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In a statement released on its Web site Thursday afternoon, the club called the allegations of racial discrimination "completely untrue" and claimed overcrowding from more than one outside camp was the problem. The club said it "deplores discrimination." Amy Goldman said she's been a member of the club for two years. She said the pool wasn't particularly crowded and the children from Creative Steps were "well-behaved and respectful." She said there had been black members at the club in the past, though she couldn't remember seeing any this year. The club appeared closed Thursday afternoon, and the guard station at the entrance was unattended. About two dozen protesters, most of them white, held signs in front of the club's locked gates and chanted slogans including, "Jim Crow swims here!" Wright rejected the overcrowding explanation, saying the club covers 10 acres with a "nice-sized" pool and a separate pool for younger children. The board, she said, knew that her group included 65 children, and none of them had misbehaved. Wright said that the children were upset and that she was looking for a psychologist to speak to them. Some children have asked her whether they are "too dark" to swim in the pool, she said. Day camp member Araceli Carvalho, 9, said she was upset when told she wouldn't be allowed to return. "I said, 'That's not right,'" she said. But when asked if she wants to return now, she said, "I don't want to swim here anymore." Wright said Girard College, a boarding school for poor children in first through 12th grades, has offered to host the camp children for the summer.
[Associated
Press;
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