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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=89TT2244>
<title>
Aug. 28, 1989: Late Honors
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Aug. 28, 1989 World War II:50th Anniversary
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 12
Late Honors
</hdr><body>
<p>In death, Mickey Leland won allies he rarely had in life
</p>
<p> The roar of an airplane engine is one of the few things
that bring hope to the Fugnido refugee camp, a desolate stretch
of Ethiopia where 57,000 survivors of Sudan's civil war subsist.
But on Aug. 7, Fugnido's residents listened in vain for the
sound of the Twin Otter carrying Texas Congressman Mickey
Leland, 44, who had visited five times before. His plane had
crashed nose-first into a mountain 30 miles away, killing all
16 aboard.
</p>
<p> When searchers located the disintegrated plane last week,
the late-night vigils in Leland's Capitol Hill office ended, and
the Washington practice of canonizing its own began. Leland, who
in his life had difficulty dragging colleagues away from junkets
to Paris and Bermuda to join him on trips to Appalachia, Africa,
Indian reservations and migrant camps, finally in death found
allies for his cause.
</p>
<p> Although Leland had managed to persuade the House to create
the Select Committee on Hunger and make him its chairman in
1984, famine lost its luster once the strains of We Are the
World faded and the television lights went off. There is little
money or prestige in hunger. Leland earned $22,650 in
special-interest speech-giving fees in 1988; Illinois
Congressman Dan Rostenkowski, chairman of the tax-writing Ways
and Means Committee, earns nearly ten times as much as that.
Laying guilt trips on colleagues until they provided $800
million for starving Africans during the sub-Saharan famine in
1985 did not ease Leland's entry into the insider's club. When
he spent a night with Washington's homeless in the winter of
1987, it was criticized as a publicity stunt.
</p>
<p> Leland's successes came in part because he was hard not to
like, and he would not give up. The dashiki he wore in the
Texas legislature gave way to Armani suits, the clenched fist
to working within the system. After persuading New Jersey
Republican Congresswoman Margaret Roukema to join him on a trip
to Africa in 1984, Leland got in to see Ronald Reagan, who then
agreed to support more foreign food aid and order ships loaded
with grain to head for Ethiopia. Leland leaves his wife Alison,
who is two months pregnant, a son -- and a world less hungry
than it would have been without him.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>