Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1960 — Page 3

4 r-JmSMi

CREDIT UNION DIRECTORS: The board of directors of the Federal Credit Union of Persian Terrple No. 46, AEAONMS, are shown, SEATED (left to right, Matthew Craig, vice-pres.; Curtis Porter, sec'y.; Frank E. Reed, Sr., pres.; William Hill, treas. and

Henry Greer, supervisor. STANDING: (left to right) Jesse Harding, lending committee; Robert Skelton, Jr.; William H. Weaver, educational chairman; Otis Willingham, lending committee and Henry Keene.

Persian Temple (No. 46) Establishes Federally Insured’' Credit Union

Chartrrcd and supervised by the federal government through the Bureau of Federal Credit Unions, the Persian Temple (No. • Hi > Federal Credit Union was established in February of this year. The corporation is a cooperative association organized to promote thrift among its members and to accumulate a fund through savings to make needed loans to members, for useful purposes at reasonable rates. All investments of the Persian Temple Federal Credit Union are insured 100 percent against loss,

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and deposits received by the organization are insured 100 percent against loss. All loans are insured against permanent disability or death of the borrower. MEMBERSHIP in a federal credit union is limited to persons having a common bomd of association or occupation, and to groups within well-defined neighborhoods, communities, etc. Shares of stock in the Persian Temple organization ars available to members of Persian Temple, their immediate families and members of local Masonic lodges affiliated with the Persian Temple. ! Savings by members are made in the form of shares purchased at the nominal sum of $5, or otherv/ise with deposits by members of the organization. The corporation will make loans to members | out of funds accumulated from | these savings The board of diFor Your Next Printing: Order Call ME. 4-1045. Open Until » f.y

Owner Arrested

ConTinaea. rrom mure i business rather than serve Negroes. “When I kept insisting that we be served,” Rev. Kipfer related, “we were told that the restaurant was closing, and the door was locked. “We finally left the establishment.” the minister continued, “and recalling that we had been discussing just such problems at our institute meetings, we decided to file an affidavit with the prosecutor’s office against the proprietors.” Bayt said after the complaint was made his investigator, Sgt. John Farrell, found that the situation actually existed, and the ministers were called to sign the affidavit. Mrs. Bonham was arrested and charged with violating the state’s Public Accommodations Law. She was released on her own recognisance, pending the hearing July 28.

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rectors fixes the lower or higher limits of loans in keeping with the laws regulating oporatiou of such . organizations. Repayments of loans are made weekly, semimonthly, or monthly, or according to any other agreed-upon schedules fixed by the board of di ertors. Applications for loans are passed upon by a credit committee elected by the directors or members of the Union. Members of the board of directors of Persian Temple (No. 46) Federal Credit Union arc Clarence C. Smith, Otis Willingham, Van Wert Mullin, Henry Greer, Mercer Mance, Robert Skelton Jr., Jesse Hording, Howard W. Weaver, Henry C. Carpenter and Patrick E. Chavis Jr. All members of the board of directors are bonded. t rank E. Reed is president of the corporation. Other officers include: Matthew Craig, vice president; William Hill, treasurer and Curtis Poiter, secretary. The officers are all members of the board of directors. ALL FEDERAL Credit unions ! are supervised and periodically | examined by the Bureau of Federal Ci edit Unions. Funds of the organization are deposited in batiks designated by the board of dii rectors, the deposits of which I must be insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Willie Barmor.e Services for Willie Barmore, 28, were held July 6 in Jacobs Brothers West Side Chapel, with burial in New Crown Cemetery. 1 He died July 2 in General Hos- | Pital. ^ Born in Pinson, Tenn., Mr. Barmore. 941 N. Sheffield, had lived in Indianapolis 14 years. He was a self-employed tailor and a veteran of World War 11. He had been a member of Cold Spring Baptist Church at Henderson, Tenn. Survivors include two brothers, Theodore Barmore, Indianapolis, | and Albert Barmore, Huntington, Tenn.. and four sisters, Mrs. Mary A. Camn. Mrs. Susie Davis and Mrs. Sadie L. Jackson, all of Indianapolis. and Mrs. Hazel Wayne, East St. Louis, 111.

