• ., te t nity. Bec u e Chavis included Louis Fa rrakhan , leader of the Nation of lam, at the B lti­ more summit, a number of black elected officials refused to at­ tend. Rapidly, a torm of criti­ cism gan to urround Chavis. Leaders from organized labor ere negative toward the NAACP I der because of his previous position on th North American Free Trade Agree­ ment. Environmentalist were nega­ tive toward the NAACP leader The current media and politi­ cal campaign to oust Chavis is reminiscent of previous ults : against prominent bla lead-" ers. We recall the political fire torm against Andrew' Young, tt'1 United Nations am­ b ador under Jimmy Carter, which culminated in his firing. More recently, progressive scholar Johnetta Cole, p ident of Spelman College, fell victim to : a media smear Campaign, block- · ing her from consideration for a : cabinet appointment in the Clin- ' ton administration. THERE I 0 doubt that Chavi made serious errors of judgment in this matter. But we must also honestly examine whether Chavis's mistakes are at the heart of this journalistic and political assault against him. For wee ,information from the NAACP's office fil in Balti­ more has been circulated and distributed to prominent white critics of Chavis. Blacks who ''; rding to ople h v WE MUST ASK the ques- . tion: Who really controls black leadership in America? Is the : real reason that Chavis is under • fire is because he attempted to • bring together black repre­ sentatives from a wide spectrum • of views and interests to work • together for a common � use? The pending removal of : Chavis as head ofth NAACP, if : . successful, will ultimately back- I fire. For all of hi erro , havis represented the spirit of hope and renewed activism for mil- · lions of African-Americans. ' Like the firingofW.E.B. Du Bois in 1948, the departure of Chavis could push the NAACP back­ ward against the rising tide of militancy and resistance among the most oppressed and alien- , ated people in this country. Dr. Man.nin.g Marable is Prcfe or of • H urory and Political Science, and Direc­ fer of the I nstitute for Research in. Afri­ can-American Studies, Columbia University. "Along the Color Line" ap­ pear in ouer 250 publications and is broadcast by 75 radio station: mt:r!ma­ tioaaliy. I intens lobby ing against the bill b. th �R --th � oppose: ihe bun un u isauh weapons=und an obsu u .uonist Re publicun leader hip \J. ho s id that the bill ,\ a' oft on puni rhme nt and � ddition 1 police. It i clear that thi bill i raciallv motiv ted. driven emotional I v y the fear of crime-vportreyed a Bla ·k--and a feeling that more ops and jails will olve the (violent Black. crime) problem. What wa even more interesting, how ver. wa the Pre ident's t hi \ gi lative defeat. .\1 ore De) 0 rat. t a B me mb r voted again ·t th President. More Roman atholic legislators voted again t the Pre iident than did Blacks. .lJor� moderate Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) memb rs--th organization that Bill Clinton helped to torjn=voted against him. Did he invite. David Wilhelm. Chairman of the D�C. to the White House and urge him to whip up grassroots D mocrats against Democratic legislators'? Noooh, Did he go to a Roman Catholic Church and call priests to the 'N hite House to end a me sage to Roman Cathol ic legislators? Noooh . Did he call Al rom In. xecutiv Director of the DLC. to the Whi e H us nd sic him on the DLC memb r '. ho aband ned his ship: .\ooolr. Then what did h e do? President Clinton decided to pit Black preachers gainst lOB lack politicians. He went after Hinck peo] le through the Black churche and B I ck lergv in order to put political pres ure and \\ hip th strayed "sheep" in the CBC back into the fold. First. he went to.e Black church in the DC metrop litan area and "preached." In his rmon, he raised passage of the cri me bill to. a higher , v I. clai ming it was "the will of God" that it be passed. H invited the nation' mini ters to come forw ard and . upport it. Second. he invited 25 Atrican . m ri an clergy to the White Hou and c rn m issi ned them to go forth and preach the .osp I of rime in an attempt to undermine the \lOR L OPPO ITIO. 1 and CO. rSCIESTIOL­ OBJECT/OX of 10 m mb rs of the CBC. Til ��R.C joi u w itli these 10 CBC me I . c r<.; in 11 cons' i ntious obj ction to the current. crime hill. T D. r. call your represemarives in Con are � at 2(J2-22.J-3121 and the President at 202-.J56-111 J to xpr s your oppo ition! I READERS WRITE c o By Bernice Powell Jackson drinking water caused by lead solder and pipes. Buildings built before 1950 are likely to contain paint with