Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1964 — Page 2

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Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER

June 6, 1964

Central Baptist Theological Ohio Mother Scholarships

Seminary Commencement set

Continued from ragfp 1

REV. N. SAMUEL JONES . . . Commencement Speaker Rev. N. Samuel Jones, director and arbiter of Christian Education of the National Baptist Sunday School and Baptist Training Union Congress, will be principal speaker during commencement exercises June 9 for the Central Baptist Theological Seminary. The exercise will be held at 8 p in., at Mt. Paran Baptist Church. 070 W. 12th. where Dr. C. Henry Bell is pastor. Dr. F. Benjamin Davis, pres-ident-dean of the seminary, will officiate. The program will begin with a professional led by choirs of Mt. Paran. New Liberty, and Greater Gethsemane Baptist Churches. A congregation hymn and the invocation bv Rev. Stacy R. L. J-hield of Campbellsville. Ky., will follow the procession. Next will come the anthem, ‘ Let Us Pray for Peace,” by F. Francis McLaughlin and the Mt. Paran Young Adult Choir under

the direction of Mrs. Blossom Jones.. . The scripture reading will be conducted by Rev. Ulysses Wilson, followed by selections by the New Liberty Baptist Church choir and an address by Rev. Bernard L. White. The remainder of the program will feature selections bv tho fireater Gethsemane Baptist Choir and combined choirs, and an address by Rev. F. K. Dillard. The principal speaker, p »stor oi Ebenezer Baptist Church of Nashville, Tenn., will address the graduates on the subject: “The Challenge of Christian Education in a Changing Social Order.” Rev. Jones is editor in chief of Sunday School Publications for the National Baptist Publication Board and acting director. He is also chairman of the Enrollment Committee of the National Baptist Convention of America and is the publication board’s voting representative in affiliation with the National Council of Churches of Christ, USA. Awarding ol degrees and diplomas will be conducted by Dr. Bell, chairman of trustees, and Dr. R. IT. Faulkner, diree-♦or-dean of the Ft. WayneMarion Extension. Candidates for degrees and diplomas are as follows: Rev. Frank K. Dillard, Rev. Walter E. Starks and Rev. Bernerd L. White Sr., all candidates for Bachelor of Religious Education; Robert R. Carpenter, James Otis Horton, William Stewart and Zerah Sweeney, candidates for Bachelor of Distinguished Service; James W. Bledsoe, James L. Hall and Jesse White, all of Ft. Wayne, candidates for diplomas in Christian Theology.

at General Electric, remarked. Despite the excitement generated by the quadruplts’ birth, he managed to maintain an air '-f relative calm. Doctors in attendance, however, were awed by the rare possibility of such a birth. Medical experts say the chances of getting four of a kind are about one in 17 million. The chances of quadruplets are about one in everv 705,000 births. All the other Mincey children, four boys and one girl, were single births. Mr. Mincey said on his side of the family^ his uncle and an aunt have triplets and twins. He said his wife has twin sisters. The main problem to solve now, according to the father, is space. The family is buying a five-room house now in Hollydale but Mr. Mincey said he needs at least a four-bedroom

house now.

“This has really taken me by surprise and I need help. When a family jumps from five children to nine overnight there are a lot of financial considerations to be thought about. I hope I get help because I really need

it.” he said.

Capt. Glenn Seiler of the Salvation Army, supervisor of Catherine Booth Hospital where the quads were born, said that all four of the boys were in

fine shape.

Dr. Reuben Richardson, who attended the rare event, said they all came out squealing. All four weighed in around the three pound mark-three pounds 14 ounces; three pounds. 12 12 ounces; three pounds, five ounces and three pounds.

Continued from Page 1 Grant was awarded to Jacque-

line Brown.

Numerous scholarships for study in beauty culture were presented. Among winners were Patricia England, $100, Barlow’s Beauty College; Delores Glenn, full course at Poro Beauty and Barber College; Janice Knight, $125, Barlow’s; Sylvia Milliken, $300, Madame C. J. Walker College of Beauty Culture, and Sharon -j no van, $25, Barlow’s. Also Ora Tinsley, $300, Poro, and Barbara Williams, $150 Walker Beauty College. Onehundred dollar presentations from the Machine Accountants Training went also to William Squires and Patricia Grier.

1

in

PARADE VIEWERS: An estimated 350,000 persons viewed the "500" Festival Parade last Thursday in downtown Indianapolis and among them were these smiling peepe. In left photo are Mr. and Mrs. Leo Higgins, who are discussing the parade as their son, David, disposes of a box of popcorn. In center photo On European goodwill tour . . .

