Newspaper Page Text
Howard Baker, Andy Young,
Joseph Lowery Highlights
King Birthday Celebration
Page 1
Aityiwta Nruni-ißrttr .
Volume 10
Carrie Mays Among Electors
Making Reagan Victory Official
WASHINGTON-
Maryland Gov. Harry
Huges jokingly called it
a “landslide” because
all 10 of the state’s
presidential electors
officially cast their
ballots for President
Carter. But in most
other states, it was
overwhelmingly
Ronald Reagan’s Show.
Reagan’s election to
the presidency was
confirmed Monday by
the Electoral College in
50 states, under a con
stitutional process that
many believe should be
abolished.
As predetermined by
the results of the election
Nov. 4, Reagan and
George Bush defeated
Carter and Vice Pr
esident Walter Mondale.
Reagan carried 44 states
with 489 electoral votes,
and Carter carried six
states and the District of
Columbia with 49
electoral votes.
The formal count will
not be confirmed until
the ballots of the
Electoral College are
counted Jan. 6 in a joint
session of Congress held
in the House of
Representatives.
Monday’s meetings
apparently produced no
“faithless” electors -
those pledged to one
candidate, but who vote
for another.
Georgia’s 12
presidential electors
officially cast their
ballots Monday for
Senator Baker, Young, and Lowery
Highlight King Birthday Celebration
ATLANTA - U.S.
Senate Majority Leader-
Elect Howard Baker will
join former United
Nations Ambassador
Andrew Young, S.C. L.C.
President Joseph
Lowery, Secretary of
Labor Ray Marshall,
opera and concert star
Leontyne Price and
scores of public figures
during a five-day ob
servance of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.’s 52nd
birthday anniversary, it
was announced today by
Mrs. Coretta Scott King.
“With all of the
recent activity in behalf
of a Jan 15 holiday it is
appropriate that we will
have with us one of the
strongest and most
influential supporters of
the King holiday
legislation, Sen. Howard
Balker,” said Mrs. King,
president of the Martin
Luther King Jr. Center
for Social Change.
“Senator Baker
brings a long and
distinguished career in
public service to our
January program. As
the leader of his party in
the United States
|
■Bk
M rs. Carrie J. M ays
native son Carter, but
not all of them were
happy about their role in
formalizing Carter’s
defeat.
“I wish the cir
cumstances had been
different,” said elector
Coretta Scott King.
The electors
gathered at noon in Gov.
George Busbee’s office
to cast the votes com
mitted to Carter as
winner of the state’s
popular vote Nov 4.
King arrived 10
minutes later and
almost missed the
chance to cast her first
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MAY IT BE YOUR BEST EVER!
stands on a number of
issues have earned him
the respect of people of
good will across the
political spectrum.” The
Tennessee senator, who
will become Senate
Majority Leader on Jan.
5, is scheduled fto ad
dress the Community
Kick-off Rally at 7 on
Jan. 12 at Ebenezer
Baptist Church.
In addition to Senator
Baker and Ambassador
Young, Dr. Jospeh
Lowery. President of the
Southern Christian
Leadership Conference,
will deliver a major
speech during the King
birthday celebration.
Dr. Lowery will give the
principal address at The
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Nonviolent Peace Prize
Award Ceremony at 11
a.m., Jan. 14 at
Ebenezer Baptist
Church. The Southern
Christian Leadership
Conference and The
King Center will co
sponsor the “Tribute tu
King” rally and mass
march on January 15th
and the Ministers’
Seminar on January
Governor Appoints Black
Judge in Columbus
Page 1
December 27, 1980
ballot as an elector. The
remaining 11 electors
were in the process of
selecting an alternate to
cast her vote when she
arrived.
Other electors were
state Democratic Party
Chairwom-an Marge
Thurman, Phyllis
Jenkins Barrow, Maxine
S. Goldstein, Herb
Mabry, Carrie J. Mays,
Eileen O’Brien, Calvin
Smyre, Horace Tate,
W.D. Trippe, and Robert
Walling.
Elsewhere, the
meetings of the Elec
toral College, held in
statehouses across the
nation, were marked by
patriotic speeches and
joviality:
.That’s what you call
a landslide,” Hughest
said after all 10 of
Maryland’s electors
voted for Carter.