high concentrations of lead while those built after 1980 have virtually no .lead paint. . Childhood lead poisoning is a preventable disease. It is also th number one environmental health threat to children in the United States. We can eradicate lead poisoning in children, just as we have rid our country of small pox and polio. would provide not only the dol- • lars for such clean up, but would also provide much-needed ·jobs in the nation's cities through , training workers to do lead ' abatement. But with all of th jockeying for passage of a health -care bill even as this is being written, there's no telling whether the Lead Abatement Trust Fund will still a part of th final, heal th care reform bill. The reality is that there is an enormous cost in not eradicating this terribl condi ion in our childr n .. It i tim t that ev ry dol­ lar inv sted in abating lead haz­ ards produc about $1.80 in benefits realized in reduced medical nd cial education co of infant mor- tality, nd in r d rnm and pr u ivity. Th fa i that Americans - 11 of us - h a moral r ponsibili do every­ thing possible to stop th poi on­ ing of our children. There' m thing we can 11 do about lead poisoning of Amer­ ica's childr n. Pa n can I rn . about potential ources of I ad • ur and step to take to • th ir children by calling -FYI of most American children. The health of two million American children is at risk. Two million American children are at risk of having lower IQ's,' shortened attention spans, hy­ peractivity, aggressive behavior, reading disabilities and behav­ ior problems. Some of them even face the possibility of mental re­ tardation, coma, convulsions and death All of these health problems are related to the fact that two million American children still ha ve dangerous levels of lead poisoning. And African Ameri­ can and Latino/Latina children face lead poisoning lev I which are much higher than those of . whit . Indeed, African Ameri­ can children are more tha n twi as likely to suffer from lead poi- oning as white children. New data from the Cent rs for Dis e Control and re n­ tion publish in th Journal of the American Medical Associa­ tion how that we have made much progr ss in the fight against lead poi oning of Am ri­ can children over the p t dec­ ade. Th removal of lead from gasoline, food cans and new r i­ dential paint is ponsible for the d in blood 1 d levels BUT THERE ARE still nearly 4 million homes and apartments occupied by families with young children in the U.S. which contain hazardous lead. Thus, almost one in every 'ten preschoolers is still lead poi- oned. In some communitie more than half of young children are uffering from poisoning by lead, For instance, in Chicago 38 percent of children t ted were lead poisoned, in St. Louis 47 percent of the children scr n d were lead poisoned, in Baltimore 40 percent, in East St. Louis 53 per nt. Rural children are not immun either - a new Univer­ sity of orth Carolina study found h t 22 percent of rural childr n t ed in 1 93 had _1 - vat 1 v Is oflead. The old r, more dilapidated th building, the more likely the child is to lead poison Poor child n and children of color are more likely to ide in such hou ing nd, thu, to eat I deb paint chips or mh Ie ust contaminated y 1 d paint. Old buildings al 0 oft n have high levels of lead in th V017NG RIGH� UPDA'TE· Yeo terday. thr Texas majority-minority . t 'J. 0 B lac k and on Latino-vCraig \\' ashington's soon-to-be Sheila Jackson Lee's (19- D).. dpi Bernice John on (D-30) and Gene rre n's (29- D) re sp cti ve ly---w r declared u �Qn�t ituii n I b.\' jud Dllpginrcd b� p.I iQenT� Re an and Bush. The judge said the districts "be r the di 1I') i rnprint of racial apartheid .... The." v, re <.; .ientific ll� d signed to mu ter a minimum I r ntag f th favor d minority or ethnic.group: minoritv numbers are virtuallv all that matter din th 'hap f tho di tri t ."- Follow th court' I g.ic-- e ne Green i a U'hitt Democrat! UT oruyha� pen if th re i the political will and financial ability to clean up our housing stock. The cost of ttingrid of lead-based paint in old buildings is urely greater than low-income privat home own ,day-car provid rs and tate nd local governments can b r. A provision in the House Ways and Means Committee's health care r form bill would de. d this n by providing a d di ated source of funds for cleaning up uch hazards in housing nd d y care n ers. C 11 d th L ad A atement Trust Fund, thi provision CONNECT WITH US .. ational Rainbow Coalition me of the Field Director I 700 K tr t.: . v..r. It 00 Wa s hington, 20006 \ ('II .. : _0_ 72� - J I. Icl 1f I ") - J ()2 ™ . -.