Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1960 — Page 2
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2—The Indianapolis Recorder, Aug. 20,1960
Democrats Failed To Enchance Image NAACP Leader Says NEW YORK—Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the NAACP, said this - week that the Democrats have not enhanced their image among Negroes by tabling the civil rights bill in the Senate. He charged that “any technique should be used to get some civil rights action in this session of
Congress.” Sen. John P. Kennedy, the Democratic presidential nominee, has said that other essential measures would have been sacrificed had the civil rights legislation not been tabled. In Washington, 20 lunch counter sit-in demonstrators picketed the White House to urge enactment of a new civil rights law before the November election. — REGISTER TO VOTE —-
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GOP Aide Scores Performance On 'Rights’ of Demos “If the Democratic performance in civil rights is a guide, ihe Democrats should tear up vheir 1960 platform and confess that it is a meaningless document,” according to VaJ J. Washington, director of the Minorities Division of the Republican National Committee. “The Democrats promised the moon on civil rights and Lhen came back to Washington and voted as a party against civil rights, with their national nominees leading the attack/’ Washington said this week in a statement. “Led by the Junior Senator fro mMassachusetts and his sec-ond-place running mate, the Democrats have down-graded civil rights to the status of second-class legislation “Jack Kennedy made this clear when he said his party killed the civil rights bill so that it would not get in the way of more important legislation. “Republicans believe civil rights legislation has first priority and their Senate performance proves it. “The comparison between Democratic words and Democratic deeds was sharply drawn in this week’s Senate action, and in Kennedy’s personal part in the operation. “On Monday the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights asked both parties for an “August dow npayment on civil rights promises. Kennedy responded: T stand ready now, as I have in the past, to vote for all these measures “On Tuesday, the very next day, Kennedy eagerly led his colleagues in voting against civil rights 1 doubt if the Leadership Conference will trust Kennedy’s promises again. “A 180-degree turn on an issue v/ithin 24 horn's is difficult, but the Junior Senator from Massachusetts managed it “Kennedy talks a lot on civil rights but the words axe meaningless. “Earlier this year. Kennedy missed 32 important roll call votes on civil rights. “And in 1957, he voted to send the GOP civil ights bill to a gasr chamber death in the Eastland Judiciary Committee. “The complete futility of the Democratic platform promises on civil rights was well illustrated Tuesday when Sen. Olin D Johnson of South Carolina said that iouthemers were not committed to the plank, that the Southern delegates to Los Angeles never approved it “What is a party plank worth if one-third of the party’s membership opposes the plank ” — REGISTER TO VOTE-— 6-Year-Old Is State's First Polio Victim Bruce V. Haskins, six-year-old, 2249 Hovey, died recently of bulbar patralytic p lio. The lad became Indiana’s first polio victim tnis year. He had not been vacinated. Bruce’s death was one of four new cases reported in the last week Marion County now has recorded 10 cases of polio this year 96 compared to 14 this time last year. ~CAPTLRfc THAT ftOMENT! Those special occasions— parties, family gatherings, special programs, guests, etc.— are but fleeting moments for most of us. But they can be captured by the camera forever. The Recorder has four photographers leady to serve you, night or day. Call ME. 4-1545 an£ ask for Mra Terook*
Kennedy Hopes In Backing of Baptist Group WASHINGTON, D. G — John F. Kennedy, the Democratic presidential romlnee, this week hoped to wan the backing of the president of the nation’s largest group; of Negro Baptist ministers. Kennedy scheduled u meeting I with Dr. Joseph H, Jackson of Chieego, president of ihe National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc., whose combined congregations total more than :ive nillion. A Kennedy aide said that he doubted if the Baptist minister wodld • endor se Kennedy at this time because Jackson has “Republican leanings’’ However, the spokesman said Jackson was “very impressed” with Gov. Edmund G. Brown of California when the ministers held their convention in Los
Angeles. j
Brown, who like Kennedy is a Roman Catholic, was said to have made a “very strong appearance’’ before the group of Protestant
clergymen
— REGISTER TO VOT^ —
Suicide
Continued n*om rage
AMBASSADOR TO SPEAK HERE: United States Ambassador William M. Q. Halm from Ghana, Africa will be guest speaker at a free public mass meeting Aug. 22 at 8:15 p. m at the Walker Theatre. Ambassador Halm will be in Indianapolis as a special guest of the Madame C. J. Walker Manufacturing Company. The local cosmetics firm celebrating it's 60th anniversary invites the citizens of Indianapolis to share in its celebration by attending this meeting. Polish Engineer Heads Dept, at Tuskegee Inst. TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE, Ala.