. Journalists out
numbered Vermont’s
electors by a 3-1 margin.
Vermont has only three
electoral votes.
Other public figures
confirmed to participate
in the King birthday
celebration include:
Atlanta Mayor Maynard
Jackson; Mrs. Coretta
Scott King. President of
the King Center; Dr.
Martin Luther King Sr.,;
Bishop Fredrick Hilburn
Talbot, Prelate of the
Sixth Episcopal District,
A.M.E. (Georgia); Dr.
William Howard,
presidentfof the
National Council of
Churches; The Rev.
Kelly Miller Smith,
president of the National
Council of Black
Churchmen: Rabbi
Donald Tam, Temple
Emanu-El; The Rev.
Otis Moss, pastor of
Mount Olivet
Institutional Baptist
Church, Cleveland,
Ohio; Ms. Addie Wyatt,
international vice
president of the United
Food and Commerical
Workers, AFL-CIO;
Mindell DeWindt. Board
Chairman of the Eaton
Corporation; and Dr.
Lerone Bennett senior
editor, Johnson
i -Life & '
; 111 «
Former Augustan Chairs’
National Association
James H. Norman,
director of the Michigan
Department of Labor’s
Bureau of Community
Services, was recently
elected chairperson of
the National Association
of State Economic
Opportunity Office
(SEOO) Directors.
Norman, a native of
Augusta, and son of Mrs.
Janie Norman, 1444
Forest St., graduated
from Lucy C. Laney
High School.
Each state,
organized territory or
commonwealth having
an SEOO can be
members of the
association. The group
has 53 members in
cluding Puerto Rico, the
Virgin Island and the
U.S. Trust Territories.
The Association is
advocate for state and
national legislation
dealing with issues
important to low-income
citizens. As bureau head
Norman directs
statewide programs
involving
I f /
'3S <; -■ . ■'
t ~ t -- „
New Georgia Judge
State Rep. Albert
Thompson of Columbus
was appointed Superior
Court judge by Gov.
George Busbee Friday.
Number of Black Elected
Officials Increase to 6.6%
Page 1
Number 32
watherization, em
ployment, aging, youth,
child development,
nutrition and housing.
Prior to becoming
director of the bureau,
Norman worked at a
local community action
agency. There he was
instrumental in ex
panding the senior
citizen nutrition
program and the dial-a
ride program.
He previously was a
parent consultant with
the Kalamazoo Public
Schools and a job
development coor
dinator with the
Douglass Community
Association in
Kalamazoo.
He is a graduate of
Mercer University, and
has a masters of social
work from Western
Michigan University.
He was formerly
chairperson of the
SEOO’s Region which
includes Michigan, Ohio,
Wisconsin, Illinois.
Indiana and Minnesota.
Columbus attorney will
take over the judgeship of
Oscar D. Smith who is
retiring. Thompson has
been a Georgia legislator
Less than /
Number ot Black Elected
Officials Increases 6.6%
WASHINGTON, D.C.
- The number of black
elected officials in the
United States increased
by 6.6. percent between
July 1979 and July 1980,
according to a survey
conducted by the Joint
Center for Political
Studies.
This is the largest
annual percentage in
crease since 1977 when
there was an 8 percent
rise in the number of
black elected officials.
The increase dropped to
4 percent in 1978 and to 2
percent last year.
The 1980 edition of the
Joint Center’s annual
National Roster of Black
Elected Officials lists
4,912 officials in 44
states, the District of
Columbia, and the
Virgin Islands. This
represents a net in
crease of 305 officials
over the 4,607 officials
identified in the 1978-79
Roster. Black officials
elected after July 1980
are not included in this
edition.
The scope of these
gains is reflected in the
fact that 29 states ex
perienced increases in
the number of black
elected officials while
only nine experienced
declines. Additionally,
increases occurred in
virtually all categories
of elective office.
The 6.6 percent in
crease in the number of
Bond Named Senate
Committee Chairman
ATLANTA- State
Senator Julian Bond of
Atlanta has advanced to
the position of chairman
of the Senate Consumer
Affairs Committee and
will serve on a total of
four key Senate panels
including the highly
important Reap
portionment Committee,
in the upcoming 1981-82
term of the Georgia
Assembly.
