r Duke University Library Newspaper Department Durham NC 27706 On The Iranian Crisis Black people. . . ."are the only group of people who have emerged out of slavery without arms." Black children in America should know that they are seen as Kings and Queens" by many out side of America. Rev. Nelson Thompson in "America Can Hasten Hostages' Release" Page 2 - This Issue TtUSPS 091-389) Words of Wisdom Men who do things that coast acrer atop to count then. God gives every bird its food, hat docs mot throw it into the Best. VOLUME 58 -NUMBER 20 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1980 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913 PRICE; 30 CENTS ' '...! V 5 " .1' -.vl CI J '3 JCPS PRESIDENT SAYS SUPREtli COURT Ruling on At 'Large Election is - t !3 -l Hi;: 4 'l Vii i Set Back For Minorities Lrv fTTX fTwSW ', i V.. i l High School Left to right: Yolanda Murrell (1st place), Shelia McBroojn (2nd place) and Beverly Battle (3rd place) a M Junior High Winners Leslie Roland, left, 1st place winner and Rosalind Pendergraft, runnerup. - l vV WASHINGTON, D.C. Eddie N. Williams, president of the Joint Center for Political Studies, last week said that the April 22 U.S. Supreme Court ruling on at-large elections represents a set back for political aspirations. Following is the full text of Williams' remarks. STATEMENT The drive by blacks and other minorities to in crease their numbers in local elective offices has clearly suffered a set back, even if not a fatal one, by the U.S. Supreme Court's April 22 decision in City of Mobile et.al. v. Bolden et.al. The case, which challenged the at-large' election system, was brought as a class action suit on behalf of the black citizens of Mobile, who comprise about 35 per cent of the total popula tion, but have no black representative on that ci ty's three member govern ing commission. A federal District Court had ruled that Mobile's at-large elec tion system "violated the fifteenth" amendment and invidiously discriminated- 'aktetereflic4nvilc tion of the fourteenth amendment." It was this ruling that was overturned by the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court declared that the disproportionate (or discriminatory) effects of an at-large .system were not sufficient to establish a claim to unconstitu tional dilution of the black vote and that "intent" to discriminate would have to be proved. The requirement to pro ve discriminatory intent is extremely difficult, some say impossible, to meet. Local governments can hardly be expected to ar ticulate ( unambiguously any intent they may have 40 dilute black votes. Moreover, it is not clear at this time what kind of evidence the courts will ac cept as proof of intent to discriminate. Consequent ly, blacks and other minorities face the pro spect of continued exclu sion from thousands of local governmental bodies which are elected at-large. Those familiar with the history of resistance to black political participa tion will readily recognize the effectiveness of at large elections in preven ting blacks from being elected to public office in localities where they are a large segment of the elec torate but not a majority. In such localities, the abolition of at-large or multi-member election systems has been crucial to efforts to increase the number of blacks elected to office. Since enactment of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the number of black elected officials in the U.S. has grown significantly, from about 600 to over 4,600 today. However, blacks still con stitute less than one per cent of all elected officials in the country, although they are about eleven per cent of the total popula tion. Moreover, the annual rate of increase in the number of black elected officials has been declin ing steadily since 1975; between 1978 and 1979 the net increase was only two per cent. Joint Center research shows that even in localities where blacks exceed forty per cent of the total population, they remain excluded from governing bodies, often because of at-large of multi-member election systems. The Supreme Court's decision will un doubtedly slow the .drive to correct this inequity. ' Although the Supreme Court decision is cause for grave concern, its adverse effects may be somewhat Rep. Chisholm Offers Solution For Black Unemployment By Trellie L. Jef fers During an interview in Durham, May 4, Con gresswoman Shirley Chisholm (D-NY) said that three approaches . should be used to solve the nation's black unemploy ment problem: There should be educational programs that 1 will :r give training for mere s cooperation between the education system; and There should be coor dination between educa tion and the 