STATE NEWS BRIEFS
STATE SALES HOLIDAY WEEKEND AUGUST 3-5TH
[GREENSBORO] For the tenth straight
year, parents will be able to save money by not paying state sales tax on
specific items when the annual sales tax holiday comes the weekend of Aug. 3-5.
Clothing, footwear and school supplies of $100 or less per item; along with
school instructional material of $300 or less per item; sports and recreational
equipment of $50 or less per item; computers of $3,500 or less per item; and
computer supplies of $250 or less per item, are covered. Tablets and netbooks
of $3,500 or less per item are included, but eReaders are not. The period
begins at 12:01 a.m. Friday, August 3, and ends at 11:59 p.m. Sunday night,
August 5.
PRINCEVILLE IN FINANCIAL TROUBLE AGAIN
[PRINCEVILLE]
Princeville leaders say the town is in deep financial trouble, so much so that
Edgecombe County moved to shut off the water of 200 Princeville residents. The
town has been notified that it owes over $300,000 on a Water and Sewer Fund
loan, and could be in default. Town commissioners call the financial situation
“critical.” Revamping Princeville’s accounting records is seen as a step, by
town leaders, towards improving the situation.
STATE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE STAGNANT AT 9.4 PERCENT
[GREENSBORO]
For the third straight month, North Carolina’s unemployment rate remained
stagnant at 9.4 in the month of June. Nationally, the jobless rate is at 8.2
percent, making North Carolina’s rate the third highest in the nation. Experts
say they expect more job growth in the state for the rest of the year.
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"POGO" JOE CALDWELL, WHO PLAYED FOR THE CAROLINA COUGARS IN THE 1970'S, LED THE 1964 US OLYMPIC MEN'S BASKETBALL TEAM TO A GOLD MEDAL WIN OVER THE RUSSIANS IN TOKYO
’64 OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST RECALLS
by Cash Michaels
editor
He’s
a five-time NBA/ABA all-star, having played for the Carolina Cougars in the
early 1970’s, scoring at will, and giving “Dr. J” Julius Erving fits on defense
every time they faced off.
He
is also one of the most coveted hoop stars in Arizona State University Sun
Devils history, the former 6’5” guard/forward having his #32 jersey retired to
the rafters there in 2010.
But
the honor that “Pogo” Joe Caldwell displays with the greatest pride from his
extraordinary career in collegiate and professional basketball is the gold
medal he brought home from the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.
So
he knows, firsthand, how the US Olympic men’s basketball team, in addition to
all of the other American athletes, feel as the Games of the XXX Olympiad get
underway in London, England.
Caldwell,
71 and residing in Arizona, says even for the professional basketball players
there, there is a tremendous sense of pride and honor in knowing that you are
representing your country on the giant world stage, and that you are competing
against the best athletes in the world.
After
standing on the Olympic stage in Tokyo with his teammates, receiving the gold
medal around his neck, Pogo Joe says after their victory, there was no feeling
like it.
“As
young men, all we wanted to do was win the gold,” he says.
And
yes, in case you were wondering, Caldwell’s Olympic gold medal is indeed solid
gold.
Having
grown up a poor black boy in Texas city, Texas, Joseph Louis Caldwell,
nicknamed “Pogo Joe” because of his tremendous ability to leap so high off the
ground, was now part of a proud legacy of US Olympic champions in 1964. So much
so that his mother kept his gold medal with pride until she died, and his
father, who was always tough with Joe, even had to admit that his son achieved
something he never dreamed of.
Especially
after Joe went to the White House, and shook hands with another Texas native,
President Lyndon Baines Johnson.
“Everybody’s
got to be on the same page,” Caldwell says now regarding the current US
Olympics men team, featuring NBA stars Kobe Bryant, Lebron James and Kevin
Durant; and coached, once again by Duke University’s Mike Krzyzewski.
Pogo
Joe says when, at age 23, he was chosen the first of the final 12 from a list
of 100 great college basketball players like Willis Reed and Cazzie Russell, to
play for the United States, “There was simply no feeling like it.”
Caldwell’s
team then was significant because it was one of the last to feature primarily
college stars, in contrast to the NBA-dominated “Dream Team” US Olympic men’s
basketball teams that have been in vogue since 1992, featuring superstar future
Hall of Famers like North Carolina native Michael Jordan, Earvin “Magic”
Johnson and Larry Bird.
Caldwell’s
1964 US Olympic team, which it had no pro players (that wouldn’t be allowed to
until a 1989 change of international rules), didn’t do too badly in the future
NBA superstar category either. UNC Tar Heel player Larry Brown was a top
scorer; as was future NY Knicks star Bill Bradley; Duke University’s Jeff
Mullins; and UCLA’s Walt Hazzard.
“We
were the originally Dream Team,” he says.
