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- NATION, Page 12Late HonorsIn death, Mickey Leland won allies he rarely had in life
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.