WILSON LIBRARY N C COLLECTION UNC-CH CHAPEL HILL 1'^ (12-\ aCiiM JaUME 79 - NUMBER 24 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA — SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 2001 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913 PRICE:30 CENTS Durham Committee to Hold 66th Founder’s Anniversary Banquet August 25 "Thi Durham Commillee on the iffairs of Black People (DCABP) ill celebrate its 66th Founders bniversary Banquet on Saturday, ijust 25, at 6:00 p.m. in the W, Pearson Cafeteria on the campus North Carolina Central Univer- The distinguished community ;aders being honored are: Dr. homas B. Bass, a long-serving, radioing dentist; and The Caw- Tunes Family, Mrs. Vivian ouise Austin Edmonds and Ken- jih W. Edmonds who, through professional sacrifice and dedicated commitment, have ensured the con tinuous publication of the seventy- - nine (79) year old Carolina Times. This independent, community- oriented weekly newspaper primarily, hut not exclusively, serves the African American popu lation of Durham and Durham County. The honorees in their respective ways have been beacons of light in the continuing struggles to make the aspirations and ideals of the DCABP founders reality. In August 1935, these visionary founders saw the need to establish "a permanent organization to represent the Negro citizenship of Durham in all mat ters pertaining to their educational, economic, political, civic, and so cial welfare.” The principal func tion of DCABP "shall be to work toward the elimination of racial dis crimination or distinction in public ' and general private affairs." Great progress has been made; yet, much remains to be achieved. (Continued On Page 2) Mrs. Ernestine Holmes, president of NCCU’s GoldsboroAVayne Alumni Association, left, Mrs. Judy Ammons, Chancellor James Ammons and Dr. Orlando Stovall meet in Goldsboro. Chancellor Ammons was the keynote speaker at the annual GoldsboroAVayne Alumni Banquet held at the First African Church. (NCCU Photo by Lawson) Blacks in State Voting at Lower Rate Than Whites DR. BASS EDMONDS EDMONDS Bill Would Give More Money To Help AIDS Patients, Prevention Among Blacks By Gary D. Robertson RALEIGH (AP) - With blacks iccoun(ing for most HIV and AIDS ases in North Carolina, the state eeds lo put more money and em- teison disease prevention, health xperis told a House panel. While blacks make 'up about one- fth of the state population, they ccount for 70 percent of the 0.500 HIV-related cases since .IDS was first reported through lie end of last year, according to iaie figures. Women and Latinos Iw make up a greater percentage bhe cases compared to 1990. A bill before a Hou.se panel ^ould declare HIV/AIDS a public lealih crisis in North Carolina. A oniroversial . provision asks the department of Health and Hu nan Services to study needle ex- ^angc programs for drug users in n attempt to reduce the spread of ■ilV, Wc re seeing a whole society '^ing devastated by disease," Dr. W Primm, chairman of the Na- J'nal Minority AIDS Council, told ^ House Health Committee. "We so much more education." rimm led a presentation about ^*^Hect of AIDS on North Caro lina as lawmakers began hearing ^ ^’ill that would allocate more n’J'ncy to help with prevention and Vacation efforts as well as lo pay niedicinc. Slate supervises a program nclp.s uninsured, HIV-positive 'n'^'iduals pay for drugs designed ’^P their disease in check. fiscal year, - nearly 1,900 j'^nts received help to pay for jng cocktails" and protease in- ™ from a budget of $12.3 ' About $8 million came ^ fhc federal government. House measure seeks $4.5 annually for the next two leAth those eligible for PS Drug Assistance Program ^ Ihose with incomes up to 125 poverty level to 250 in.i.'' poverty level. A (n 31 250 percent of the «r v? $24,500 ale it ^ current 125 percent cne of the lowest among the "People who are making under $20,000 per year, they’re faced with not getting a job in order to keep gettijig the drugs, or getting a job not being assured of the drugs," state AIDS director Evelyn Foust said. "I don’t think we ought to put people in that dilemma." The bill also would set aside $2 million over the next two years to fund community-based programs to educate the public more about how the disease is spread. The money also would expard testing and treatment facilities. New testing tools are making it easier and quicker to diagnose indi viduals with HIV and treat them, Bill Hinchey, a vice president at OraSure Technologies, told the committee. Hinchey touted a new testing pro duct that would take only 20 minutes to test for HIV and other sexually-transmitted diseases using a saliva or blood sample. Injecting drugs with used, tainted syringes is the second-leading known cause of HIV cases in North Carolina, according to the Division of Public Health. Homosexual sex is the leading caus\ House Republicans have been op posed to state funding of such pro grams they say promotes drug use.. Pilots proposed in the 1997 and 1999 sessions didn’t clear the House. Rep. Thomas Wright, Ihe bill sponsor, said he’s not going to amend the bill to add pilot pro grams as he did two years ago, angering Republicans. But he believed the HHS study could prompt private organizations to implement needle programs. A needle exchange program in Asheville has been praised by some for lowering HIV cases among blacks. "It’s not a government sanctioned program," said Wright, D-New Hanover. Several public health groups sup port needle exchanges, although studies have mixed. There was no debate by the committee on the needle-exchange study provision. Health and Human Services Sec retary Carmen Hooker Buell said the department supports the bill. "Clearly HIV/AIDS is an exam ple of the health dLspariiies in North Carolina between