------,
c
mont
tion.
R ¥ denie he fired the hot. He
pleaded guilty, h cont nd , onI y
bee u e of the dure of eight
month of olitary confinem nt,
much of the time under 24-hour
lights ("a midnight sunstro ," he
lled it).
Hi bigg t mistake, Ray h
aid, was firing the Han e i
lawyer and retaining the late
Percy Foreman, who negotiated hi
plea and -year ent nee.
The younger Han said hand
hi father were preparing to go to
trial, and were confident.
They planned to undermine the
te timony of the tate' tar wi t
ness, a fellow resident of the flop
house who claimed to have seen a
fle ing man r embling Ray. The
witness' common-law wife would
testify that h had been drunk at the
time and that the fleeing man was
shorter than Ray and much lighter.
H 'JU I D P
in 1 88 aid it had hecked
nd foun "no per ua iv
evidence" 0 a conspir cy.
" 0 furth r inv tigation ap
pear to b warranted," th depart-'
m nt r port d to th Hou
Judiciary Committee, ' ... unl
new information which i uffi
ci nt t upport additional inv ti-
gative activity be om
available. "
Such information might be
found in the approximat ly 360
boxe of aled a sas ination
committee file , say re earchers
uch as Melanson, a prof or of
political cience at Southeastern
Massachu Us University.
Amon ocuments, he
.noted, , e prepared by Ca-
nadian a ori ties concerning
Ray's associatio in Montreal
during the summer before King
was killed. It was there that Ray
claim be first met Raoul.
Harold Weisberg, another
author and inve tigator, said he
would like to see the special case
index, a manifest of evidence and
intervi wees, that he beli ves the
FBI prepared, as well as the full
li t of witn e before the com
mittee.
OMMITT IL per-
taining to the killing of Kennedy
were ord red relea ed by Con
gr 1 t year, but th Kin r
tion wa not includ .
But Edgar, another former
committee member, di agreed.
"In the' , we lived in a public
perception of democracy;' h
aid, "but th private reality was
a police tate m ntality on th part
of some in the intellig nee ag n
ci ."
Th Comm rial App al of
Memphi reported last month on
decade -long Army intelligence
urv illan e of King, up to the day
he was hot. Th n w pap r aid it
found no evid nc of an Army rol
in King' d ath; the Army d -
lin d comment to the AP.
"At the tim we wrapped up
our investigation in 1978, I had no
idea," Fauntroy aid of the up
po ed urveillan .
The purpo e of a n inve ti-
gation be aid, hould be 1 to
identify and pr ecute p ople than
to reveal what really happ ned in
the 1 , " 0 that in th decade
of the' " it would n toe y
\
, ,
Black attacks on
whites surge in
South Africa
H
ing' i ling
ov r hadowed
ani ation ri e
H DEF NSE also would
have' pointed to items found in
Ray's abandoned Mustang, includ
ing clothing that would fit only a
lighter man, and cigarette butts,
though Ray did not smoke. Two
white Mustangs were parked out
side the flophouse.
Ray's current lawyer, William
Pepper, sees him as the victim of a
justice system with different ets of
standard and procedures for
criminal tho e Utbatmay
be referred to as political."
By MICHELLE WILLIAMS
Aa.oc " ted Pc!!. Wrt{!!.C I • F )!
U1l'��r�' . __;_.tt ����. ...�. "·r ... dty hall. Th
, . 'ror c:» years, t e
inatid h ev. rti mora 1
Luther King Jr. has overshadowed th th arne route.
reason he came to the Mi i ippi The weekend concl uded with a
Delta city where he died. concert Sunday aftem n at Mason
More than 1300 of Memphi' Temple where King gave his last
anitation workers had gon on trike peech, A candlelight vigil followed at
in February 1 , not just for tter the Lorraine, where a wreath of flow
wages and working conditions but ers w� b� placed at the ite of King's
also for dignity. Some beli ve the manon. The Rev. Jes eJackson
strik by members of the American and BenjarninHooks, the outgoing ex-
Federation of State County, and Mu- ecutive director of th NAACP, were
nicipal Employees was the turning cheduled to peak at the ceremony.
point of the civil rights movement.
Taylor Rog rs, who till works a�
the sanitation d partrnent, said BI ks
had no place to hower at the end of
the day and often went h me with
maggots falling from th ir uniforms.
They lifted 50-gallon drums, worked
long hours without overtime pay and
picked up trash in pouring rain ..
All for $1.7 an hour and no bene
ft .
"My family 'd if I was tired of
being treated like a econd-cls Citi
zen, they would upport my deci ion
to strike," aid Rogers, wh had eight
children to support during the strike.
