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- NATION, Page 27American NotesRIGHTSA Chairman's Odd Antics
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- Before Ronald Reagan assumed the presidency, the U.S. Civil
- Rights Commission was a strong ally in the movement for racial
- equality. But under Reagan, the panel became more of a bystander.
- Now high hopes for the commission's revival under George Bush are
- in danger of being undermined by the antics of its chairman,
- William Barclay Allen. He refuses to resign despite broad hints
- from the White House that he should step aside.
-
- In February, Allen and a former commission psychologist,
- accompanied by a TV crew, visited an Arizona Indian reservation to
- interview a 14-year-old Apache girl, the subject of a custody
- battle between her natural mother and the white couple who had
- adopted her. Allen contends that the girl wants to leave the
- reservation, though the mother has formal custody. The commissioner
- and the psychologist picked the girl up for the interview on her
- way home from school. Although they then took her to her mother,
- the mother filed a kidnaping charge against Allen. He was arrested
- by local police and detained for five hours.
-
- After word leaked that Bush wanted to replace Allen with Arthur
- Fletcher, a moderate black Republican, Allen said he intended to
- complete his term, which ends in 1992.