D To orr -In n unprece­ den bid to w y public opinion and up tage the chool board, union lude recenUy 0 red plan for improving Detroit cl rooms, hile eng ged in contract negotiations with them .. The union blueprint ac)�w ledg the need for inajor over­ h ul of the 167,000- tudent ystem, plagued by low chieve­ ment and dropout ra of 40 percent. The plan calt for smaller chool that stay open longer, tricter di cipline nd new "de ign team " of chool employees, parents and tudent to work on pecific educational and management issues. The plan w developed by leader of 12 district unions, with upport from the Metropolitan Detroit ALF-eIO and an Oakland County public relations firm. Union official hope to counter the school board' Em­ powerment Plan, which seeks to give principals, teachers and parents control over budgets, cur­ riculums and most, other decisions. Wild r m at with ANC JOHANNESBURG - Virginia Gov. Doug! Wilder recently met with African National Con­ gress officials during a nine-day vilit. bleb lDcluded funerals for the 46 victims of a June 17 mas­ sacre in Boipatong township - the country's worst in years. The ANC has blamed the government for the killings and broke off constitutional talks with the white government. Wilder, who has visited six African on a 23-day African trade and cultural mission, did not meet with ANC . president Nelson Mandela, who flew to meet with United Nations Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali in Dalar, Senegal to discuss the crisis. Chicago Suburb Agree to Pay, In Bla Suit CIIlCAGO - Chicago Heigh1S, a Chicago suburb, has agreed to pay $4.5 million to owners of a housing complex who contended in a lawsuit tbat the 12 buildings there were condemned and demolished by the town in 1985 because most of the resident were Black. . The town's officials agreed to the settlement in Federal District Court on Monday to avoid the possibility that a larger amount in punitive damages would be as­ sessed by a jury that issued a ver­ dict against the town last week, said Mayor Douglas Troiani. The jury concluded last Thursday that because of the ra­ cial makeup at. the complex, the Sunset Apartments, several Chicago l:Ieights offici", moved in the mid-1980's to have it van­ dalized, making it uninhabitable under the community's building codes. . Magne lum Improve urvlval chance Lo_OII - Injections of mag­ nesium immediately after heart attack ymptoms begin ig­ nificantly improve the chances of survival, according to a study published in a British medical journal. The death rates after one month among patients who received magnesium was 24 per­ cent lower tban among those who did not, the study reported in the June n issue of The Lance. CHARTRA 0 HI 01'0 - An objection from judge bout I wyer' choice of ttire h become the talk of legal circle in W hington, rai - ing que tio about where I yer' perso I freedom collid with couruprocedur and whether clothing can influence jury. The que tio aro e after a lawyer, John T. Harvey 3d, wa removed from a case last week by Judge Robert M. Scott of the Di - trict of Columbia Superior Court after a dispute over Harvey's wear­ in a ente cloth. The judge had aid that the stole might unduly in­ fluence jurors' cultural ensitivites. . Neither the pro ecutor nor Harvey's client raised objections about the cloth. Harvey h ked the Di trict of Columbia Court of Appeals to reverse the order and to remove the judge from the case, and he vowed .. to appeal to Federal court if the ruling is not reversed. "An Orthodox Jew wears a yar­ mulke, an Indian wears a turban, and according to the case law they can appear before this judge," Har­ vey aid in a recent interview. "What is the difference between a yarmulke or a turban and my stole?" The Issue has intensified be­ cause Harvey is representing a Black man who was accused of as- ault with ten . That bas raise the q on r predominantly Black jwy would be prejudiced by the cloth in favor of Harvey's client. The Cloth of King The multicolored kente cloth, Originally from West Africa, has become popular with African Americans in recent years as a sign of racial pride. Kente, which is thought by some scholars to derive from a word meaning "basket"s, was originally reserved for kings 'and high-ranking, chiefs like the leaders of the Astian­ ti tribe in Ghana. In the United States, it is worn mostly as an accent, fashioned into hats, scarves, ties or stoles. Though he seldom wore one as a public of­ ficial, Marion Barry, the former , W hin ton Mayor, ttention ror we rin tole. received kente cloth K nte nd ult The di pute between the lawyer nd the judge began I t February when