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- Newsgroups: alt.support,soc.motss
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- From: hutch@ibeam.intel.com (Steve Hutchison)
- Subject: Re: One hell of a wake-up call.
- Message-ID: <C16oGH.4J2@ibeam.intel.com>
- Organization: Intel Corp., Hillsboro, Oregon
- References: <1993Jan11.153709.25733@watson.ibm.com> <1993Jan12.041804.4953@netcom.com> <C0xDLy.8xp@agora.rain.com> <1993Jan16.161334.28367@spdcc.com> <C0z22I.37q@agora.rain.com>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 03:02:40 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- bcapps@agora.rain.com (Brent Capps) writes:
-
- >dyer@spdcc.com (Steve Dyer) writes:
-
- >>In article <C0xDLy.8xp@agora.rain.com> bcapps@agora.rain.com (Brent Capps) writes:
-
- >>If this guy died from the chemicals, it's news to me. I believed he used
- >>psoralens, drugs which are used to enhance tanning and treat vitiligo.
- >>This sounds like an urban legend.
-
- >I double checked my facts. "Black Like Me" (1964) is the true story of
- >John Howard Griffin, a reporter who had himself chemically altered to
- >pass as black. According to the blurb on the back of the video box,
- >Griffin's premature death was attributable to long-term side effects of
- >the pigment-altering chemicals he used.
-
- Griffin died of melanoma contracted, they believed, as a side effect of the
- exposure to UV rays. In the book he described recieving injections of both
- a sensitizing drug and of some form of melanin. He got his initial tan in
- a tanning table used for therapy - one of the old UVA models that has since
- been shown to greatly increase risk of melanoma - and then spent two weeks
- on the beach in Jamaica while injecting himself with the drugs, or taking
- them orally. After he darkened up to a fairly dark black, he continued to
- take the melanin pills and possibly the psoralen as well, until he ran out.
-
- After a few months as a black man in the South he started to "fade" and he
- resorted to the old standby, walnut-stain skin dye, available as a treatment
- for the skin condition where pigmentation is unevenly deposited.
-
- All this from the book itself - the death by melanoma was described in an
- afterword and on the dust jacket of the book in the library in Medford, OR
- where I most recently read it.
-
- Hutch
-