They
won all nine of their Olympic contests in Tokyo convincingly, finishing off top
favorite (and USA arch-enemy) the now defunct Soviet Union, 73-59.
So
important was the Olympic victory over the Soviets during what was the “Cold
War” period in US-Soviet relations, that military personnel held the victory as
a great symbol of pride to them.
Historically,
it was the US Olympic men’s basketball team’s sixth straight Olympic gold
medal, and their 46th straight win.
Caldwell
would be drafted by the Detroit Pistons in 1964 after he brought the gold home
from Tokyo. He would later play for the St. Louis/Atlanta Hawks, and then make
history by being one of the first NBA players to leave to play for the
fledgling ABA, signing one of the first big contracts ever in 1970 with the
Carolina Cougars, which played in Raleigh, Greensboro and Charlotte. Caldwell
and his family lived in Greensboro from 1970 -74.
It
was only after the Cougars moved to St. Louis, and changed it name, was
Caldwell “indefinitely” suspended in a contract dispute that ultimately forced
him out of the game that he loved.
But
despite all of the hardship of his professional basketball days, the
heartwarming glory of Caldwell’s Olympic gold medal days are what still put a
bright, prideful smile on his face.
Sometimes
he’ll just take the mark of singular history, put it around his neck, and visit
a restaurant or Sun Devils game. People immediately recognize their native son,
and greet Caldwell with hearty handshakes, and heartfelt hugs.
Pogo
Joe’s triumphant college basketball career made him a living legend in Arizona.
But
his Olympic gold medal made the living legend a champion of history, something
Caldwell says he’ll cherish the rest of his life.
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VOTERS ENCOURAGED TO CHECK STATUS NOW
By Cash Michaels
Editor
As
of July 25, 2012, there were 6,306,529 registered voters in North Carolina,
according to the state Board of Elections.
But
will all of them be allowed to cast an unfettered ballot in the Nov. 6th
presidential election?
Not
if they aren’t properly registered in the correct precinct. And that’s why
voting officials and civil rights activists are urging registered voters to
double-check now, long before the November elections, to make sure that with
the new redistricting maps went into effect this year, you are still residing
in the same voting district, and are still assigned to the same voting precinct
you voted in since the 2008 elections if you haven’t moved.
The
new maps split districts and precincts, something many voters didn’t realize
when they voted in the May primaries. In many cases, people were sent to their
proper new voting precincts. But in situations where voting officials weren’t
sure, voters were required to cast provisional ballots, which were kept
separate from all other ballots.
Those
provisional ballots were checked later, and validated only if the elections
board could confirm the voter’s status for that district.
That
means not all of those provisional ballots cast were validated.
Checking
your status now is key, observers say, because if you don’t live in the same
voting district or precinct as you did even six months ago, you could have a
problem come Election Day.
There
currently is no photo voter identification required in North Carolina, but that
doesn’t mean voters won’t face hurdles if their registration isn’t in order.
According
to the NC Board of Elections, to be registered to vote in North Carolina, a
person:
- Must be a U.S. citizen.
- Must be a resident of North Carolina.
- Prior to voting, must be a resident of the county for at least 30 days
prior to Election Day.
- Must be at least 18 years old or will be 18 by the date of the
next general election.
- Must rescind any
previous registration in another county or state.
- If previously convicted of a felony, the person’s citizenship rights
must be restored (must not be serving an active sentence, including probation
or parole).
The
deadline to be properly registered to vote in your county of residence is 25
days before Election Day.
While
there are a variety of places where one can properly register (public
libraries, county NC Dept. of Motor Vehicle offices, disability services agencies,
public assistance agencies, etc.), checking one’s voter registration occurs
only at your county Board of Elections office, or online per the NC Board of
Elections website at https://www.ncsbe.gov/VoterLookup.aspx.
Online,
the NC Board of Elections page is titled, “Voter Lookup,” and it allows you to
get your most recent voter information after entering your first and last name,
your birth date and county of residence.
You
can also check the status of your absentee ballot if you submitted one, or your
provisional ballot if you cast one at the polls on Election Day.
If
you have indeed recently moved out of the county or voting district you once
resided in, or intend to be living elsewhere in North Carolina 25 days prior to
the November 6th elections, then you must change your voter
registration status by signed written notice to your county Board of Elections.
Read more about this at http://www.ncsbe.gov/content.aspx?id=24.
For
more information, call the NC Board of Elections at 919-733-7173
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20TH CENTURY CIVIL RIGHTS LEADERS
TO MEET IN GREENSBORO
Special to The Carolinian
[Editor's note - The Carolinian will be exclusively covering this historic three-day summit of top 20th century civil rights leaders. Look for our reports next week]
From July 29 through August
1, 2012 approximately 30 leaders of the defining justice movements of the 20th
century will gather in Greensboro, North Carolina, to lay the groundwork for
the creation of a National Council of Elders. These Elders from 20th
century justice movements will review the critical moral and spiritual issues
confronting the nation with the express purpose of sharing their experience and
expertise with leaders of 21st century justice movements.
