FRAN ORT, KY. (AP) - A group
of Kentucky civil right leaders
wants to know why Ku Klux Klan
members were allowed to wear
hoods during a rally I t week at the
Capitol.
One of the leaders, the Rev. Loui
Coleman Shelbyville, ked At
torney G neral Chri Gorman to find
out whether Frankfort's anti-mask
ordinance hould .have been en
forced.
An attorney general' opinion
would be advisory only, not legally
-=����������� binding.
About 25 Klansmen, some wear
ingho ds.congregatedatth Capitol
last Saturday while state and city
police t od watch.
study
popular belie hi t ,
B titu tbc
proportion of peopl on the
nation'. elfare rolls. By
revi � Bureau da
the W hington, D.C... d
Center on Bud t and Policy
Prioritie rcleued report
howi t 48 percent 0 the
nation's If.are recipien are
wbi ,32 percent are Bl and
15 percent are Hispanic.
Tbc report also showed that
of the nation', 3S.7 million
poor people, SO percent are
te, 29 percent are BI and
18 percent are Hispanic. How
ever the report. entitled "White
Poverty in America", revealed
that whi nd to lift themsel
v out of poverty quicker then
BIacb o� Hispanics.
Ith
Patrol'
A'l'lANTA, GA -Do suc
cessful BI eta pply un-due
pressure on other profi ional
African AmericaDI in a bid to
prevent them from "acting too
white?" That cbarge ex
is1ed for some time but it w
made public recently by a
Black reporter for the Atlanta
Constitution-John Blake.
�any successful Black
charge that tbey arc shunned
or criticized by other Blacks if
they adopt too much "white
behavio .... or do not automat
ically side with Blac on
major poUtical and social is
sues. Blake labeled su<x:cssful
Blacks who seek to prevent
other successful Blacks from
becoming "too white" the
"Soul Patrol."
MICIDGAN
CITIZEN
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Sunday By
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P.O. Box 03560
Highland Park, MI 48203
(313) 869-0033 .
Benton Harbor' Bureau
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(616)927-1527
Publl.h r:
Charles D. Kelly
Editor:
Teresa Kelly
Managing Editor:
Wanda F. Roquemore
Contributor.:
Bernice Brown
Patricia Colbert
Mary Golliday
Allison Jones
Shock Rock
Leah Samuel
Ron Seigel
Tureka Turk
Carolyn Warfield
Vera White
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Production.
Antialroha
Thurman Powell
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. Earlene Tolliver
.
Dut.lliM for. all newspaper
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Wednesday prior to publication.
The Miclaigan Citizm is avail
abl-e 011 line through Ethnic
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,
WORLD NATION
,
A NEW LIFE - Geraldo Muchipiha, who was forced from his home
in 1991 by rebet attacks, retumed to Mozambique to start a new life
with the help of CARE, the wortd's largest private relief and
development organization. CARE provides seeds, tools and
agricultural training to displaced Mozambicans, helping them grow
crops like lettuce, cabbage, tomatoes, collard greens and sweet
potatoes.
Africa
"LIV nim I ,"
,de ribin hi tim
in the refu camp, "with no 1 nd,
no or, nothing to do but it nd
it for th to end. "
Although RENAMO t
till frequent, th Mucipi decid d
to return t Moz rnbiqu to ttempt
a n w lif. D titut, Y t hopeful,
they wa! ed for three da to rea h
the Mozambique bord r, where th y
were given free pa age on a
crowded train to their homeland.
The Mucipih rrived in the city
of Cuamba, where CARE, th
world' larg t relief and develop
ment organization, is upporting
relief efforts to provide food to 3.1
million p ople throughout Mozam
bique. In addition to di tributing
food to th family, who hadn't eaten
in four day , CARE medical staff
examined the family and vaccinated
the childr n.
After pending a week at the
camp, Mucipiha moved hi family to
a safe area, where he plans to build a
home nd prepare the land for plant
ing. Blankets, clothe • and a
month' ration of food will help them
survive while their crops take root
and grow. CARE taff taught
Mucipiha how to build small dams to
provide water for his garden, which
include lettuce, cabbage, tomatoes,
collard greens, and weet potatoes.