H rvey ppe red in court wearing the triped cloth draped over hi uit a he prepared to defend hi client. At the hearing, Judge Scott, who i white, gave Mr. Harvey, ho is Black, choice: remove the stole, re ign from the court-appointed case, or try it before the jUdge but without a jury. Rejecting all th e options. Mr. Harvey, wearing h stole, next p­ peared before Judge Scott I t week • for a he ring on the case. Harvey aid that lthough he, his client and the pro ecution had agreed on a guilty plea to a charge of robbery, he would refuse to enter the plea until the dispute over the stole w re olved. Judge Scott then di mi cd Har­ vey from the case. "I will remove you today, not on the b is of your kente cloth, but on the buis that you will not enter a plea," he aid. Citing the Constitution Other lawyers and legal scholll1 later agreed with Harvey that tbe SOUlU of the conflict remained the te cloth. But -'nIII. that loth' sm relevant. "It's my choice to war it, pure and simple," he said. Harvey said his church, the Faith United Church of Chri t, re­ quires that the cloth be worn in private and at work as an expre - sion of religous faith and ethnic solidarity, and that he has worn a stole since November. "My client said he had no prob­ lem with my repre entation," said Harvey. "I can't see any juror look­ ing at my stole and saying the defendent must be innocent. I am not for or against Marion Barry be-' cause Marion Barry has nothing to do with why I wear it." Judge Scott has refused to dis­ cuss the issue outside court. "It's my policy," he said in an interview. "I don't comment on ongoing cases. Calling for direct-action picket­ ing and boycotts which led to world-wide anti-apartheid mobilization against South Africa, TransAfrica officials in WaShington, DC, urged all Americans to support an effective national lobby .for a more positive United States policy toward the Republic of Haiti as well as other oppressed peoples and govern- ments. . The same intensity and commit­ ment that African-Americans­ fostered to end the separatist governments in southern Africa must now be brought to the broader concerns affecting the political and economic empowerment of all Africans, Randall Robinson, Trans­ Africa executive director, declared at the opening of the organization' 1992 conference recently. "As the Rodney King verdict showed, the struggles waged by Africans and African-Americans are not divergent. The quest for freedom, justice, self-determina­ tion, human rights and economic empowerment (are the same) ... The marginalization of Africa has coin­ cided with the marginalization of Blacks in America," Robinson said in his report. "Black organiztions-schurches, ocial groups, schools, trade unions, professionals and others-­ must now step-up efforts to inform and instruct their constituents about John T. Harv y 3d, a Wa.hlngton lawyer, wa. removed from a ca.e atter a Judge objected to hi. wearing In court a .tole made of African kente cloth. The .trlp d cloth Iw worn a. a ymbol of Black pride. I let therecord speak for itself." Legal experts said they could not recall other cases in which lawyers were removed from cases because of their attire. "I've just never heard of such a thing," said David Rudenstine, a professor of constitutional law at the. Benjamin N. Cardozo Law School at Yeshiva University. "The probable narrow question boils down to whether the stole jeopardized the dignityof the court forum Or constituted contempt to th judge," Rude tine dded. "Cle rly the judge did not feel that y, ince he w willing to h r the e himself. "So can judg require n Or­ thodox Jewi h ttomey to remove yarmulke on the groun that me­ on Je . h on th jury might be unduly ympathetic?" he cd. "I can't ee how it not far." An 'In ult' to Black Bl c lawyers and c demics were critical of wh t they w racism in the judge' implication that Black jurors would be in­ fluenced by th ente cloth. "It is n insult to Blac Americans to sugge t they 10 e their objectivity when they it on a . jury because they ee piece of cloth," aid Keith Walters, vice pre ident of the National Bar celation, a Black lawyers group. .. If a lawyer went into court wearing a clown outfit, I don't think anyone would tolerate it. But I talked with everal members of our bar in California and Detroit, and they aid in their courts it is not n un­ usual ight to e an attorney wear­ ing a kente cloth, and no one says anything." Still other argued that the proper place for any concern about juror sympathie w during �ef net p �Qtion l� rt'. \ [nterview of prospective i r leno n vol dJre. �wouW e1Hninatc the quiry, or put it where it belongs," aid