“This is an historic
occasion,” says Dr. Zoharah Simmons, a member of the Elder’s Organizing
Committee, “and it is happening in an historic place. For the first time in our
nation’s history, leaders of justice movements from the past century are
organizing to bring our collective wisdom and experience to bear on the crises
confronting our nation and to offer our support to those who are leading the
justice movements of the present century.”
For the Elders, Greensboro
represents “a sacred space” in the history of the Civil Rights movement. During
their meeting they will gather for a moment of silence at the memorial to the
four young African Americans who refused to give up their “whites only” seats
at a Woolworth lunch counter in 1960. Their action quickly captured the
imaginations of thousands of black and white Americans and the “sit in”
movement they launched that day led to the desegregation of the entire
Woolworth chain and over time to the 1964 Civil Rights Legislation that banned
all forms of racial segregation in this nation.
It is very clear that the 20th century leaders who are gathering in Greensboro
have a combination of wisdom and experience that will be useful to 21st century
activists. They are veteran leaders of the justice movements that shaped their
century: Civil Rights, Women’s, Peace, Nuclear Disarmament, Environmental, Gay
and Lesbian, Immigrant Justice, Native American Rights, labor rights and other
nation changing movements of the last 60 years.
Those who have already
accepted the invitation to join the Council of Elders include and are attending
the gathering in Greensboro:
Rev.
Charles and Shirley Sherrod, prominent civil rights and land
collective activists, leaders of SNCC, Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee, and co-founders of New Communities, a collective farm in
Southwest Georgia. Danny Glover, actor, film director, a civil rights
leader and political activist, an outspoken critic of the Iraq war and the Bush
administration, active supporter of various humanitarian and political causes. Fr.
Louis Vitale, a Franciscan priest,
co-founder of Nevada Desert Experience, and lifelong civil rights activist who
has engaged in civil disobedience for nearly four decades in pursuit of peace
and justice. Dorothy Cotton, civil
rights activist, a leader of the SCLC, Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, who created citizenship classes throughout the south, an organizer
of the 1963 Birmingham Movement and Children’s Crusade. Gloria House, professor, poet, human rights activist, a SNCC field
secretary in Lowndes County, Ala., a leader in African American community
development and Third World solidarity causes. Chokwe Lumumba, activist, organizer, human rights advocate, city
councilman, Jackson, MS, an attorney who represented poor people and political
activists, defended individuals and groups whose human rights have been
violated, opposed the death penalty and represented individuals sentenced to
death. Gus Newport, former Mayor
of Berkeley, CA., co-chair of the U.S. Peace Council, a grassroots community organizer focused on peace and
justice issues, public policy, leadership development transforming devastated
neighborhoods in Boston and New Orleans. Ron Scott, a social justice activist in Detroit, host American
Black Journal, a member of Michigan’s Democratic State Central Committee and
the Coalition Against Police Brutality and Peace Zones for Life. Suzanne Pharr, organizer,
political strategist, founded
Women’s Project in Arkansas, 1981, a co-founder of Southerners on New Ground,
1984, director of the Highlander Center
1999-2004, and author of Homophobia: A Weapon of Sexism, and In the Time of the Right: Reflections on
Liberation.
DYNASTY WINTERS
RALEIGH TEEN TO MEET PRESIDENT OBAMA
This Friday Raleigh teen Dynasty Winters will get the opportunity to meet President Barack Obama in Washington, DC as part of weeklong activities with American Legion’s Girls Nation. Ms. Winters and Devin Burch, both rising seniors at Southeast Raleigh High School, graduated from the American Legion Auxiliary Tar Heel Girls State Program at closing exercises held Saturday, June 16, 2012, at Catawba College in Salisbury, NC. The American Legion Auxiliary Unit 157 and Charles T. Norwood American Legion Post 157, both of Raleigh, co-sponsored the girls to attend.
The Girls State Program is a highly acclaimed youth leadership development program conducted every summer in every state across the nation for young women who have exemplified outstanding character traits and scholastic ability. The two top performers from each state’s program are selected to participate in the Girls Nation Program held later in the summer in Washington, DC. Ms. Winters was one of the top two performers at this year’s Tar Heel Girls State event and traveled to Washington as a ”Senator” representing North Carolina.
While in the nation’s capital she will participate in a weeklong immersive, and highly valued learning experience. Activities will include running for office, electing a mock U.S. Girls Nation President, campaigning for the passage of mock legislation, and meeting with several of our national government leaders. The highlight of the week includes a visit to the White House, where, traditionally, the young ladies visit with the President of the United States.
