U.S.-Aided Soweto School Shut
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JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — A Soweto high school funded by American companies to help South African blacks enter the business world has closed because of anti-apartheid boycotts, a U.S. business spokesman said today.
Kenneth Mason, executive director of the American Chamber of Commerce in South Africa, said he hoped to negotiate with parents, students and community leaders on a future for the school that would allow it to reorganize and reopen in January. The Planned Advancement for Commercial Education school was built in 1982 with a stated goal of providing a superior education in commercial studies to enable blacks to enter middle-management corporate positions.
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