Minnie Norris Is Delegate to 98th NEA Convention Mrs. Minnie C. Norris, 3rdgrade teacher at School No. 6, is the official Indianapolis delegate at the 98th annual convention of the National Education Association, meeting in Los Angeles. More than 15,000 teachers and educators are attending this weeklong meeting whose theme is “A United Profession Enhances Quality in Education.” Senator John Sherman (R-Ky.), Miss Pauline Frederick, U.N. correspondent for the National Broadcasting Co.; U.S. Commissioner of Education Lawrence G. Derthick; movie star Jeff Chandler, and Mrs. Rollin Brown, chairman of the recent White House Conference on Children and Youth, head a list of speakers scheduled to address the convention. Among the resolutions being considered for adoption by the group are lowering of the voting age to 18, affirmation of the rights of teachers to take part in political activities and a strong stand on federal support for edution. Mrs. Norris, a member of the Indianapolis Grade School Teachers Association, has taught in the local public school system for five years, and is at home at 1639 Kenruth.

The Indianapolis Recorder, Jtdy 9, 1960—3

GRANDMOTHERS MODEL AT FASHION SHOW TEA: These nine youthful grandmothers beam smiles for the photographer in this scene at the Garden Tea and Fashion Show held June 26 at the Walker Casino. All the ladies were gue'it models of the Les Grandmeres Club, sponsor of the affair. Out-ofrtown guests for the afternoon were members of the 20t|h Century Grandmothers Club of Dayton, *0.

Proceeds from the affair were to be used to furnish the crafts room in the new Planner House recreation center. The models are (left to right) Mesdames Thelma Brown, Juanita Waters, Claude Anderson, Bessie Ford, Helen Davis, Ruby Bell, Natalie Powell and Mattie Davis. Mrs. Mae Johnson is founder and president of the Les Grandmeres Club. (Recorder photo by Jim Burres)

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Nation on Brink of Racial Explosion, Says Dixie Newsman NEW YORK—The United States is on the verge of a major racial catastrophe similar to the violence and bloodshed that erupted in South Africa recfntly, a Southern journalist warned recently. .Writing in the current issue of 1 ook Magazine, George E. McMiPan declared that “sit-down” pratests by young Southern Negroes “may hold the fuse that ignites the explosion ” BcMillan, a resident of Aikem, S. C., said he was “astonished” during a recent trip through the South at “how rigidly and inflexibly the sides have lined up in the racial strug- ; gl'O ” “The most frightening thing now,” he wrote, “is the air of resignation with which Southerners of both races view the inevitability of violence. It is not so much that anybody wants violence as it is that nobody sees any alternative to it.” “SOUTHERN NEGROES,” McMillan noted, “are infused with a j new determination and are ready i to risk violence to get some of the gains they believe are due them.” “The middle class whites,” he added, “seem help'essly commatted to violence. They’ve said so j long there’ll be trouble if the old balance between the races is ! disturbed, that they now find themselves almost counting on trouble as a solution to their problem," he said in the Look article. To ^recent violence, McMillan predicted that somebody outtfde of the South will have to intervene and that “that inlerventioin v/ill almost certainly have to come from the Federal Government.”

Committee Organized To Urge Repeal Of Right to Work Law Rev. Clinton M. Marsh, pastor of Witherspoon United Presbyterian Church, and one of Indianapolis’ leading: ministers, ia a member of a new citizens’ committee, organized for the purpose of seeking repeal of Indiana’s “Right-to-Work” Law. The organization is the Indiana Council for Industrial Peace. Lynville G. Miles, Indianapolis attorney, is committee chairman. Other committee members include Rev. Raymond T. Bosler, editor of the Indiana Catholic; Alfred H. Edelson, Indianapolis businessman; Dr. Grover L. Hartman, executive director of the Indiana Council of Churches; John Raber, president of the Indiana Farmers Union; Rev. F.V.H. Carthy, direc--Ll r of social relations for the Episcopal Diocese of Indiana, and Rev. Lyman Achenbach. pastor of Oaklandon Universalist Church. The group is affiliated with the National Council for Industrial Peace in Washington, headed by Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and former Senator Herbert H. Lehman (D., N.Y.)

