Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 April 1964 — Page 2

Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER

April 11, 1964

Malcolm X

Continued from Page 1

tacked him because “he is afraid of what I am going to say.” Philbert X claimed that his blood-brother, who was suspended by Muslim Messenger Elijah Muhammad for refusing to obey an order to remain silent on the slaying of President John F. Kennedy, is leading the so-called Negro down a path of violence. MALCOLM has advocated the use of arms, if necessary, for self defense in the civil rights struggle. Philbert X is minister for Muslim mosques in Grand Rapids, Flint, Lansing and Muskegon, Mich. He pictured Malcolm as a “Judas” who had betrayed his teacher, Elijah Muhammad. Muhammad allegedly suspended Malcolm for 90 days after the "rebel Muslim” had described President Kennedy’s death as a case of "th chickens coming home to roost.”

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Stote Housing Conference Set April 11 Local realtist will host a state housing conference of the National Association of Real Estate Brokers, Inc., Saturday, April 11. The conference will open at 12 Noon with a luncheon at which city councilman Rufus C. Kuykendall will install members of the Central City Real Estate Board (CCREB). Speaking at the luncheon will be Atty. Richard G. Hatcher, president of the Gary, Ind., city council; and Atty. Henry J. Richardson Jr., member at large of the Indiana Real Estate Commission and legal Council for the CCREB. Workshops will be conducted in the following areas: FHA and VA Programs and Procedures with DeHart Hubbard of the FHA Regional staff and staff from FHA and VA of Indianapolis. Mortgage Financing and Processing by Advance Mortgage Company with Union Title and Lawyers Title Companys. Appraising Profession by Theodore Barnes, president of the National Society of Real Estate Appraisers.. Public Relations by James C. Cummings, manager of Barrington. Small Business Administration and Local Government Agencies in Housing with A. W. Hamilton, Zoning Board member; and Grant W. Hawkins, member of the Metropolitan Plan Commission and the Board of Works.

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Clay Discloses $100,000 Egyptian Offer LOUISVILLE — (ANP) — Cassius (Muhammad Ali) Clay, couldn't pass the Army’s aptitude test recently, is seriously considering a $100,000 made to him by the Egyptian Government to teach sports in that country, the “Lip” disclosed last week. According to newspaper reports, Clay, 22, stated that the offer was made by the Egyptian Government, which had promised to build a sports center in his name in Cairo. Clay, who won the world heavyweight champion on Feb. 25 on a seventh-round technical knockout over Sonny Liston, is slated to leave soon on a tour of Africa and parts of Asia. Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, Inter-Continental Promotions, Inc., the promotional corporation set up for the dethroned Listort, is reportedly set for reorganization. The corporation came under the fire of the Senate antitrust and monopoly subcommittee in Washington recently following the disclosure that Clay is committed by contract to make his first defense under the firm’s promotion. As ICP now stands, Liston owns 22 1 /6 per cent of the assets; the Nilon brothers, 45 per cent; Sam Margolis, a Philadelphia vendor and “friend” of Liston, 22 ^ per cent, and Atty. Garland D. Cherry and Salvat#re J. Avena, five per cent each.

THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER Published Weekly by the GEORGE P. STEWART PRINTING COMPANY, INC. Main Office, 518 Indiana Ave. Indianapolis, Indiana Entered at the Post Office, Indianapolis, Indiana, as second-class matter under the Act of March 7, 1870. National Advertising Representative Interstate Tnited Newspapers, Inc., 545 Fifth Avenue. New York, N. Y. Member: Audit Bureau of Circulation. National Newspaper Publishers Association. Hoosier State Press Association. Unsolicited Manuscripts, pictures and cuts will not be returned unless accompanied by postage to cover same. 6 Mos. 1 Yr. City 13.00 4.00 Indiana - 3.25 4.50 Elsewhere 3.50 5.00

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C. D. Walker Named Prexy Of AEAI