<ANP) — Tuskegee Institute last week hired its first white dean. He
is Dr. Z W. Dybczak, 36. a London h u leason for Marshall’s despon-
and Canadian educated engineer | dency.
who will serve as dean of the In-1 Earlier that morning. The Restitute’s school of engineering. | col der learned, Marshall, who was Born in Poland, Dr. Dybczak employed at . the Warren Hotel, began his engineering career in ! ^ ^ .* l ^ s tamhy tiiat he hadn t rader in the Ro^al Air Force in teeling well, and that he was England during World War II. After thinkin e about e om £ t0 the hospi '
leaving the service in 1946, hei ,\
b uneral
er sprawled on the floor clutching the shotgun. Blood was gushing from the gaping wound in his
head.
Weathers died in the ambulance enroute to General Hospital. The brother told a Recorder reporter that Marshall, a former mental patient, had been released about a year and a half ago but still received periodic treatment. "We'd noticed he had been despondent for the past several days, Marshall related, but we never expected him to take his life.” ’Ihe brother also said heii Knew of
Night School Teacher Staff Announced
Dr. Charles D. Walker, Director of the Crispus Attucks High School Evening School ivision announced this week the tentative staff assignments for the year 1960-61, registration for which will be held at the sch ol on September 6, 7, 8, 12 and 13 The tentative staff appointments for the evening school includes: Mrs. Alice Payne, librarian; Miss Barbara Crowdus, R. N.; Cramon Myers, business education; Mrs. Ethel Banister, pre-high school; Chester Mullens, machine shop; Mrs. Mary Oglesby, physical education; Mrs. Louise Ridley, mathematics and the new assignments. Others on the statt are: Mrs. Marjorie Ranker, Nathaniel Scott, Mrs. Elnor Tillsn,, Augustus Hamilton, Annes Patton and Edith Hughes in business education, Rudolph Wilson. Claence Baker, Arthur Taylor, Mattie Johnson and Mrs. Agnes Chapman, English. Mrs. Natalie Woods, Mrs. Ruth Malone and Mrs. Josephine Holder in Clothing and Dressmaking. Clifton Conn, John Kenison, Vivian
Union Baptists (ContLioec from rage 1) journey back to Indianapolis will begin at seven o’clock in the evening. Everyone is invited to come and enjoy the day, however, you must bring your own picnic basket. Free refreshments will be served by the Association. Interested persons or groups may call the chairman, Rev. F. Jefferson. The phone number is WAlnut 3-7464, and the mailing address is 2184 N. Capitol.
Jones, Julian Coleman, George Roddy, Emmett Lunsford and Herbert Thompson in Vocation and Industrial Arts aind Andrew Ramsey in Conversational Spanish. James Walker will teach mathematics and Forrest Wistman has been assigne to physical education and social studies. In the prehigh school area, James Conley, Mrs. Leona Ellis, Harold Johnson, Mrs. Flora Bates, Augustus Higgins, Mrs. Lois Willioms and Mrs. Dora S. Winston will make up the teaching staft Miss Alyce Keno will again be in charge of Art and Ceramics, and John Brooks, William Jones, Leander Parker and Joseph Myers will be science instructors. Rizelle Boyd, Julian Coleman Jr., Caries Harry, Mrs, Sara Johnson and John Moore will be in Social Science.
Reservations should be made on or before >.he Aug. 24 deadline. No reservations is necessary if you plan to drive your car, and there is no admission charge for entrance to the playground. The camp and its facilities are available for rental to any church, fraternal civic or club group. Your group will thank you for choosing this wonderful vacationland for their next outing. The Association secretary is now booking reservations for next summer and fall seasons.