According to the American Legion’s published information, American Legion Boys State and American Legion Auxiliary Girls State are the premier programs for teaching how government works while developing leadership skills & an appreciation for your rights as a citizen.
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By Cash Michaels
THE
SUMMER OLYMPICS ARE HERE - From now until August 12th, all of the
pomp, ceremony and excitement of the 2012 Summer Olympics will unfold on our TV screens from London. We wish
out American teams all the best, and hope that they bring back the gold. We
could all use the uplift.
And
please US Men’s Olympic Basketball team,
behave yourselves! Your representing your country, now!
GOODBYE, SHERMAN - Must acknowledge the passing this week of one of the great comic talents ever, Sherman Hemsley, known best as black businessman "George Jefferson" in the CBS '70 sitcom, "The Jeffersons," which was originally a spinoff of the classic hit, "All in the Family." Hemsley later went on to star in the NBC sitcom, "Amen." as Deacon Frye.
Hemsley was 74 when he was found dead in his El Paso, Texas home this week. Interestingly, Hemsley had no wife and no kids.
GOODBYE, SHERMAN - Must acknowledge the passing this week of one of the great comic talents ever, Sherman Hemsley, known best as black businessman "George Jefferson" in the CBS '70 sitcom, "The Jeffersons," which was originally a spinoff of the classic hit, "All in the Family." Hemsley later went on to star in the NBC sitcom, "Amen." as Deacon Frye.
Hemsley was 74 when he was found dead in his El Paso, Texas home this week. Interestingly, Hemsley had no wife and no kids.
A SICK NATION - Once again vicious
gunfire has rung out, and high numbers of innocent people have been killed and
wounded. It is more than sad, and beyond sickening what happened in Aurora,
Colorado last week.
But
what is even sadder is our nation’s reluctance to deal conclusively with the
ready availability of guns, assault weapons and ammunition.
In
the African-American community, we know this first-hand, given the numerous
shooting deaths in our impoverished inner cities nationwide, especially in
major urban centers like New York, Philadelphia, and of course, Chicago.
To
be blunt, the blood of all of this gun violence is on all of our hands.
Gun
advocates are working hard to make sure that this debate goes nowhere. Since
the Aurora shootings, they’ve been trying hard to make the issue mental health,
instead of the ready availability of semi-automatic weapons with magazines of
100 rounds of firepower (which can be readily procured on the internet with no
background check).
The
issue isn’t mental health. People arming themselves to the teeth for some war
they can’t wait to fight on the homeland…now THAT’S crazy!
People
stocking up on AK-47s to enforce their drug territory, that’s insane.
And
folks rushing out to buy a gun and ammo right after Barack Obama is elected the first black president of the United
States…now THAT’s racist!
Let’s
face it, this country functions on a culture of guns and money. We love our
weapons, and the freedom to use them. Somehow, the power to take a life, and
hide behind the excuse of “self-defense,” just makes some of us feel all gooey
inside.
Don’t
believe me? Just ask George Zimmerman, Lee
Harvey Oswald and now, of course, James
Holmes.
Guns
and money represent power in our land, the kind of power many of believe GOD
entitled us to as American citizens.
Of
course that’s bull, but many of us believe it, and could probably miscontrue a
Bible verse or two to back it up.
The
fact of the matter is a good deal of our gun culture is based on race.
Trust
me, a lot of the folks who push hard NOT to restrict firearms are not worried
about shooting each other.
No,
they want to protect themselves from “them,” whoever “them” happens to be in
their town, state or region.
And
as long as “them” is perceived to be a viable threat, these Second Amendment
folks will insist that they have a right to their guns.
Even
when a six-year-old child is murdered in cold blood at a movie theater in
Aurora, Col.
Even
when a six-year-old girl is murdered after visiting her congesswoman in an
Arizona shopping center.
And
even when a 4-year-old little girl is killed by a driveby stray bullet that
pierced the walls of her home here in Durham.
Yes,
ours is a sick nation. Even after this tragedy in Colorado, we apparently aren’t
outraged enough to demand the gun laws be toughened.
Perhaps,
if all of a sudden, the sons and daughters of powerful people start killing
each other with automatic weapons, then we’ll see some change.
But
until then…the blood of all of these shootings will always be on all of our
hands.
THE
“O” STRATEGY - It’s uncanny. President Barack Obama is a better
president when he’s a candidate, than when he’s a president.
Without
a campaign, Barack Obama is nice, wholesome, willing to work with everyone, and
take a lot of unnecessary gruff from anyone, just to show that he’s here for
all of America.
But
with a campaign, Barack Obama is a shrew, coldblooded competitor who gives as
good as he gets when it comes to hardball politics. I think Hillary Clinton can
testify to that, and I know Willard Mitt Romney is still smarting from his
whole Bain Capital/I-want-to-keep-my-taxes-a-secret episode.