Governor's Aid

(Continued irwn race 1) mission’s report which- indicates that Mr. Ewing’s rejection may have been based upon the fact that he is a Negro.” However, the Civil Liberties director reasoned, “The state as an employer is quite different from a private entrepreneur. It is to be expected that employment practices of state agencies should be exemplary. “If the Fair Employment Practices Commission renders a report alleging a denial of employment by some other state agency because the applicant is a Negro, then the matter becomes one for the careful attention, review and action, if needed, by the Chief Executive of the state.” MEANWHILE EWING, 29, former Earlham College star athlete who lives in Richmond, was again turned down after “reconsideration” by State Police officials. Lieut. Richard Sutton said a reexamination showed Ewing had not. lived in Indiana for a year prior to submitting his application, as required. After determining this noneligibility, the investigating officers did not probe further into Ewing’s background, Sutton said. EWING COUNTERED THAT he has maintained a continuous legal residence in his home town of Richmond, although he worked in Buffalo, N.Y., for six years. “I have always maintained my legal residence here, paid taxes and even voted by absentee ballot in local and state elections,” he declared. State law (Burns 29-4803) provides that “The place where a man’s family resides shall be considered his residence.” It adds that “A person shall not be considered to have lost his residence who leaves his home to go into another state . . . for temporary purposes merely . . Moreover, if a man works in one place but his family lives in another place, fiis legal residence is where his family resides. Although working in Buffalo, Ewing reestablished his family in Richmond in November, 1958, the w^uld-be trooper related. 'The reasons given ORIGINALLY for the rejection of Ewing, by Capt. Howard Hyslope, were all “character” reasons including such items as “frequent job changes,” “loud parties,” “domination by his wife” and the alleged conviction of his brother of a felony in 1952. These factors, it was said, outweighed Ewing’s college degree in business administration. According to Captain Hyslope, only “about three” of the 75 men who were accepted for the trooper train-

ing school are college graduates. After Ewing complained to the FEPC, an intensive investigation was made by James C. Cummings Jr., who was then a field consultant for the commission. He reported the rejection of Ewing was “not justified.” The “job changes” were those of a Negro college graduate seeking to find a suitable position, Cummings said. Two alleged “k>ud parties” were given at Ewing’s home in Richmond by his sister-in-law, while he was not at home and even his wife had nothing to do with them. At that, only one neighbor complained of being disturbed. As for the ‘Svife domination” charge—which has occasioned some smiles among married Hoosiers—Mrs. Ewing told Cummings she has never attempted to influence her husband’s decisions in matters relating to his work. THE STATE POLICE ha*e never had a Negro officer during their 25-year history. In recent years, during the administration of Superintendent Harold Zeis, The Recorder has been informed there was no color bar and this newspaper accordingly published appeals for applicants. This year 10 Negroes made application. Ewing and one other passed, but the other man was turned down because of an arrest for visiting a dive.

Sen. Kennedy to Address NAACP Rally JuJ/ 10 Senator John F? Kennedy is the first Democratic presidential candidate to accept an invitation to address the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People’s pre-ccnvention rally at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Anfeles, Sunday afternoon, July 10, According to Roy Wilkins, NAACP executive secretary. All candidates were invited to address the meeting. A similar rally is scheduled for July 24 in Chicago, 111., prior to the Republican national convention. Heftry Lee Moon is the NAACP public relations directon

Fireside Meeting to Mark 110th Anniversary of Death of Bab

Dr. Hormoz Broumana, chairman of the local spiritual assembly, will preside over the meeting Mrs. George Brawley, 4035 N. Capitol Ave., observing the 110th July 9 at the home of Mr. and anniversary death of Bab, the prophet-herald of the Baha’i faith. I Faith. This day is comparable to the Good Friday anniversary of Christ’s crucifixion. The Bab taught that “the world is one country and mankind its citizens; there is only one religion and .all prophets have taught it.” In an age of corruption, he stressed the importance of truth. Surrounded by civic and legal intrigue, Bab demanded revised laws to protect the innocent and dispense justice, and regarded the condition of Iranian women who lived in degraded seclusion as a blot on the entire country and urged education for both sexes. By his own business practice, prior to his persecution and im-

prisonment, the Bab set an example o£ scrupulous courtesy and

fairness.

Today millions of Baha’is in more than 250 countries recognize Baha’ u’llah as the return of the spirit of Christ. They accept his teachings as guidance from God for this critical period in the history of mankind.

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