'job training process. Said , Congresswoman Chisholm, "if we are goj ing to help people become productive, we have to coordinate education and jobs." She noted that unemployment among blacks nationally is said to be 387, and that there are situations in which employers are "screening for someone to work, but wg&fl .blac4ts4ack, the-.necessary. Should te tn twfnrm thf jobs," Mrs. Chisholm said "Blacks are being trained for jobs that do not exist or they are not being train ed for existing jobs." She also mentioned that in some areas, blacks are be ing trained for jobs where they are unable to work because of housing discrimination. "We should syn chronize black unemploy ment and black education. People are the most im portant asset that this country has; and if we softened by the fact that it . was issued by a divided I Court. Two of the six Justices who supported the decision concurred for reasons different from those of the other four. Thus, Justice Blackmun, in his separate concurring opinion, criticized the lower court for being too extreme in requiring the City of Mobile to convert its government to a mayor-council -form. Blackmun concluded that the District Court was "perhaps overly concern ed with the elimination of at-large election per se, rather than with structur ing an electoral system that provided an oppor tunity for black voters in Mobile to participate in the city's government on an equal footing with whites." Implicit in Blackmun's opinion is the suggestion that a milder remedy might have won his ap proval. It is possible, therefore, that future legal challenges to at-large elec tions, which take a dif ferent approach, might produce a different result. It is important to note also that the Supreme don't use this asset, we are Court's decision does not " heading for trouble, said. Mrs. Chisholm was in North Carolina with Senator Edward Ken nedy's campaign group. She is a member of the U.S. House of Representatives. Black Energy Group Challenges President Jimmy Carter NEW ORLEANS The American Association of Blacks in Energy (AABE) took action at its Louisiana meeting last week to challenge Presi dent Jimmy Carter to ap point blacks to two regulatory bodies which have decision making positions , regarding energy. They are the Energy Mobilization . Elementary Left to right: Phillip Woods (3rd place), Lorie Jackson (2nd place), ( and Minda Purefoy (1st place). Deltas Award Cash Prizes to Eight Talent Participants Eight cash prizes were awarded winners in the first "Talent on Parade" sponsored recently by the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Area Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorori ty, Inc., a public service sorority. First place winners received $25, second place, $15, and third place, $10. Each partici pant, as well as the win ners and guest performers, j received certificates of participation. ' The elementary category winners were first place - Minda Purefoy, a piano presenta tion of "The Hanon Scale" and "Swans on the Lake"; second place - Lorie Jackson, vocal solo of "Hello Young Lovers" from the King and ; and third place - Phillip Woods, photography display. Junior High winners were first place - Leslie Roland, piano recital of "The Tumblers" and "Dream Waltz"; and se cond place - Rosalyn Pendergraft, craft display. High School winners were first place - Ms. Yolanda Murrell, violin rendition of "Concerto in G Major"; second place -Ms. Shelia McBroom, fashion designs; and third place - Ms. Beverly Battle, a modern' dance perfor mance to the music of "Treasure." Participants were from the Pittsboro, Chapel Hill, Carrboro, and Hillsborough schools. All proceeds from the show go toward the scholarship fund. Join The NAACP! Aid In The Fight For Human Rights! 6.2 Pay Cap Likely For Federal Workers While the federal unions, including the National Alliance of Postal and Federal Employees (NAPFE) are vigorously opposing the Administration's proposed pay reform bill, -both supporters and opponents of the measure agree federal workers will be held to a 6.2 pay raise in October. The 6.2 pay cap is bad news for federal workers who already find it impossible to keep pace with double digit inflation. The consensus is that even if the pay reform measure is successfully blocked this year, there is little chance that congressional appropriation committees will oppose the lead of the Administration or the budget committees. The probable pay hike is 2.3 percentage points lower than the 8.5 average in the pay raise guidelines for the private sector. And, federal workers cannot help but remember that the Administration's "national accord" with labor also called for the same wage guidelines