(jOOO'J !Vj U hc €IwCan^t^ |yiikFihiiTHuei»i5E^ (EBB - NUMBER 19 (USPS 091-380) DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1988 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913 PRICE: 30 CENTS ilike ’84, Black Share Of rimary Votes Levels Off YORK (AP) — Although ;);son has been dramatical- ■ssful in the Democratic i this year, analysts say he repeated a major ac- mentof his 1984 presiden- maign: expanding the black ifthe vote. fcears ago, Jackson drew a Igher blxk turnout in many Blacks made up a fifth of the iatic electorate in Ohio, up liercent in 1980; a sixth in iJania, also up from 8 per- t while he has drawn iktic crowds, expanded his pmong whites and raised Jpiare of the black vote this md, he has not galvanized :ks to register and vote, rst candidacy brought a lot ack voters to the polls, as a clear pattern of in black participation," said Idivs poll analyst John Bren- |at pattern is not repeating is year." [voter turnout is crucial for ocrats because blacks ip one of their core voting l^ategists say Jackson could he Democrats’ chances if he fcliver an expanded black She general election - and e^party’s odds if he should tags black support of the wing the primary results so le major implication is that nnot expect an unusual black iAis year," said independent Jeter Hart • the Democrats are counting K oportionate black turnouL 0 be it’s going to be dif- to achieve," Hart said. "If n’t achieve it when there’s ! ne-to-one relationship, it’s ikely to happen when it’s to-one relationship." n increased black voting 14 through massive voter Mon drives. He has not con- pich intensive drives this nd exit polls in many states E d the black vote virtually I from 1984 as a share of the electorate. CBS News-New Yoik Times polls said blacks made up 19 per cent of the Democratic voters in Ohio last month, compared to 20 percent in 1984; in Pennsylvania, 16 percent this year, 17 percent in 19^4; in New York, 24 percent this year, 24 percent in 1984. ABC News poll results have been similar. "In Illinois, despite the publicity about the crowds that greeted Jackson, black turnout ac tually was down a bit from 1984," said Brennan. "It was steady in Pennsylvania, steady in Ohio, down a bit in Indiana, up a bit in New York." Polls have shown sizable in creases in some states: in Georgia, blacks made up 35 percent of the turnout in the NBC-Times poll, up from 28 percent in 1984. in Ala bama, though, an NBC News pall said blacks made up 32 percent in 1988, little changed from 30 per cent in 1984. In many cases, more blacks may have voted this year than in 1984, but not in numbers any greater than the increase of other voters, pollsters noted. Another issue for Democrats is whether black turnout may fluc tuate in the general election as it has in the primaries, or is more likely to remain stable. In 1984, some analysts expected a greater share of bl^ks, newly energized by Jackson, to vote Democratic in No vember, Brennan said. But blacks made up 8 percent of the general election vote, down a point from 1980 and three points below their share of the voting age population. The 1984 general election may be a poor example, pollster Hart said, "because that wasn’t a fight that was turning a lot of people on." Still, he said he was surpri^ that Jackson has not broadly boosted black voters’ electoral share this year. "At just lets you know institu tionally how difficult it is," Hart said. "Even one man as good as he is isn’t able to disproportionately shift the electorate." NEA PRESIDENT MARY HATWOOD FUTRELL deUvers what has been described by many as one of the most inspiring com mencement addresses heard at NCCU in years. Durham Police Chief Hampton Sees Local Shelter For Battered Women As Asset lACP Calls For Boycott Of Atlanta Banks ANTA (AP) — The IP’s Atlanta chapter says it Me its account with Citizens pem National Bank and is a boycott and federal inves- nlof the city’s white-owned ial institutions. Jctions were prompted by a of newspaper articles sug- g; the banks rarely make ns in black or integrated hoods, regardless of in- itement released Monday, resident Julian Bond and |ye secretary Narvis Grier' leeffect of the bank’s actions fng less than the purposeful Jon of black Atlanta, the ^hg of the white noose lihe center city, and a Mil "So these customers are going to be seeing more aggressive competition for their business in the near fu ture." A Trust Company Bank official said the NAACP statement should not apply to it. "Our position is that we do not discriminate in the extension of credit on the basis of race," said Wade T. Mitchell, executive vice- president of the bank. "All you’ve got to do is come into our main office and sit and watch for about 30 minutes, and you tell me if we discriminate," he said. By Jim Wicker When members of the local Coalition for Battered Women and Mayor Wib Gulley gathered in Northgate Mall last Friday to launch a campaign to acquire a shelter for Durham, Police chief Trevor Hampton gladly gave his support to the project "Domestic violence is a problem that crosses all segments of society," says Hampton, a veteran law enforcement officer although he only recently became the head of Durham’s police force. Uneducated women from pool and under-privileged backgrounds and communities are not the only ones who are battered: the problem also extends into the homes of the educated in middle-class and even wealthy neighborhoods, says Hampton, who saw the problem first-hand during the years that he worked as a pattol officer. "This shelter will be an asset, a needed resource, for the com munity," Hampton said shortly be fore he joined the mayor in cutting a ribbon to officially kick-off the fund-raising campaign. Spokesmen for the coalition for Battered Women, Inc., said they got more than 60 calls for help in the past year from women who had been beaten or threatened by violent spouses. Hampton says the setting up of a shelter in Durham will be a help to police, as well as to the many vic tims of domestic assault. "It will give us (police) a place to take or refer battered women who need protection," the chief says, ex plaining the coalition presently has only a small shelter in Orange County, which is not only several miles