M�SlSSippi 81 cks cha�e ration ofg v MUOO PL TATIO, M -Blacks in the mall community of Bamboo Planta­ tion, Mississippi have filed suit charging local white fanners of de ecr ting old Black cemeteries by planting cotton on the graveyard sites. The Rev. Earnest Ware i the leader of a group which has filed a $15.5 million suit for damages and to top the practice. But the white family which _ JlQW t site wenl.ahcad_ . rt k��DAc�to�:����.� se n even Iter the uit. ri jj J a me Qiy a1 JO';1t. professor �t 'he University f Tennessee ys th practi of planting crop on old Black grave ite i common. MIC I CITIZE Published Each Sunday By New Day Enterprise 12541 Second Street P.O. B x 03560 Highland Park, MI 48203 (313) 869-0033 Benton Harbor Bureau 175 Main Street Benton Harbor, MI 49022 (616) 927-1527 Publisher: Charles D. Kelly . Editor: Teresa Kelly Managing Editor: Wanda F. Roquemore. Contributor : Harry Anderson Bernice Brown Patricia Colbert Mary Golliday Allison Jones Shock Rock Leah Samuel Ron Seigel Tureka Turk Carolyn Warfield Vera White Production Manager: Kascene Barks Production: Antia Iroha Thurman Powell Orlando Karim Account Executive: Earlene Tolliver Deadline for all newspaper and advertisin copy i 12 noon Wedn da prior to publication. The Michi an Citiz n i avail­ able 1 tin through Ethnic Newswatch andto suc criber of M ad Data Central. " 0 ial darwini m b In a' cientifi ju tification for h olingchildren of diff, re t ba round differently. the early 1900 Ira king had begun and du ation be­ anI a mechani m for p� motin 0 ial l. � uratification.: "B caw' langua ca Woodward Av ,Suite 202. Th West African art, collected by Ousmana Kern, a West African from Monrovia, U ria, i being presented in Da Iy's Gallery on th econd floor of th David Whitney Building exhibit and J on exhibit ovem­ ber 22 through December 22 in th Dably GaJlery is ponsored by African-Arneri an arti t Jamc. Lewis. Lewis wns and operates Dably' Gallery and Publi bing Company in the David Whitney BuiJdin , 155 DAIL'S GALLERY David Whitney 81dg 1553 Woodward Ave .. 2nd FI Detroit, MI48�26 . (People Move, Stup .13 313-964-4247 Pi�se Its xhibi We 'by OUSMANA KERA' Africall Art Trader November 22 - December 22, 1992 11 - 8 PM • 7 Days a week , OUSMANA IS KNOWN THROUGHOUT THE U.S. FOR HIS FINE SELECTION OF: �� �b� . Jew Iry Trad Beads Gold Dust Weights carving Cloth & Kent. Strip Mudd Cloth W. vlng In trum nt African Game C·YORU e C II U • o 822UMrla c:J Ou m o K r Inl n rn • 0 n o o • cording Barqu t, the original rni ion of American public I in th early 1 th ntury w "to i opportunity, I,ll progr mo ility" for all citize in the relative­ ly ne r lativ I homo eneous d m racy. But, he noted when ururu an from . outhern and e tern Europe nou D be . me to the United Sta and rural arnili . moved to the cities at the end o I HI lIIBI 0 We t African art, there are mas ,bronze and wood, jewelry, gold dust weigh , cloth and kente strip ,fabri ,trade beads made in the early 17 . carv­ ings, mud, cloth, in trument and replicas 0 African game. The art work com from Yoruba, Luba Lobi, Man hanti, Dan, Fang, Bassa, Chokwe, Pende Bobo, Guro, Senufo and Baga. Lewis contends that Kera has over "300 pieces" of art in this exhibit and the value is "at least S300,