Let us know... Call ME. 4-1545 We WANT your news; that's what a newspaper is for. Have you or anyone you know
HAD VISITORS? HAD A PARTY? HAD A CLUB MEETING? GRADUATED FROM SCHOOL? GOT MARRIED? HAD AN ANNIVERSARY? BEEN ILL?
BEEN VISITING? HAD A BABY? RECEIVED SOME HONOR? ENTERED SCHOOL? BEEN ENTERTAINED? SERVED A DINNER? MOVED?
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Indianapolis Recorder
So It Reaches Ut By 5 On Monday
entered the University of London where he earned thie bachelor’s degree in engineering in 1950. For two years then, he gained industrial experience in Lincoln, England and taught parttime at the Lincoln Technical College. At the University of Toronto, he began work toward the doctorate which he earned in 1959, compLet- , ing his work um!'*i two research | scholarships awarded by the Unii versity. Prior to his coming to Tuskegee, ! he was research associate wiih the I remote control division at the Arj gonne National Laboratory <U. S, Atomic Energy Commission) me ML J Chicago. ^ — REGISTER TO VOTE — Mills Resumes (Continuen r «m race I) own choosing before he can be dismissed. It further provides that the trial board be composed of disinterested persons. It was reported that of the eight members of the trial board, three of them should have disqualified themselves since they had been active in a campaign against
Mills.
The three 4 referred to were Sam Collier, president of the local; Holland Lolla, former secretarytreasurer, and David Senter. Atty. Ward maintained, at the time, that Lolla’s only right to sit on the board—assuming for the moment that he w r as indeed a disinterested person—was by virtue of his office as secretary-treas-
urer.
Shortly before the trial The Recorder learned that the local union had been mandated by the international to reinstate Charles Martin as secretary-treasurer because of some technical flaw in his ouster. Lolla, who had been elected to fill Martin’s unexpired term, allegedly refused to vacate the office and later obtained a temporary restraining order against the international union. On Jan. 29, while attending a district council meeting at the Sheradon-Lincoln Hotel, Mills was arrested on an embezzlement charge, growing out of the fact that he had not turned over January receipts to Lolla. The money, Mills’ attorney said, was on deposit on behalf of the union. On Feb. 2 Mills received official word of the trial board’s action suspending him. Mills and his attorney appeared July 9 before a panel of the executive board in Chicago where they presented He was notified of the general board’s action on Aug. 1. — REGISTER TO VOTE— A Newspaper route is good training. Help your child start a Recorder route in your neighborhood. _
services for Wimsatt |
were not definite Tlmisttay after-:
noon.
A native of Owensboro, Ky., I Wimsatt had lived in Indianapolis eight years and was employed as a eustodoian supervise*- at the j Veteran’s Administration. The survivors besides his wife j include two sens, John Thomas and ! Wayne Wimsatt; his mother, Mrs. j Ethel Smith, Owensboro; the father, Charles Wimsatt, Chicago; aj step-mother, Mrs. Marie Wimsatt, | Chicago; four brothers, James, I Charles, Walter and Arsnole Wim-i satt, and four sisters, Mrs. Betty Morton, Mrs. Mamie Wallace, Mrs. Ethel Chilton and Mrs. Marjarie rv<uuon. Services for Weathers were to be held Monday in the Peoples h uneral Home, with burial in New Crown Cemetery. ' i he sin vivors besides his moth- j er and brother include a sister, ! Miss Leota Weathers and another I br other Char les Weathers, all of 1 Indianapolis.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER Published Weekly by the GEORGE P. STEWART PRINTING COMPANY. INC. Main Office 518 Indiana Av«. Indianapolis, Indiana Svileretlr at the Post Office, Indianapolis, Indiana, as second-class matter under the Act of March 7, 1870 National Advertising Representative Interstate United Newspapers, Ino64B Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Member: Audit Bureau of Circulation, National Newspaper Publisher! Association, Hoosier State Press Association. manuscripts, pictures and cuts will not be returned unleai nassMieislii by postage to cover sains. Subscription Ratss 6 Mos. 1 Yr. City $ 3.00 4.00 Indiana ... 3.25 4.60 Elsewhere 3.50 6.00 ttnala Copy Price IBo
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