Charles p. Walker, director of evening division at Crispus Attucks High School, is scheduled Friday to assume the presidency of the Adult Education Association of Indiana from the outgoing president, Dr. Mason Atwood, Indiana University, Bloomington. Walker’s assumption of the post will highligh the organization’s annual meeting at the Indiana University Medical Center. • The program will include an ^ evening session Friday, followed by a day program Saturday. “What’s New In Adult Education” will be the theme. Composed of adult educators in Indiana, including school, church, library, labor and other workers in the Adult Education field, the organization has a membership of 150. Walker has been a memoer for eight years of this organization which is affiliated with the Adult Education Association of the USA. State offices are maintained at Indiana State College, Terre Haute. Participants in the meeting will include Paul W. Wetzel, directcV of adult education for Indianapolis Public Schools; Kay Thompson, executive secretary of the Terre Haute Council of Churches; Dwight Morris, professor of adult education, Indiana University; W. A. Williams, director of the Division of Vocational Education, State Department of Public Instruction, and Dr. William Jones, I. U. Medical Center. Also Robert McClarren, state librarian; Rev. John D. Castle, Indianapolis; Dr. Lee Henney, director of literarcy education, Pendleton Reformatory; Hershel Thomas, director of education, Pendleton Reformatory; Rudolph Wilson, teacher, Crispus Attucks High School Evening Division, and Margaret Warner, State Board of Health, Ft. Wayne. OTHERS INCLUDE Dr. Joseph Taylor, I.U., Indianapolis Center, and Dr. Robert Smith, assistant professor of adult education, Indiana Uni-

versity.

Walker and W’arren Hass, vice-principal of Arsenal Technical High School, are in charge of local arrangements.

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SAVED FROM BLAZE: Pictured obove are the three children who were saved from their flaming home, 2452 Sheldon, last Friday by a 23-year-old Eastside woman, Mrs. Ruth Thomas, 1927 Broadway. The children are (left to right) Jeffery, 11/2, Pamela, 8 months, and Janet Davis, 5. They are the children of Mrs. Maxine Davis, who was not home at the time of the fire. (Recorder photo by Jim Burres).

Didn't Send

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NAACP Aims

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in employment, and apprentice^ f ship training” Saturday in the Chateau Room of the Claypool 1 Hotel. Dallas Sells, president of the | Indiana AFL-CIO, and Curtis Strong, labor chairman of the Indiana State Conference of NAACP Branches, will play prominent roles in the session. Nathaniel Lee, president of the Ohio State NAACP, will preside over the meeting. More than 2,000 are expected I to attend the leadership training conferences as the Midwest Region covers Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan, Wisconsin, and West Virginia. The Freedom Fund Dinner and the Freedom Ball immed- | lately following Saturday night | in the Indiana Roof are open to the public. Reservations are accepted through ME. 5-4690. “Winning Freedom in 1964” is the theme of the conference which will feature workshops and seminars led by representatives of the national NAACP of-

fice.

A state by state report of progress in civil rights in the Midwest will be made the afternoon of opening day, the various state presidents reporting. Andrew W. Ramsey, Indianapolis teacher, is president of Indiana branches. Mrs. Virgia Davis is president of the Indianapolis branch, host to the conference. Clarence Mitchell, director of the Washington, DC. bureau for NAACP, will address the conference Friday on the role Of the NAACP in the 1964 elections. The organization’s chief lobbyist, Mr. Mitchell will report on the civil rights bill now before Congress. Calvin Banks, director of registration and voting, will instruct the delegates in the latest techniques to be used in the conduct of registration and voting drives. Charles P. Lucas, of Cleveland, O., will direct a discussion concerned with lobbying for state and municipal legislation. “The Church, the Synagogue, and Crisis in Civil Rights” will be the subject of an address Friday afternoon by Rev. Edward J. Odom, church secretary of the NAACP. Rabbi Maurice Davis, Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation, and Rev. W. J. Hodge, president of the Kentucky ’NAACP, will also take

part.

Mayor John Barton will extend greetings from the city of Indianapolis during the opening

cp^inn

Robert L. Carter, General Counsel for the NAACP, will conduct a workshop concerned with “Social and Legal Aspects of Various Community Problems Facing the NAACP” Friday eve-

ning.

Governor Matthew Welsh will give welcoming remarks. The Willis Kirk Band will provide music for the Freedom Fund Ball which will follow the

Dinner.