to be applied to the private and federal sector. Needless to say,; from all indications this will not be the case in the fall. And, what does the federal worker have to look for ward to next year? With the "total compensation com parability" pay setting formula called for in the pay reform bill, federal workers will still lack parity with their private sector counterparts. While the formula compares the' salaries and fringe benefits of both sectors, it fails to factor in such benefits as bonuses, sales discounts, and profit sharing. In the pay reform field hearing held last month in Atlanta, Georgia, Maryland Congresswoman Gladys Spell man who chairs the House Subcommittee on Compensation! and Employee Benefits said OPM "is trying to bring the' level 6f comparability down, and then tell employees they're getting full comparability ." I am inclined to agree with the Maryland Congress-woman. Board and the Energy Security Corporation. High on the list of the 'priorities by the all black energy related organiza tion were seats for blacks on these agencies. There are seven positions on the Energy Mobilization Board and seven on the" Energy Security Corpora tion. The first unit will facilitate the decision making process as regards energy while the latter will manage the proposed syn thetic fuel development program. AABE, headed by Rufus McKinney, a vice president with Southern California Gas, said that his organization took the position that the Windfall Profits Tax should be ap propriated by Congress to get on with the develop ment of synthetic fuels with' minority firms get ting a fair share. The American Associa tion of Blanks in Energy was formed three years ago and has had singular achievements in making its presence known in energy circles, including the Department of Energy, state and local regulatory agencies. One of the main thrusts of AABE has been the development of job op portunities for blacks in the energy field. apply "td election' systems adopted since 1965 in areas, mainly in the South, covered by the Voting Rights Act. In several cases the U.S. Department of Justice has disallowed use of at-large or multi-member districts in states or localities covered by the Voting Rights Act because of their discriminatory intent or discriminatory effect. Aside from myriad legal issues which attorneys and the Courts must sort out, the most important and immediate effect of the Supreme Court's decision is the signal it transmits about the continuing ero sion of black gains, in cluding gains in the political arena. Thus, the Supreme Court's decision is seen by some as an extension of its DeFunis and Bakke deci sions and as an ominous harbinger of difficult times ahead. The Voting Rights Act, which will be up for a renewal in 1982, may itself be imperiled. Regardless of what legal remedies it might stimulate, the Court's nil-' ing challenges blacks to become even more asser Continued on Page 3 Fire Claims One Death In Oxford Manor, Several Injuries IS BY PAT BRYANT and BARBARA TAYLOR A horrifying nightmare being repeated with alarming frequency among residents at Oxford ' Manor, a federally subsidized housing pro ject. Since December, fire has claimed the lives of two children and one adult. The last est fatality was four-year-old Joyce Pierce, who died Tuesday evening. May 13. There are beliefs that the fire could have been avoided, and that apartments in the complex are riddled with malfunctioning electrical systems. City fire inspec tors have ruled out elec trical malfunctioning as the cause of the fire, a determination disputed by tenants in the complex. Mrs. Betty Pierce, mother of Joyce, tells at story filled with the horror bedroom engulfed in flames. Six of her other . children made the leap, but before David Pierce, 7, leaped, he had received second degree burns over most of his body. His ' four-year-old sister was. left behind, . and was found later by firemen ly ing among the flames.. Injured in the leap were Mrs. Pierce, 34, and her daughter, Linda, 16. of leaping from a second, when they discovered the floor window in .1 Continued on Page 2 School Opening Set For August 19 The Durham City School Board accepted a recommendation from Girsonnel director, oward McAllister, Mon day night, May 12, at the regular school board meeting, to begin the 1980-81 school year on August L9 and end June 2. Teachers will report for duty on August IS. The dates were part of next year's school calendar which had been created by , a committee of Duham: City - educators, parent and students. There were suggestions, however, from the school board, to study Labor Day as a more desirablo. . date for the begtanlnt.pfl Jhe 1981-82 schoqlyetn :