outside the city but in adequate in size. (TllKI TULA OK HAMPTON Officials of the coaliliim said the $150,000 fund drive will enable the local chapter ic buy a suitable house in Durham that can provide emergency, overnight accommoda tions for close to two dozen victims (often a woman also has to flee her home with her small children dur ing an outburst of violence). During the next several days, members of the public can get a glimpse of the coalition’s vision by visiting the "mock" shelter struc ture on the center stage at Northgate Mall. Anyone who desires can mak: a donation to the shelter by selecting his or her choice of items needed to furnish and equip the shelter. Hampton said he supports the idea of a local shelter because it will offer a convenient haven for victims and will allow them to get needed counseling and other help. Also, it will help place victims in a better position to get the protec tion from violence that the law can provide, if the spouses who assault them arc prosecuted. Many times, the chief says. women will call in the police, file charges in arrest warrants against the men who beat them, but when the case comes to court, the victims ask that the charges be dropped. "I’ve had it happen to me" as a patrol officer, Hampton recalls, ad ding he thinks battered women who drop charges do so out of fear and "to protect the economic situations of their children and themselves." But by having a shelter—even a temporary place of protection from violence—the victims may be en couraged to let their assailants ex perience the negative implications of the court, thereby giving the law a chance to function against men who batter their women, Hampton says. Members of the coalition, point ing out that battering is the single greatest cause of injury to Amer ican women, say statistics reveal that 25 percent of all married women "will be severely beaten by their husbands." Although it doesn’t seem rea sonable to the rational individual, it has been found that "batterers often plan their assaults." Also, it is pointed out that emotional, eco nomic and sexual abuses "always accompany physical battering.” Reiterating the police chief’s statement that all segments of society are affected, members of he coalition say "battering occurs at every income level, among all races and all religious denominations. Battering occurs in Durham, in Carrboro, in Chapel Hill, in Hillsborough." The coalition says "women who stay in shelters learn that they are not alone, that their experiences are similar" to others and that silence and isolation forced on them by the (Continued On Page 2) ®ing of the hopes and is of generations of hard- Charlotte NAACP Official ng citizens." ficials at Atlanta’s largest [.denied any intentional dis- Btion and promised to i.m- jservice in black com- Social Services Worker Sues County For Discrimination kNationa! Association for the praent of Colored People ils supporters to withdraw Jtjnds from banks cited as i^ieg discrimination. called upon local, state I eral officials to prohibit inking practices by with- ng public funds from such in- ons. Jd told The Atlanta Constitu- ^siatement applied to every IdJ'ued bank and savings and uXUanta. vivhile, bank officials asked ^tomers not to overreact to Jkles in the Constitution and paper. The Atlanta Jour- 'i® feeling i S o among many bank- ® of missed opportunities," a spokesman Dallas Lee. CHARLOTTE (AP) — A Meck lenburg County Social Services De partment employee has sued the county for more than $1 million, claiming she has been racia'ly dis criminated against because of her involvement with the NAACP. Valerie Woodard’s lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Charlotte, claims she has been denied promo tions, suspended and demoted be cause of her membership and ac tivities with the NAACP. Ms. Woodard, a 35-year-old of fice assistant, describes herself in the suit as ”an active and vocal” member of the NAACP. She's a vice president of the NAACP’s Charlotte-Mecklenburg County branch. Ms. Woodard, who earns $17,433 a year, is seeking $1,050,000 in damages. She claims her constitutional rights have been violated and she has suffered pain, humiliation and embarrassmenk The NAACP’s Charlct'e- Mecklcnburg County branch l as contributed SI,000 to help Ms. Woodard pay for her legal battle against the county, said Kelly Alexander Jr., president of the NAACP in North Carolina. Ms. Woodard began working for the social scpuces department in November 1980 as a clerk typist The suit says she sought a promotion to caseworker more than 50 times in the next 3 1/2 years. She was promoted to that position in May 1984, but was suspended 12 months later, and according to the suit her bosses recommended that she be terminated. Following a grievance hearing, .Ms. Woodard was reinstated but demoted to a clerk typist and her salary lowcrcu, tlic sua alleges. in July 1986, after clerk-typist po.iitions were elimir.aivu, Wcodard was rcclacslf.cd tc .x of fice assistant, the suit says. Woodard claims the reclassifica- a was a demotion, and that she was denied raises in 1986 and 1987 ali'.i being unfairly rated in her job ..erformance reviews. The lawsuit re ties as defendants Mecklenburg County, County Manager Jerry Fox, Ed Chapin, the Social Services Department’s director, and three social services department supervisors. Fox and Chapin could not be reached Monday. Louis Farrakhan Defends Cokely; Bernardine May Enter Fray CHICAGO (AP) — A former aide to Mayor Eugene Sawyer, fired for making anti-Semitic com ments, is getting support from con troversial minister Tthe Rev. Louis Farrakhan. Farrakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam faith, told about 4(X) people Tuesday night that some ■„Ack aldermen—not Sawyer should be blamed for Steve Coke- ly’s dismissal because they wouldn’t defend him. "What (Cokely) said was printed, not the total context" Farrakhan said. "And immediately some of our black leaders said ‘fire him, fire him.”' Farrakhan aimed some of his harshest rhetoric at Aldermen Tim Evans and Dorothy Tillman, ack nowledged Sawyer foes, and Alderman Danny Davis. "The shame of Tim Evans," Far- lakhan said. "He waited until the time was just right and he yelled, (Continued Oq Page 2)