The mailing includes a cover letter and enclosures. The mailing says as you know by now, South Africa's State President, F.W. de Klerk visited the White House on September 24; Mr. de Klerk is the first apartheid leader to visit Washington since this evil system was created; on the same day, we delivered over 50,000 Vote for the People campaign ballots to Congress to underline our demand that sanctions against the Pretoria regime be intensified; instead, President George Bush proclaimed at a White House ceremony that South Africa was on an "irreversible" course of dismantling apartheid. The back of the cover letter is an order form for Vote Campaign materials. The mailing includes END APARTHEID...
The mailing includes a cover letter and enclosures. The mailing says as you know by now, South Africa's State President, F.W. de Klerk visited the White House on September 24; Mr. de Klerk is the first apartheid leader to visit Washington since this evil system was created; on the same day, we delivered over 50,000 Vote for the People campaign ballots to Congress to underline our demand that sanctions against the Pretoria regime be intensified; instead, President George Bush proclaimed at a White House ceremony that South Africa was on an "irreversible" course of dismantling apartheid. The back of the cover letter is an order form for Vote Campaign materials. The mailing includes END APARTHEID Vote for the People CAMPAIGN UPDATE of August-September 1990. The mailing includes MEMO FROM DUMISANI S. KUMALO. The mailing discusses Nelson Mandela, Jennifer Davis, Boston Mayor Raymond Flynn, the U.S. Conference of Mayors, the African National Congress (ANC), Lindiwe Mabuza, Don Stillman, the United Auto Workers of America, Cyril Ramaphosa, the National Union of Mine Workers of South Africa, Mayor Kurt Schmoke, the Progressive National Baptist Convention, the American Muslim Journal, the Black Collegiate Journal, the Economic Opportunity Commission of Nassau and Suffolk Counties, KISS-FM, Mankekulo Ngcobo, the Baltimore Anti-Apartheid Coalition, Congressman William Gray, Steve Milburn, Baltimore Anti-Apartheid, Father Nomvula Ngcobo, Ebenezer AME Church; Mary Benns, Rabbi David Saperstein, Union of American Hebrew Congregations, Aubrey McCutcheon, Washington Office on Africa, Rev. Amos Brown, National Baptist Convention, the Religious Action Network, the American Committee on Africa, political prisoners, secret police, the Group Areas Act, Speaker Tom Foley, Congressional leadership, the Population Registration Act, Hartford Memorial Baptist Church, and Rev. Mangedwa Nyathi. [Note: the correct name is Mankekolo Ngcobo-Mahlangu.]