It’s
no secret which one is my favorite.
Don’t
get me wrong…the fact that this president looks for opportunities to bring
people together for a common cause is a good thing. My problem has been - it’s
been proven - that when people aren’t really interested in working together,
and actually tell you that to your face (or at least tell the rest of the world
via a press conference), then take that message, and move forward without them
with all deliberate speed.
That’s
the beauty of watching Obama in campaign mode. There’s no room for Republicans
in that setting. The objective is to win, because you know you can do a better
job for the people of this nation.
And
the more junk they talk about you and your policies, the more you make them pay
when election time comes.
So
couple Barack Obama’s drive with the extraordinary brain trust he has around
him, and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has his hands full for sure, as proven by his
lackluster response to the president’s aggressive campaign of defining him as a rich guy who is
spectacularly out of touch with the America people.
The
“O” strategy is to put Romney in a box so that no matter which direction he
tries to go, he runs smack into a question about his past and ethics.
And
what helps the “O” strategy along is that Romney’s Republican base is really
not all that enthused with the former Massachusetts governor, thanks to his
moderate-to-liberal past. So when they do defend Mitt for some of the stupid
stuff from his past, they sound awfully half-hearted.
Indeed,
the only reason why they defend Romney at all, besides how bad it looks if they
didn’t, is that Republican Party hates Barack Obama so, so much, and want him
out of the White House so, so bad.
No
question that hate is such a powerful emotion, it can make things happen. But
hate also makes you make mistakes because you can’t see the forest for the
trees.
The
Obama campaign hopes to capitalize on those mistakes. Keep in mind that they’ve
proven that they are more than capable of doing exactly that, giving the
president the opportunity to eek out a slim victory this November.
We’ll see.
SUPPORT THE W-10 PARDON
PROJECT - Support is slowly but surely building for the Wilmington Ten Pardons
of Innocence Project from not only across the nation, but around the world.
For the record, I am the
coordinator for the project, which is sponsored by the National Newspaper
Publishers Association of Washington, D.C. Support is building, and more people
are signing on, asking Gov. Beverly Perdue to declare all ten of the Wilmington Ten actually innocent of the charges they were falsely
convicted of forty years ago.
One of the things we’re
working on is our online presence. The first is on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/TheWilmingtonTenPardonOfInnocenceProject. There you get history, pictures, videos, comments and
links connecting you further to the Wilmington Ten case.
Then there is the online
petition that was setup by Susie Kenney Edwards of Cary for the cause. It
allows you to add your name to others, urging Gov. Beverly Perdue to “pardon
the Wilmington Ten” - https://www.change.org/petitions/nc-governor-bev-perdue-pardon-the-wilmington-10.
Thus far, we have 445 signatures. We are working towards
100,000, if not more.
Please visit these sites,
join the team, and let’s all stand for justice. Forty years is too long for
injustice to reign.
Make
sure you tune in every Thursday afternoon at 4 p.m. for my talk radio show,
''Make It Happen'' on Power 750 WAUG-AM, or online at www.myWAUG.com. And read more about my thoughts and opinions
exclusively at my new blog, ‘The Cash Roc” (http://thecashroc.blogspot.com/2011/01/cash-roc-begins.html). I promise it will be interesting.
Cash in the Apple -
honored as the Best Column Writing of 2006 by the National Newspaper Publishers
Association. Columnist Cash Michaels was also honored by the NNPA for Best
Feature Story Journalist of 2009, and was the recipient of the Raleigh-Apex
NAACP’s President’s Award for Media Excellence in Sept. 2011.
Until next week, keep a
smile on your face, GOD in your heart, and The Carolinian in your life. Bye,
bye.
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By George E. Curry
NNPA Editor-in-Chief
WASHINGTON (NNPA) – If Black voter turnout reverts to the level it was before Barack Obama was elected president of the United States in 2008, the nation’s first Black president will have a difficult time winning a second term in the White House, concludes a National Urban League report released Monday.
The report, “The Hidden Swing Voters: Impact of African-Americans in 2012,” was written by Madura Wijewarden and Valerie Wilson of the National Urban League Policy Institute based in Washington.
The report observed, “In 2012, if the African-American voter turnout rate in every state declines to 60%, which was the national voter turnout rate for African-Americans in 2004, then we estimate:
- “President Barack Obama will not win North Carolina – a decline in African-American turnout will lead to a loss of 63,706 votes which is 4.5 times the 2008 margin of victory.
- “President Barack Obama will have difficulty winning Ohio and Virginia – lower African-American turnout will lead to a loss of almost a quarter of the margin of victory in 2008.”
“Some 2.4 million more African-Americans voted in 2008 compared to 2004,” the National urban League Report found. “This was a 16% increase in African-Americans who voted to bring the total to 16.67 million voters.”
