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- NATION, Page 37American NotesNORTH CAROLINAA Klan Kleanup
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- What can a hate group do to clean up its dirty image? The
- Reidsville klavern of North Carolina's Ku Klux Klan thought it had
- come up with a tidy answer: it offered to join the state's
- Adopt-a-Highway program, under which 5,000 civic and social
- organizations have agreed to keep 10,000 miles of state highways
- clear of litter. At least four times a year, the Klansmen would
- exchange their white robes for orange vests and pick up trash along
- three miles of U.S. 158, east of Reidsville. In return, a sign
- noting their good deeds would be erected along the highway.
-
- It was an offer that North Carolina's department of
- transportation found too good to accept. "The Klan is atypical of
- the groups that have been involved with the program," explained
- James Sughrue, a DOT official. No other volunteers, except a
- cub-scout pack considered too young to be on the roads, had been
- turned down for the highway-cleanup project. Rockey Chapman, head
- of the klavern, admitted he wanted "that sign to advertise my
- group." He asked the state branch of the American Civil Liberties
- Union to sue for a reversal of the rejection. The A.C.L.U. was
- expected to do so on the ground that the KKK was the victim of
- discrimination based on its "political philosophy."