J. Clay Smith, a professor of constitutional law at Howard University, who has just finished a book on the hi tory of Black lawyers in the United States. "The question is, whether a lawyer as opposed to a juror can be removed from a case by a judge on some type of arbitrary standard. We're not talking about omeone coming into a courtroom with a Batman cape. I have not seen this in researching the first 100 years of Black lawyers nor in my own 20 years of work. . He added: "Women wear kente embroidery on their suits. I have a kente cloth bow tie. So the ques­ tion is, how much kente cloth i too much kente cloth?" I upportsma lobby for Haiti events in Africa. The Congres- ional Black Caucus is pivotal in ensuring that the African American voice is heard in the corridors of power. Africare's Constituency for Africa (CFA) project will do much to bolster grassroots intere t in Africa. The Black media has an even greater task in ensuring that Africa and its multitude of issues are not forgotten," he emphasized. SPFAKlNG AT TransAfrica's 15th annual dinner, Robinson and other officials paid tribute to depo ed Hai tian President Jean Bertrand Ari tide and thousands of refugees seeking relocation in the United State until the first democratic government i restored in tbe Caribbean island. Human rights advocate Alice Walker, author of "TM Color Purple," union leade William Lucy and Rev. Charle Cobb, retired mini ter and civil rights acnvtsi, were also honored at the dinner which high­ lighted TransAfrica's annual foreign policy conference. President Ari tide also told the black-tie guests " ... In one ense, you already know what I have io say because my history is your history, the hi tory of your tribe, of your people or your nation ... We, daughters and 0 of Africa re not. .. beaging for pity. We explore our historical and anthropological horizons and celebrate List of ANC demands of government TransAfrlca's courage and great­ ne ,the courage and greatness of those who speak with their actions and their brave deeds ... " Referring to President George Bush's order for U.S. troops to send back 34,000 Haitian refugees flee­ ing political oppression, Aristide quoted Robinson in saying " 'If the e refugees were white, they would be let into the U.S. immedi­ ately. We've admitted 70 percent of all refugees from Eastern Europe, but fewer than one percent from Haiti. The numbers don't lie ... " The CFA was organized at Africarc House in Washington with representative of 40 African­ American organizations and the ,United Nations based Organiza­ tions of African Unity (OAU). The miaaion is mobilize and fo ter in­ creued cooperation of a broad bued coaltion committed to the progress and empowerment of Africa and African peoples, aid Melvin P. Foote, coordinator. TransAfrica also announced, the scheduled opening of its new head­ quarters in thC DuPont Circle em­ b y section of the capital. The building w purchased under the leadership of activi t athlete Arthur Ashe, chairman of the TransAfrica capital fund nd keynote luncheon speaker. religious Washington Office on Haiti, delegation of U.S. citizens who recently returned from a fact­ finding mission to Haiti, also i sued a critique calling for urgent changes in U.S. policy toward Haiti to head AN INTERRACIAL, inter- JOHANNESBURG, Soutb Africa (AP) - Here is a list of demands the African National Congre s made to the government Tues­ day when it suspended negotia­ tions on political reforms: - Establishment of an inter­ national commission to inve - tigate township violence, and an international team to, monitor violence; - Creation of a Constituent embly to draft and adopt a new constitution ending white­ minority rule; - Establi hment of an inter­ im government to oversee the transition to multiracial democracy; - Termination of all covert activitie by police and military; - Suspension and prosecu- off "a social explo Ion termed as potentially imminent" The group wa headed by Worth Cooley­ Proust, president of th board of directors of the Washington Office on ;Haiti (WOH). tion of soldiers and police in­ volved in political violence; - Halt to repre ion in the nominally independent Black homelands (statement doe not elaborate); - Replacement of all-male workers' ho tels, often impli­ cated in violence, with family units; - Increased scrutiny of hos­ tels, including guards on 24- hour duty and regular earches of dwelling ; - Banning of all dangerous weapons in public, including 0- called cultural weapons such as pears and shields; - Release of all pollttca! prisoners; - Repeal of 11·· repre sive" legislation. The tatement did not elaborate.