Mrs. Fairrer, 2921 N. Park, captures highlights of the event on film, while in third photo Mr. and Mrs. Emerson R. Wayne, 1427 W. 33rd, and their son Jeffrey pose for the photography. (Recorder photos by Jim Burres)

ISAC Pickets Supermarket owner to describe

race relations in Northern USA

Continued from Page 1

PATRONIZE RECORDER ADVERTISERS

T' v

DR. JOSEPH E. KERNEL OPTOMETRIST Traction Terminal Building 104 NORTH ILLINOIS STREET ME. 5-3568

AT MR. B's: The Dove Baker and Willis Kirk quartet will open ot Mr.B's Pomp Room, 825 W. 30th, with a spec'al matinee Monday from 4 till 7, then nitely from 9 till 2.

mittees appointed to cover up the sick situation. Boy is tired of the run-around. Boy is tired of phony publicity releases and phony statistics, but more important, Boy is tired of being called boy and treated like a boy oy tb° Navy. “We are not boys, we are men. We are human beings and like all others, are made in the image of God. All we ask is *hat we be treated as citizens and given an opportunity to compete on our own merits.” Rev. Brown admitted that there were a few Negroes in good positions, but said they

were “tokens.”

Spreen said that the facility employed 17 percent professional engineers and 32 percent ikilltci technicians and that there has been a problem of iinding qualified Negroes. He said that a biracial committee was formed several months ago to review the equal employment program and is still

in existence.

THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER Puolished Weekly by the - OEORGE P. STEWART Pi.INTlNG COMPANY, INC. Main Office, ."IS Indiai a A\e. Indianapolis, Indiana Entered at th * Post Office, Indianapolis, Indiana, as second-class matter under the Act of March 7, 1870. National Advertising Retire--entative Intersta'e Pnited Newspapers, Inc., 545 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. Member: Audit Fureau of Oircuation. National Newspaper I’uhishe;s Association. Hoosier S ate Press Association. Cnsolieited Manuscripts. pictures ami cuts will not he returntyl unless accompanied by postage to -over same. f. Mos. 1 Yr Mty --- $:?.00 4.00 ndiana — 3.25 4.50 Olsewhere - 3.50 h 00 ~

BY A STAFF REPORTER As a part of the “Goodwill People-to-Peonle Travel Program,” initiated under the administration of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a local businep.man will tour behind the iron curtain this month in an effort “to improvt this nation’s race relations image.” Zalton Wcisz, ’ president of the Seven to Eleven Supermarket chain, will leave June 11 for Europe, where he will personally undertake the task of telling of how much better treatment Negroes receive ii. the North as compared to the South. Weisz, a native of Hungary, will join other members of the Mid-West Food Retailers, Processors and Distributors on the tour, which will end July 3. Commenting on the tour, Weisz, who has lived in this count iy 13 years, said that

many people behind the iron curtain see newsreels of racial turmoil in the South and think all America is bad. “They see only the bad,” said Weisz. “When I was in Hungary last year a lot of people asked me why 20,000,000 people in America were treated so cruelly because of the color of their skin. “When I told them about Indiana and particularly about my business here in Indianapolis, they were really sur-

prised.”

He said they were even more* surprised when he told them that of the 200 persons employed by his firm, the majority of them were Negroes, and that two Negroes were in man-

agerial positions.

“This is the side of America that many ox them have never ceen or heard of,” Weisz said. ‘The reason I want to go is to i how them that all is not bad and that we're making

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Y-Teens to gather for annual meet

Y-Teens from throughout Indiana will meet June 14 for their annual summer conference at Oakwood Park, Lake Wawasee, Ihd. Attending from Indianapolis are Misse; Kay Record and Phyllis Wyrick, youth program director; Jocelyn Tandy and $herry Sayles, Arsenal Technical; Brenda Herring, Crispus Attuck-^; Beverly Whitehurst

and Kathleen Knedsen, Indiana School lor the Blind; Mary L>naw and Jan Parrot, Emmer. cn M inuel, and Cathy Clark ai. d Linda Blakemore, Short-

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“Key to the Future” is the theme ox the leadership eonte.ence emphasizing development of new skills and leadership to help strengthen each individual club.

progress every year. Weisz stated he had had photographs taken of his employees and work and would show them while on the tour. The chain store president stated that he and several other Indiana food industry representatives will join representatives from Ohio, Illinois, Michigan and Kentucky in New York City, From there they will meet with industry leaders in London, Brussels, Scotland, Moscow, East and West Berlin, and Budapest, Hungary, and in oth- ! er parts of Germany and Rus- |

sia.

Leader and host for the tour , will be Professor Eric C. Oe- j sterle ox Purdue University’s, Agriculture Economics Depart- i ment. The purpose of the mission, j as stated in an invitation to i Weisz from People-to-People, | Inc., is “dedicated to improving relations and understanding be- J tween America and the people I of Eastern and Western Europe.” The miu^.’un Is not restricted to tourism, according to the invitation, and “offers every American the opportunity to express his belief in, and sell ‘Democracy,’ to combat Communist propaganda pertaining ! to tne United states and to tell i tne most important story of ‘free enterprise’ and ‘the American wav ox life.’ ” The People-to-People program was formally established | in November of 1981 as a nonprofit, non-governmental, non- , political organization of private i citizens. Former President Eisenhower accepted chairmanship of the board ox trustees. .

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