white North Carolinians and minority black North Carolinians," Buell said. Eliminating the.se kind of dis parities "is without a doubt my top priority within the department." CHARLOTTE (AP) - Blacks in North Carolina vote at a lower rate than whites despite constant registration drives and laws making it easier to cast ballots, according to a newspaper study. In Mecklenburg County, 56 percent of voting-age whites went to the polls in No vember compared to 45 percent of blacks. Overall, North Carolina’s gap was more than 12 percentage points, the Charlotte Ob server reported Monday. "We’re well aware of the gap," said Fred Yates, political action chairman for tlie NAACP’s N.C. chapter^. "We’ve got a long way to go." The study reflected a national pattern caused primarily by socio-economic factors. Poor and low-educated people are less likely to vote than others, studies show, and blacks make up a disproportionate share of that group. Black voting ri.ses at the higher end of the socio-economic ladder, "If you could correct for (income) nation wide, then blacks are actually more likely to participate than whites in the same status," said political scientist John Aldrich of Duke University. "(The gap) is almost ail class and educational background." The Observer reviewed data for 82 of tlte state’s 100 counties. Nowhere did the black participation rate top that of whites. Experts cite several rea.sons for the voting gap, including historical discrimination, the number of black men in pri.son or on parole, and feelings among black residents they have little at'stake in an election. "If for years you’ve been told your vote doesn’t matter, that you don’t count, then why should you go to the polls?" asked the Rev. Charlene Hendricks, pastor of Solid Rock Missionary Baptist Church in Char lotte. Angelo Sharpless, a 40-year-old black truck driver from the Charlotte area, said he doesn’t vote becau.se "everybody lies and tells you what they’re going to do, and then when they get up there, they don’t do noth ing." Yet Duane Muhammad, a leader of Hick ory’s predominantly black' Ridgeview com munity, said he votes out of respect for his family. His mother marched in Detroit with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and other rela tives also felt passionately about civil rights. "Those who have gone before us literally died for us to be able to vote," Muhammad said. "For that alone, we should vote." Also contributing to the gap is the fact that a disproportionate number of people in prison, probation or parole in the Carolinas - 'about 59 percent - are black. They cannot apply to vote until their sentence has ex pired, which contributes to the gap. Because politicians reflect their 'voters'’ agendas, experts said the gap means that black interests are underrepresented in city halls, legislatures and Congress. Add the fact that lower-income voters are less likely to contribute to campaigns or get active politically and you have the makings of a system geared toward the wealthy, said Claudine Gay, a Stanford University politi cal scientist who studies ethnic voting pat- lerns. "One should be concerned about how to engage otherwise unengaged Americans," she said. "And among the most unengaged Americans are African Americans." High Court Sustains Victory for Award-Winning Louisiana Inmate By Anne Gearan WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. Supreme Court refused lo consider a Louisiana prosecutor’s attempt to reinstate a murder sentence for an award-winning prison journalist. The high court’s action, taken without comment June 18, means Wilbert Rideau will either be retried or set’free after four decades behind bars. A federal appeals court over turned Rideau’s conviction last De cember for the abduction and kill ing of a white bank teller because blacks were improperly excluded from the grand jury that indicted Rideau, who is black. The 20-member jury had only one black member. District Attorney Rick Bryant has said he would seek a new convic tion if the Supreme Court refused to reinstate Rideau’s verdict. "In this case, there were two living victim witnesses, several confessions and much physical evi dence," Bryant said in December. "No grand jury in the history of the world would not have indicted." The facts of Rideau’s crime are not in dispute. In 1961, when he was 19, Rideau robbed a Lake Charles bank of dlrs 14,000, took three hostages and shot them as they begged for their lives. Two lived; teller Julia Ferguson died. Rideau arrived at the Louisiana Stale Penitentiary in Angola with an eighth-grade education and a death sentence. While waiting for his date in the electric chair, he taught himself to read and began writing. His sentence was changed to life in prison without parole after the U.S. Supreme Court threw out Louisiana’s death penalty in 1972. Under his editorship, the prison magazine. The Angolite. has won the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award and the American Bar Asso ciation s Silver Gavel Award. It has included articles about rape and a killing in prison, inmate suicides, riots, prisoner rights and execu tions. Rideau also co-directed a '1998 documentary about the Louisiana State Penitentiary called "The Farm," which won the Grand Jury Prize at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival. Despite recommendations for a commutation, four governors have refused lo free Rideau. While Rideau has never denied killing the bank clerk, his attorney has said a new and fair trial could result in conviction for a lesser crime, perhaps manslaughter, resulting in a shorter sentence and Rideau’s ultimate release. Durham Branch NAACP Monthly Meeting Sunday, June 24, 4 p.m. Bell-Yeager FWB Church 128 East Cornvi/allis Road • The Public is Invited •