Bond’s committee
assignments include
reappointment to the
Senate Governmental
Operations and the
Human Resources
Committee.
“The Chairmanship
of the Senate Consumer
Affairs Committee will
give me a greater op
portunity to work in the
area of consumer
protection legislation
and I welcome the
challenge to oppose
fraud in the market
place," said Bond.
Bond and other
members of the reap
portionment panel will
study and recommend
legislation on the
complex problem of
redrawing political
boundary lines for
Georgia's Congressional
Rosa Parks Receives
Top Accolades of
NAACP Image
uvertising
black elected officials
reverses the steady
decline, since 1975, in
the rate at which blacks
were elected to public
office. With this in
crease, blacks, for the
first time, now hold one
percent of the 490,200
elective offices in the
United States. However,
blacks remain grossly
underrepresented in
elective offices
throughout the country.
There are about 19 black
elected officials for
every 100,000 blacks in
the population while
there are 252 non-black
officials for every 10 ,000
non-blacks. According to
the U.S. Census Bureau,
blacks comprise 11.8
percent of the total U.S.
population.
The five states with
the largest number of
black elected officials
are: Mississippi (387),
Louisiana (363), Illinois
(298), Michigan (284),
and the District of
Columbia (261). The
Joint Center’s survey
also shows, once again,
that no black elected
officials have been
identified in the
following seven states:
Idaho, Montana, North
Dakota, South Dakota,
Utah, Vermont and
Wyoming. On Nov. 4.
1980, a black woman was
elected ot the House of
Representatives in
Wyoming.
districts based on the
new 1980 population
census.
Governor Busbee is
expected to call a special
session of the General
Assembly in late 1981 for
the purpose of drawing
up a reapportionment
plan.
The Senate Gover
nmental Operations
Committee of which
Bond is a member
studies and recommends
legislation dealing with
the management and
operation of state
government agencies.
As a member of the
Human Resources panel
Bond studies and
recommends legislation
relating to mental and
physical health, social
welfare, rehabilitation
programs and the
Department of Human
Resources, the largest
agency in state gover
nment.
The appointments
were made by a three
member selection
committee headed by
Lieutenant Governor
Zell Miller.
Bond was recently
reelected to a 4th term
from Atlanta’s 3rd
district, he previously
served nine years in the
The states with the
largest increases in the
number of black elected
officials are: Mississippi
(60. Louisiana (29) and
Texas (22).
By category of office
held, black officials are
still most numerous at
the municipal level.
There are now 2,356
blacks holding
municipal offices, 132
more than in 1979. This
represents 48 percent of
all black elected of
ficials. Os the total
number of municipal
officials, 182 are
mayors. Last year there
were 175.
The second largest
number of black elected
officials serve in
education positions. Last
year, 1,144 black held
elective offices at this
level. This year, there
are 1,214 blacks in
educational positions,
representing 25 percent
of all black elected office
holders.
At the judicial and
law enforcement level,
there are 526 black of
ficials, 40 more than last
year.
At the county level,
there are 451 black
officials, 53 more than
last year.
The number of
Blacks on regional
governing bodies
remained the same this
year at 25, while at the
state legislature level,
there was an increase of
16 officials, bringing the
total of 323.
In July 1980, there
were 17 blacks in the
U.S. House of
Representatives.
However, the number
will increase tc 18 when
the 97th Congress
convenes next year. In
the November 4th
elections blacks gained
two new seats with the
election of Gus Savage
(D-Ill.) and Mervyn
Dymall (D-Calif.), but
lost one seat when Dr.
Melvin Evans (R-VI)
was defeated. Also, two
new black Represen
tatives will fill seats
previously held by
blacks. harold
Washington (D-Ill.) will
replace Bennett Stewart
whome he defeated in
the democratic primary,
and former Judge
George Crockett (D-
Mich.) will fill the seat
vacated by Charles
Diggs.
The Joint Center’s
1980 Roster shows that
976 black women now
hold elective office. 11118
is 94 more than in 1979
and represents 20 per
cent of all black elected
officials.
Black elected women
are distributed by level
of office in much the
samtf way as are all
black elected officials.
Most black female of
fice-holders serve in
municipal and
educational positions.
There are 450 black
25(