Robert L. Williams is chairman of the Midwest conference planning committee.

military career, which spanned three wars, MacArthur none the less had some definite ideas about the place of the black man in world affairs, especially as they concerned the military. In 1945, when he was in Dutch New Guineas, he told reporters questioning him about his views on segregation in the armed forces and the part Negroes played in the theatre of war, MacArthur declared: “RACE HAS NOTHING whatsoever to do with a man’s ability to fight. Any man who says that another man’s fighting ability can be measured by

color is wrong.

“I learned that in serving as a junior officer with the famous 25th regiment. One of the greatest armies I have ever commanded was a Filipino one.” His remarks were prdvoked by the persistent rumors which had been aimed at discrediting the combat performance of the all Negro 93rd Infantry Division. Five years later, MacArthur added a significant postscript to his remarks, by asking: “I have one criticism of Negro troops who fought under my command during the Korean War. They didn't send me en-

ough of them.”

In this instance the “old soldier,” was airing his blobal racial philosophy and defending his position on racial integration versus segregation in his Far East Command. “Far from being an advocate of white supremacy,” he said. “I know and understand and sympathize with the aspirations and needs of colored peoples throughout the world - -

perhaps more so than any living American. “The people of Asia found their opportunity in the war (World War II) to throw off the shackles of colonialism and now see the dawn of a new opportunity. “I did not create Negro units in the U.S. armed forces. They were created in Washington and sent to me as already organized Jim Crow units. “I did not ask for men by race. I did not ask for Negro or white men. I asked . . . ‘for men.’ “As for replacements from the U.S. coming into my command, they could go into any Army unit, and did, where needed. I don’t believe that any theatre commander in American war history accepted and integrated the number of troops that I did.” POINTING OUT that he had l “always measured men and units entirely on a basis of character and efficiency,” the general added: “A soldier has been a soldier all on a basis of equality. I have always practiced it.” Of the character and quality of service of the Negro troops under his command, he said: “Their service has been magnificent; their patience, their fortitude, their courage and their complete devotion to their country marked them as belonging to the nation’s noblest citi-

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Eartha Kill Divorced From White Husband

SANTA MONICA, Cal. — The four-year marriage of sultry songstress and actress Eartha Kitt and white realtor William McDonald ended here last week in revealing court proceedings. Judge Allen Lynch granted the divorce and in addition ordered McDonald to pay $100 per month support for the couple’s two-year-old daughter,

Kit.

Straining to hold her composure, the star told Judge Lynch that whenever she returned to their Beverly Hills home, her spouse would accuse her of carrying on torrid affairs during

her singing tours abroad.

When asked the basis for his accusations, Miss Kitt said that McDonald would always reply that he had been informed

in letters he received.

“The Kitten” testified that when she asked McDonald to show her the letters, he declared that he had burned them up because they contained “so

much filth.

tested and after bearing the judge’s decision Miss Kitt broke into tears. The split with her mate marked the third mixed marriage of show business personalities that have ended in divorce during the last 18 months. Miss Kitt was preceded by *♦*■ tractive Dorothy Dandridge and another singer, pretty Diahann Carroll. Dorothy Dandridge’s split up with Jack Dennison came in November, 1962, about six months before she declared bankruptcy. The divorce reputedly came after Dennison understood that his wife could no longer support him “in the style he had been accustomed to.” Miss Carroll and Monte Kay, music publisher enjoyed matrimony for 10 years. Their rift followed reports that the singer was carrying on an affair with actor Sidney Poitier.

McCovey's Bat Is Best: Scout

MESA, Ariz. (ANP)—“Willie Mays is the great all-around s'lir who can do everything aad Orlando Cepeda is a dangerous hitter, too. But when it comes

a«_u twiw *° s ^ eer power you have to

“I never committed adultery ta ^ e ^ c C° ve y-

That was Hank Sauer, the

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ried, she declared during testi- 1 San Francisco Giants scout, exm ®” y - _ , , . tolling the power hitting of left

McDonald s behavior left her fielder Willie McCovey, the Na-

a “nervous wreck,” she added. 1 tional League’s homerun co-

The divorce suit was uncon- champion last year.

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