"Even with normal rainfall,"
Henry says, "timing is critical. You
may see green fields, rather than the
dust and dry earth traditionally a -
sociated with a drought, but if th
rains come at the wr ng time, the
rops are rulned."
Civil ight group
question . righ of
Klan men to wear hoods
The 1981 ordinance makes it il
legal for three or more people ap
pearing in public to wear hoods or
masks that would conceal "sub-
tantial portion" of their faces. The
ordinance was based ona model sug
gested by the Kentucky Commission
on Human Righ .
"THEY SHOULD have been
made to take their masks off,"
Coleman aid in an interview
Thur day. "The city ordinance
should be adhered to."
But aark Beauchamp, commis
sioner of the department that over
sees state property and which is ued
a permit for the demonstration, aid
"the city ordinance doesn't apply"
on the capitol grounds.
Kentucky State Police Capt. John
Lite, who coordinated security at the
event, said state police lawyers ex
amin d the ordinance and reached
the ame conclusion.
"I was fully intending to enforce
the ordinance until we found out
from legal counsel you can't enforce
a city ordinance on state property,"
Lile said.
IN ADDITION to overseeing
food distribution in Mozambique,
CARE provide seeds, tool and
training to 2,800 Mozambicans in 20
citie throughout the country. Road
rehabilitation project ponsored by
CARE provide local people with
tool to rebuild road that have been
ripped apart by RENAMO.
Although Mucipiha faces a long
truggle to rebuild his home and har
ve t his crops, he remains optimistic,
I king forward to the day when the
war ends. "When there is peace my
family' and I will have a place to
live."
Then, it was pictography
and hieroglyphics ...
The Children of Somalia
Need Your Help Now
, .
The following agencies pledge to see that your donations are used
where they will do the most good.
Please don't let the children's cry go unanswered. Send your
tax-deductible check to any of the agencies listed below, earmarked for
Adv ntl ..
CARE
International Rescue
Save th Children
Development Ie Relief
660 First Avenue
Committee
PO Box 975-Dept.1
Agency (ADRA)
New York, NY 10016
386 Park Avenue South
Westport, CT 06881
Box 4289
(212) 686-3110 '
New York, NY 10016
(800) 532-1818
Sliver Spring, MD 20904
(212) 679-0010
(800) 424-ADRA
CONCERN/America
Lutheran World Relief
UMCOR, United
2024 N. Broadway
Methodist Com mlttee
390 Park Avenue South
of Relief
Afrlcare
PO Box 1790
New York, NY 10016
475 Riverside Drive
440 R Street NW
Santa Ana, CA 92702
(212) 532-6350
Room 1374
Washington, DC 20001
(714) 953-8576
New York, NY 10115
MAP International
(202) 462-3614
Doctors Without
2200 Glynco Parkway
(212) 870-3816
Borders
Box 50
US CommlHee for
American Friends
30 Rockefeller Plaza
Brunswick, GA 31520
UNICEF
Service Committee
#5425
(800) 225-8550
333 East 38th Street
1501 Cherry Street
New York, NY 10112
Operation USA
Dept. SR
Philadelphia, PA 19102
(212) 649-5961
New York, NY 10016
(215) 241-7158
76151/2 Melrose Ave
(212) 922-22590n
Los Angeles, CA 90046
Foo'd for the Hungry
(213) 658-8876
World Concern
American Jewish
7729 E. Greenway Rd
Oxfam America
PO Box 33000
World Service
Scottsd�e,AZ 85260
26 West Street
Seattle, WA 98133
15 West 26th St 9th FL
(800) 2·HUNGER
Bo�ton, MA 02111
(206) 546-7201
New York, NY 10010
(800) 225·5800
World VI Ion
(212) 683-1161
International
Presiding Bishop's
PO Box 1131
Medical Corps
Pasadena, CA 91131
Fund for World Relief/
(800) 423-4200
Baptist World Aid
5933 W. Century Blvd.
Episcopal Church
6733 Curran Street
#310
815 Second Aveu
McLean, VA 22101
Los Angeles, CA 90045
New York, NY 10017
(703) 790-8980
(310) 670-0800
(212) 867-8400
Now it's the
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