He is white. When Piper and Russel dares him to go to the East End, East end is where there are Black. Which has to mean The family is white so John is white.
white and long hair
black and yellow black and yellow...just kidding black and white
It was both but mostly white and some black people were against it because the white people would kill a black man or mabye woman if they were caught with a white man/woman
If you're white then you'd call a black person African or African-American. If you're black then you'd call a white person a white person.
white
John McNab is older than Mars bars and john McNab is white who live at the other side of the street
John McNab is older than Mars bars and john McNab is white who live at the other side of the street
yes he is
Because McNab and Mars Bar are always against Maniac. They try to make him feel bad about his skin tone (white) and because people don´t want to accept that he is better at sports than them
He feels that people are the same and that it shouldn't matter what color of skin they have. He believes that black people aren't really black they are a brown and that white people are more of a peach color.
The old man calls Maniac "whitey" at the block party in the story "Maniac Magee." This reflects racial prejudice and the old man's own perspective on Maniac's status as a white boy in a predominantly black neighborhood.
He thinks there should have not been black and white seperated
white and long hair
He wrote is because he wanted to show that there was no difference between white people and black people (racism)
it mean go home but a fishes belly is white and maniac magee is white and mars bar wrote it to maniac but mars bar is black, so that's why mars bar calls maniac fishbelly and if you read the book it said the F was scrubed away
He goes down Hector street because it devides the white and black people .
McNab's group stopped at Hector Street in the book "Maniac Magee" because it was the territorial boundary that separated the East End from the West End of the town of Two Mills. The East End was predominantly white, while the West End was primarily African American, and the two sides had a longstanding feud. The stop at Hector Street symbolized the racial tensions and divisions within the community.