And that increase was reflected across various age groups.
“African-Americans between 18 to 44 years old had higher turnout rates than their white (non-Hispanic) counterparts – 6 points higher for 18 to 25 year olds and 1.9 points higher for 26 to 44 year olds,” the report stated. “This was the first time any race/ethnic group had surpassed the white (non-Hispanic) turnout.”
In addition, the report found: “The number of African-Americans who voted grew by 16.4% between 2004 and 2008 – this was an additional 2.4 million African-American voters. This was 2.11 times the rate of growth in the African-American citizen, over 18 years population.”
African-Americans clearly made a difference in North Carolina, Virginia, Indiana and Florida.
“The 2008 victory by then-Senator Barack Obama in North Carolina was primarily due to the growth in African-American voters in that state,” the report said. “The number of additional African-Americans who voted in North Carolina in 2008 compared to 2004 was nearly nine times the margin of victory in North Carolina – an additional 127,000 African-Americans voted and the margin of victory was 14,177.”
The National Urban League study estimated that if John McCain had received an additional 2 points in support from African-Americans in North Carolina, he would have defeated Obama, a lesson that is apparently not lost on Mitt Romney, who has begun courting the African-American vote.
Growth in the Black vote between 2004 and 2008 in Virginia was nearly equal to Obama’s margin of victory there in 2008. And in Indiana and Florida, African-American growth over that same period represented nearly 80 percent of the margin of victory in those states in 2008, according to the report.
The progress of 2008 could be undermined if efforts to dilute the Black vote are successful, the report said.
“Efforts by several states to introduce voter identification requirements and limitations on early and postal voting are casting doubts on whether the diverse electorate of 2008 will be maintained, let alone expanded,” it stated. “The stability and legitimacy of the republican form of government depends more on achieving that expansion of the electoral franchise than anything else. This makes 2012 a crucial election.”
Even though phenomenal growth has been achieved in Black voter turnout, voter registration has not kept pace with that progress.
The 69.7 percent Black voter registration rate in 2008 was 3.8 percent lower than the rate for Whites. But the turnout rate for African-Americans was only 1.4 points lower than Whites. If the Black registration rate of 69.7 percent in 2008 can be increased to 78.3 percent –the same rate as for African-Americans in Maryland – and the turnout remains the same as it was in 2008, an additional 3 million African-American voters can be gained this year, according to projections in the National Urban League report.
Getting Blacks registered is half the battle because once they sign up, they are more likely to vote (92.8 percent) than Whites (90 percent) or Latinos (84 percent).
Like Bill Clinton before him, Obama became president without winning a majority of the White vote. CNN exit polls in 2008 showed Republican candidate John McCain holding a 54 percent to 45 percent edge over then-Senator Obama among White voters.
The November presidential election will pit Barack Obama, the nation’s first African-American president, against Mitt Romney, the first Mormon to win the nomination of a major party for president.
The Urban League report observed, “This expansion of access to the highest office in the land to different racial, ethnic and religious minorities through leadership of both political parties is a cause for celebration.”
For Blacks to celebrate again, however, they will have to match or exceed the enthusiasm generated in 2008 by the election of the nation’s first African-American president.
As the report reminded readers, “This was perhaps the first time in the history of the world that a people had popularly elected a member of a racial minority as their head of state with executive authority.”
###
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REP. WILLIAM WAINWRIGHT, 64, DIES
The deputy Democratic minority leader of the NC House, state Representative William Wainwright, died Tuesday evening after a long illness.
He was 64.
Published reports indicate that Wainwright had been suffering from an illness for the past year. Recently, Wainwright has to be admitted to hospice care.
Wainwright, who served 11 terms in the NC House and formerly served as House speaker pro tem, represented the 12th District of Craven and Lenoir counties. He lived in Havelock, and was a minister. Wainwright was funeralized and buried last Saturday, with bGov. Beverly Perdue, and colleagues from the NC General Assembly, in attendance.
House Democratic Minority Leader Joe Hackney said, "William Wainwright conducted his business at the General Assembly with as much passion as anyone I encountered during my time in office. He was a talented negotiator motivated only by what was best for the people of his district. He was speaker pro tem during my four years as speaker and deputy minority leader for our caucus for the past two years, but we have been friends for much longer. I will miss him.”
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THE WILMINGTON TEN: LOSS AND STRUGGLE PART 2
By Cash Michaels
editor
Editor’s
note - There is no
question that the false prosecution forty years of the nine young black men and
one white woman who would become widely known as the “Wilmington Ten,” dramatically
impacted their lives, as well as those of their families and loved ones.
Most
of the defendants were young, some barely in their twenties, when they were
convicted in 1972 of crimes they didn’t commit.