"I was afraid of what was going to
happen.
";';fI fl
lied 10 re nt
The attack have varied
from irin m o c, to thr
mg r nad im 'pr domi-
nantly whit athenngs.
Ob rvers fear the attacks
. uld I d tara war in the
troubl d country which i cur
r ntl trym to move towards
BI ck majority rule. Mean
\ -hile. th PI' C h: d nied be
In respon rble t r the attacks.
nCitizen
AID T yrnposium of-
fered a chance to et the record traight
about Memphi . He said the city i
both forever linked to King's death,
and inspired by his philosophy to
unify and fight for civil equality.
Interest in the sanitation workers'
trike w nrred recently when three
Mernphi State Unive ity prof ors
decided t make a documentary on the
ubject.
The film "At the River I Stand,"
premiered Friday in Mernphi and was
hown nationally Sunday on public
televi ion. AI 0 Sunday night a mock
trial for James Earl Ray, who is erv
ing a 99-yearsentence for King's mur
der, aired on Home Box Office.
CE�o
O�
'. v
Didn't win the Lotto?
Well, Your Second Chance ·
you BEST CHANCE
G
IZE
I
Published Each
Sunday By
New Day Enterprise
12541 Second Street
P.O. Box 03560
tilghland Park, MI 48203
(313) 869-0033
"BUT AYl'ER TIl community
got behind us, it uplifted us 'and kept
us going."
Strikers carried igns that imply
tated "I arn a man." White residents,
for two weeks, picked up th arba e
themselv .
Four day after King w hot,
workers went ahead with th march
that he had planned to att nd. It was
peaceful and non-violent, and an
agreement with the city was worked
out shortly after.
"We're till not doing as well as we
hould be doing,' aid Rogers, adding
that some current wages are barely
above the poverty level. II But we
made people listen.'
J eEpp wasanactivistwithAF
SCME during the strike. He aitl King
" ... recognized their ( anitation work
ers') truggle was every man' trug
gle."
aenton Harbor Bureau
'175 Main Street
Benton Harbor, MI 49022
(616) 927-1527
Find the six BEST CHANCE Lotto numbers that are scattered
throughout this newspaper:
The numbers appear In BEST CHANCE Lotto boxes that look
like this: .
Young's
program
-reaches goal
DETROu-Mayor Coleman
Young celebrated his own victory
after a court ruled the affirmative ·
action is no longer need to rcrial.ly
levy the Detroit Police Depart
ment
Tbe US. Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati ruled that Young's pro
gram to boost the number of Block
ergeants hes been successful.
Tbereare 304 white sergeens 'in
the department and 302 Bl k ser
gean . Young said his goal in the
affirmative action program was 50-
50 in an 80 percent Bleck city.
Although Blecks do dominated
the city's population, Young says,
"I am not seeking impose BI k
domination on the city. "
The program has not gon
without i problems. The Detroit
Police Officers . ation filed
uit in 1974, daiming the program
unfairly passed ov 291 whi of
ficers for promotion between 1974
and 1
Howard Simon, executive di
rect r of the American Civil Liber
ti Union of Michigan, word IS
"will there bea mechanism in place
to ensure that the police department
continues to be a representative of
the community?"
Publi her:
Charles D. Kelly
Editor:
Teresa Kelly
Managing Editor:
Wanda F. Roquemore
Contributors:
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
BEST CHANCE:
Match
APRIL 3, 1993
Lotto Tick t
Write those numbers
In the Circles. below.
Pull out your losing Michigan Lotto tickets for
Saturday, APRIL s, 1993.
If, all 6 BEST CHANCE numbers match one set of
numbers on your Saturday, APRIL 3, 1993
Michigan Lotto ticket, YOU ARE A WINNER!
"TH WH finally toad
up and changed the nation became this
sp rk that eng nd r d th d ncy in
very man" Epp ald.
"Th y were willin to put th ir
liv n the lin for human di rutyand
r pecta ility."
Epp was on of doz ns 0 peak
ers who tt nded a yrnp ium Friday
and Saturday at th ational Civil
Righ M urn, the It 0 th former
Lorrain Motel wh rc Kmg w kill d
April 4 1
Th AFSCME held a march Satur
day in downtown M mphi tartingat
Cl yb m Temple and ulminatin at
D «ullin . for all new pap r
and advcrtisin op is 12 noon
HI dncsdav prior to publl. ation.
III i Michi 'an Citizen is avail
tlhie on line through Ethnic
" H dr(lC<.hwuitosub. crib r of
Mead (1((/ 'cntral.
prize: W nne
m e or MI hi an ltlzen tor w nnln
nat
, .
,