The Nation - News from Oct. 7, 1987
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For the first time, the share of young blacks who voted surged significantly ahead of the percentage of young whites who went to the polls, the Census Bureau reported in a study of turnout for the non-presidential 1986 election. Turnout of people aged 18 to 24 for both groups edged down slightly, but still rounded off to 25% for young blacks, while falling to 22% for their white counterparts, the report found. In the 1982 non-presidential balloting, the two groups were virtually tied, with turnout at about 25% each. Black registration and voting has grown significantly in the South, the study added.
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