In all, the lives of the Wilmington Ten have been marked
by struggle, hardship and indignities they otherwise would not have experienced
if the state of North Carolina, forty years ago, had not sought to punish them
for their political activism, and willingness to demand social change. Three have
since died.
Today, forty years later, the
Wilmington Ten and their families seek individual pardons of innocence from the
State of North Carolina for crimes they didn’t commit. But even pardons cannot
erase the pain and struggle they’ve all endured.
In part 2 of this three-part
series, we look at the lives of Connie Tindall, Marvin Patrick, and James “Bun”
McKoy.
CONNIE TINDALL
Young Connie Tindall was an
all-star high school football champion in Wilmington who dreamed of growing up
to play Sunday afternoons in the NFL one day. At age 20, Tindall had the skill,
the talent and the ambition. All he needed was the chance to prove himself.
But the Wilmington Ten episode
changed all of that.
Tindall, whose father was a
longshoreman, was looking for work while still attending school. The unjust way
he saw black students being treated in the New Hanover county Public School
System after it closed all-black Williston High in 1968, compelled Tindall to
get involved with the movement for educational equality 1971.
It wasn’t long before Connie became
a fiery spokesman for the black student cause headquartered at Gregory
Congregational United Church of Christ, located in Wilmington’s black
community.
Tindall shaped the black student
message, and became their face in the media. Even after UCC Rev. Benjamin
Chavis took over leadership in February 1971, Tindall continued to help lead
and speak out amid the building racial tensions that saw violence in the
streets, and police reluctance to do anything about it.
Apparently the authorities made
note of Tindall, however, because a year after the firebombing of Mike’s
Grocery near Gregory Church, Tindall was yanked out of bed late at night in his
parents’ home, arrested and charged with conspiracy in connection with the grocery
store incident.
“We have a warrant for your son’s
arrest,” Tindall recalls the police telling his shocked parents, remembering
how they had the house surrounded.
The young man was taken from the
house to the street, and handcuffed, as his bewildered parents watch.
Tindall knew the arrest and charges
were bogus, because on the night of the fire, he was across town in a club
called the Ponderosa, celebrating his birthday with several friends.
Tindall admits that before the
Wilmington Ten episode, he had a “few scraps” with the law - things that
teenagers normally got in trouble for. But nothing of the magnitude of what he
was being charged with now - conspiracy in connection with the firebombing and
the sniper fire aimed at firefighters.
When the first trial in June 1972
was cut short and declared a mistrial, Tindall says there was no question in
his mind that he and the other members of the Wilmington Ten would be hung out
to dry. There were ten blacks and two whites on the first jury. When the case
began again on Sept. 11, 1972, the new jury was now ten whites and two blacks.
Tindall said the prosecutor, Jay
Stroud, was “deranged,” especially in how he “wined and dined” witnesses like
Allen Hall to lie on the stand.
Tindall’s family attended the
trial, distraught at what they were seeing. But they also supportive of their
son, telling him, “We believe in you.”
Tindall was convicted and sentenced
to 31 years in prison.
It hit him and his family hard, he
says, but they remained supportive during his incarceration.
“Prison was just another way of
life,” he recalls. “Same things went on in the streets, went on there.”
Tindall kept the faith that even if
it took ten or twenty years, the truth would come out. He said that the whole
ordeal was meant to destroy him, but he refused to allow that to happen, and
held his head up high.
His family came to see him often in
prison, and encouraged Tindall to stay strong.
When Tindall finally left prison on
early release after almost five years, his return to Wilmington was met with no
job (or least no job he could keep past one week).
Fortunately, because Tindall’s
father is a longshoreman, he’s able to work with him.
But beyond that, some people in the
community continued to shun Tindall, black people, and he admits that it hurt.
It took several years before living in Wilmington became “bearable,” primarily
because many believed that he was guilty.
Tindall’s future prospects for
personal success were dim as long as he stayed in Wilmington. He says had the
Wilmington Ten never happened, he “would have been a beast” as an NFL defensive
back.
Tindall refused to leave
Wilmington, despite the difficulty and heartache, because the port city was his
home.
In recent years, Tindall has faced
health challenges, but he continues to strive toward the day that Gov. Perdue
declares he and the other nine members of the Wilmington Ten receive pardons of
actual innocence.
Tindall still harbors some anger
for how his life was ruined, how his dreams were destroyed, all because of a
false persecution, and prosecution by the state of North Carolina.
“If you want to do something for
me, then pay me for those 4 ½ to five years I sat up in that penitentiary for
nothing,” he demands. “Vindicate me.”
Tindall concluded by asking, “Why
us?”
MARVIN
PATRICK
At 60 years of age, Marvin Patrick
has suffered a stroke and struggles to get around on a cane.
