem this country has is being politically correct,” he said in a debate in August, when pressed on his comments about women that brought criticism. “I’ve been challenged by so many people and I don’t frankly have time for total political correctness. And to be honest with you, this country doesn’t have time either.” In doing so, Trump tapped into a frustration shared even by many voters who disagree with him on other issues. In an October poll of Americans by Fairleigh Dickinson University, more than two-thirds agreed that political correctness is a “big problem” for the country. Among Republicans, it was 81 percent. That sentiment is clear in conversations with Trump supporters. “Let him be a man with the guts to say what he wants,” said Polly Day, 74, a retired nurse from Wausau, Wisconsin, who came to a Trump rally recently in nearby Rothschild. “Should he tone down? He’ll figure that out on his own. I like him the way he is.” At the same rally, Kottke said Trump’s rejection of political cor rectness is one of the main reasons he supports him, along with the candidate’s determination to improve security, protect jobs and keep Muslims out of the country. Plenty of others agreed with him. Ex-officer acquitted of threats in traffic incident PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Jurors have acquitted a white former Philadelphia police officer of charges of hurling racial epithets and threatening to kill a black man during an off-duty traffic incident. The panel deliberated for about eight hours before re turning the verdict on the terroristic threats charge in fa vor of Edward Sawicki III on Friday, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported. Sawicki, a police officer for almost nine years who was fired after he was charged, appeared to sag in his chair with relief as the verdict was read. He was later hugged by relatives and fellow officers and thanked jurors and those "who supported me over this very long two years.” Jurors were unable to reach agreement on charges of simple assault and a weapons count related to allega- tions that the 36-year-old displayed his service pistol in a threatening manner. Prosecutors are to announce at a June 1 hearing whether they will retry Sawicki on those two counts. Defense attorney William Brennan called the terroris tic threats charge "the foundation of this entire case.” "We’re hopeful the D.A.’s office will let this matter end with this verdict,” Brennan said. Investigators have said Sawicki backed into the vic tim’s knee while parking near south Philadelphia’s famed Pat’s King of Steaks restaurant in October 2013. Police said the man banged his hand on Sawicki’s car when he was struck, and he said Sawicki used racial slurs and told him "I’ll smoke you.” Sawicki said he thought the man was trying to stage a false-accident scam and said the man caused a scene when he realized Sawicki was a police officer. A Pat’s employee testified that he saw the heated argu ment and heard the officer make threatening remarks, but under questioning said he could no longer be sure who used racial slurs.