Chavis says
Blacks exposed
to toxins
BALTIM RE, MD--NAACP
lead Rev. 801 CbaW recently
renewed charges that "c:nvir6n
men1al racism" is harming Blcdcs
am other mioority gro . The
occasion . te.stim>ny before
a Sc:nmc I.bcomminee consider-
. of
10 'The
head told the ubcommittee,
"Bl and Hispanics are dspro
poitionately exposed to toxic
wastesi ."
0laviS wants the Clinton ad
ministration to study � effects of
toxics was on minoriti . The
Realan administration rejected a
imilar call in 1983.
HIG
CI.ZE
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available on line through Ethnic
New Watch and to ub crib r
oj M ad Data C ntral.
Archaeologists Discover 3,200-Year-Old Tomb
Ian for t Pharaoh R m e II, who r d for 67 y r In
t 13th c ntwy B.C. Antiquity xperta aythat the tomb might
be rt of n ntlre pr vio Iy u nown cropol.
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N kh- In, n rmy comm nder nd me enger to for Ign
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I
By MARCY GORDON
M.oc,.,.d P,.. •• Writ.,
W HINGTON ( P) - Among th
173,700 items that Thurgood Mar
shall gave th Library of Congr
probably the most p rsonal is a diary
he kept briefly in 1951 while on a
mi sion to the Far E t for the
NAACP during the' Korean War.
j n big WlW.�".
e __"..""",.---
rel�
ments when he " wapped stori ,
drank whiskey" with reporters in To
kyo.
The diary shows Marshall's erse
of humor and curiosity about hi sur
roundings even as he conducted a gru
eling probe of Army discrimination
against Black. servicemen.
TIle red-covered diary i among
the documents that Marshall, who re
tired from the Supreme Court in 1 1
and died last January, left to th li
brary.
IN 1951, Marshall was legal direc
tor of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People,
which sent him to the Far East to
investigate numerous complain of
unfair trials and impri onment of
Black oldiers in Korea. Gen.
Douglas MacArthur had ordered an
Mayor accuses
opponent of
racial politics
RUGER, Ml . (AP) - Mayor
Steve Flemming aid hi opponent in
next wee ' eleetion is playing racial
poli tics.
Flemming, who is white, aid
Democratic mayoral candidate Wil
liam Jackson has wrongly portrayed
white politicians in Cruger as power
hungry.
Jackson, who is Black, told th
Greenwood Commonweal th I t
week that in the 47 years he's lived
in Cruger, Blac have never partici
pated in elections or held any politi
cal office because whites have used
deliberate tactics tQ keep them OUl
Jackson aid Blac' are not given
information about election p e
dures, such as qualifying deadline
or told wh nan el ction will be held.
Cruger, which has about 5 peo
ple, is about 75 percent Bla k. It i
governed by a mayor and five alder
men,' who erve at-large. All are
white.
OU BLA'" , eekm
po itions on the board of ald rm n.
Flemming, a farmer who w
elected mayor in 1 89, aid he and
the aldermen are not "power-hun-:
gry," or "money - hungry."
"As mayor, I m 12.5 a
month," Flemming aid. "Out ofth
four years I've served as mayor, l'v
probably lost money."
An alderman's alary i $4 a
See ACCUSED, AS
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-----
I
,
r
J
w
.,
o
offi ial inv tigation. and h
agreed to give Ma hall a
Army personnel for hi parat
quiry.
been to Korea at lea t once- hall said hi inv tigation w "be-
wapped tori , drank whi key, etc." ginning to hape up." During hi three
And n Jan. 22: "The lot ma- week in Tokyo, he interviewed
hin at P Club are real one- co of impri oned Black soldiers
armed bandi .' wrongly convicted of cowardice and
M hall went to the Army PX other charg by courts-martial.
c mmi ary on Jan. 20: "Converted Th n Marshall flew to Korea to
d partrnent tore-huge plac -. read trial tran crip and interview
everything but what you want." oldiers at th front. Unfortunately for
unday , Jan. 21, when h historians', though the rest of hi di
4ay in .• 1':1�dIi"",,�!,,����;,o":6'
•
ga
THURGOOD MARSHALL
"Cleared Customs with ut diffi
culty. No on to m t me," Ma hall
wrote of his arrival at the Tokyo air
port on Sunday morning, Jan. 14,
1951." ked ergeant on duty, who
called hi captain, who called hi ma
jor, wh lied hi colonel. ... North
west Airlm ould n t find a hotel."
Finally, Marshall recounted. an
Army 0 i er found him a h t I that
w quiet ut far from the' city' cen
ter.H haddinn rattheoffi e ' .lub
at the Army b e, where he f und ' 'no
egregan n in club, but segrc ran n
on po t.'
In town, he noted. taxi for Japa
n e r iden wer old and bum d
char al, wtul th arkcd "Tour
i t" or "Forci ncr" were F m run
ning n ga oline. Th re were
"Foreigners Welcome' Ig at a
number f taurants.
On Jan. 17. in a meeting with an
aide to Ma Arthur and other Army
bra • Ma hall aid," Every n
prorm d full c perati nit in allow
in him t interview la k pri. oners
in the Army t kade near T k and
other matt YS.
Write those numbers
in the circles below.
II
teredo
"I TH BOARD believ
that an exit exam i n ary
then that exam hould be re
quired of all graduating seniors.
At thi time, everal exceptions
have been made to this rule.
For example, d tudents
do not have to take the exam,
private school tudents are not
required to take th exam and
tuden who attend two y�
of high school and then go on to
get a Graduate Equivalency Di
ploma are not required to take
the exam,' t the caucus tate
ment said.
The caucus al 0 pointed out
that orne chool y terns allow
tuden who failed the exam to
participate in graduation exer
cises.
c
Letto" num
IUnn. .
3. To d.lm prize: Wlnn.t
u t .pp�r In p
ned
It P.O. 01
m
of MI hi an III
..