Looking back over the past 40
years, Patrick says being arrested as part of the Wilmington Ten lost him the
opportunity of being unionized with the longshoremen, like his father. At the age of 20, Patrick had already
worked on the docks, and even served a short stint in the US Army.
In 1971, Patrick got involved in
the black student movement at Gregory Church because he deeply believed in a
quality education, and that included African-Americans learning about their
history and culture. That was being taken away from them, and Rev. Ben Chavis,
who Patrick was close with, was leading them in a constructive, yet defiant
manner, to get the gains that they lost, back in the aftermath of the closing
of Williston High School.
In an ironic twist a year after the
firebombing of Mike’s Grocery, word gets out that the authorities are arresting
various students who were at Gregory Church. Rev. Ben Chavis, the movement
leader, has also been arrested, and is being held. When Patrick goes down to
see his friend, he is arrested too, and charged with conspiracy.
When the trials came, Patrick
didn’t want his mother to attend. He knew how heavy a burden the whole ordeal
had been for her and his father, and he wanted to spare them as much as
possible. “I didn’t want to put no pressure on her,” he says. “She knew in her
heart that her son was innocent.
Patrick was convicted along with
the rest of the Wilmington Ten at age 21, and sentenced to prison for 29 years.
He credits the Lord with helping him to survive Odom Farms Prison in
Northhampton County. The fact that several of the ten were sent to prison
together meant they were able to be supportive of one another.
Because of the distance from
Wilmington, the visits from family were fewer than Patrick had hoped for, but
when they did come, they lifted his spirits.
Thanks to the case beginning to
fall apart in the mid-1970’s, Patrick leaves prison early, and comes back to
Wilmington. But when he did, “even black folks acted funny.”
Patrick’s association with the
Wilmington Ten makes keeping a job difficult. After a while, he’s forced to lie to get, and keep a job.
He’s treated badly even in church,
where members believe that the Wilmington Ten were guilty.
Through the years, Patrick worked
as long as he could, until he had a stroke over a year ago.
As for what he would say to the
governor regarding why he feels that he is deserving of a pardon of innocence,”
Patrick said, “Ma’am, my name is Marvin Patrick, and I plead innocent to these
charges.”
JAMES
“BUN” MCKOY
What has happened to his life
because of the Wilmington Ten episode brings tears to the eyes of James “Bun”
McKoy, age 59.
At 18, McKoy played bass guitar in
bands, particularly on Carolina Beach, where he played with whites at supper
clubs. He wanted to play professionally. “I just wanted to be the entertainer.”
The youngest of four, McKoy graduated from Hoggard High School in 1971, amid
the strife and black student protests.
McKoy joined the protests, but
says, unlike many of the others, he “didn’t think much” of their new leader,
Rev. Ben Chavis, primarily because music, not activism, was his preoccupation.
So in 1972 when young McKoy was
arrested and charged with conspiracy in connection with the Mike’s Grocery
bombing, McKoy couldn't fathom why, or how. He and Willie Earl Vereen, a fellow musician, were playing a gig together out of town the night that Mike's Grocery burned.
That means they had plenty of witnesses. But it didn't matter.
That means they had plenty of witnesses. But it didn't matter.
Police arrested McKoy at home at
2:30 in the morning, while his stunned mother watched helplessly. McKoy figured
the only reason why he was being arrested is because he lived in the
neighborhood of Gregory Church.
As the case headed to trial,
McKoy’s parents urged him to “Hang in there,” telling the young man to stay
strong despite what was very much looking like a stacked deck by prosecutors.
“Why they picked us out is the
question,” McKoy says.
He knew the trial would be a farce
given what happened during the preliminary hearing when the state’s star
witness, Allen Hall, angrily jump off the stand at defense attorney James
Ferguson.
McKoy’s family attended the trial, praying
and hoping that the jury will see through the prosecutor’s tricks. But in the
end, McKoy and the others are convicted.
McKoy was sentenced to 29 years.
He was sent to Odom prison, but
knowing that his parents and siblings were praying for him, and with him in
spirit, helped McKoy cope.
“One thing [my mother] would say
is, “We’re still with you,” he recalls.
McKoy also copes by playing his
music, and cutting up. Since several of the other W-Ten defendants were sent to
the same prison, they all stick together.
The family comes the long way to
visit when they can.
McKoy says though he held out hope
that the truth would eventually come out, he is angered by the North Carolina
Appellate Courts, which voted to uphold the Wilmington Ten’s convictions.
He feels that the rulings by the NC
courts were to, “satisfy some people.” McKoy has more appreciation for the US
Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, which ultimately overturned the Ten’s
convictions.
After McKoy left prison on early
release, he didn‘t have too many problems fining work when it came to music. In
the interceding years, McKoy has sustained two strokes.
So why does James McKoy believe
that he deserves a pardon of innocence from Gov. Perdue? “Because I’m
innocent,” he says. “Now read the record!”
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