Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1964 — Page 2
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THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER
NOVEMBER 14. 1964
White Writer
Continued from Page 1 lease from eounty Jail where they had been held on a speeding charge for fire hoars. Their bodies were later discovered near Philadelphia, Miss. A Mississippi grand jury, sifting evidence in the case, adjourned on Sept. 30, without issuing any indictments. However, a Federal grand jury at Biloxi, Miss., returned indictments two days later but not specifically related to the trio murder. The federal indictments centered around the abridgement of civil rights. According to Huie, “these men know that the community is never going to convict them, because that community generally blames the victims of the murder more than they blame the murderers. Their attitude is that outsiders came in and got what they deserved ... the people of Neshoba County are good people, except on the race issue." In making this summation, Huie is echoeing previous statements made by many others who have said that the murderers are known. Louis Lomax, writing in a recent issue of Ramparts, said that the trio fell afoul a mob after leaving the jail, and that at least six members of the lawless group “have been identified." He added that they could not not be named because they have not been charged with a crime.
New York launches Youth faces
block busting probe
Free diobefes detection kits offered here Again this year, free detection kits are being offered during the local observance of Diabetes Detection Week Nov. 1521. The free packs may be picked up at centers throughout the city sponsored by various organizations, according to Dr. Richard J. McAlpine, Detection Week chairman. Again this year, free KICK-OFF event for the observance was a luncheon Tuesday at the Speedway Motel with Bill Talbert of New York City, well known tennis champion and sales executive, as guest speaker. A diabetic victim since childhood, Talbert is senior vice-
BREAK GROUND FOR NEW CENTER: Ground breaking ceremonies were held Sunday for a new edifice for the Eastside Christian Center, to be located at the corner of Fernway and Caroline. In left photo are (left to right) Henry Meier, architect for the $170,000 project; Mrs. Edna M. Martin, executive director of the center; William W. Locey, chairman of the building committee; and Ray Spencer, director of Christamore House and president of the center's board of directors. In right photo are
pictured a portion of the center's staff. They are Mrs. Elizabeth MacDonald, who has served nine years as supervisor and teacher of kindergarten; Mrs. Thelma Paragon, who has served eight years as registrar and four years as a teacher; Mrs. Thelma Herrington, 13-year veteran supervisor of the primary department, and Mrs. Delores Mitchell, who has served 14 years as a teacher. The latter is a product of the John Herron Art Institute. (Recorder photos by Jim Burres)
president of the Security-Co-lumbian Banknote Company of New York. He has taken daily insulin injections since the age of 9. In 20 years of amateur competition, Talbert won 30 national championships, ranked among the top 10 players of the country for 13 years, and has been co-win-ner of the U.S. grass court national doubles titles on four occasions. He devotes much of his time to furthering the work of the American and New York diabetes associations. Sites where the free kits which have enabled hundreds of unsuspecting persons discover they were diabetic can be picked up include the J.C. Pen-
ny Store on Monument Circle, Ayr-Way in Southern Plaza, H. P. Wasson Co. in Eastgate, and Ayres’ in Glendale. The general public is urged to take advantage of this opportunity to check for this disease. Charles Robinson. Charles Robinson, 57, 326 W. 16th, died Nov. 1 at General Hospital. Rites were held Nov. 4 at Bethesda Baptist Church, of which he was a member, with burial in New Crown Cemetery. Mr. Robinson, a native of Mingara, Ala., resided here 19 years and was employed at the Ertel Manufacturing Corp.
New Hope Continued from Page 1
Son of Philadelphia Tribune editor dies of leukemia
ALBANY, N Y. (NPI) — A full-scale investigation into the “block-busting” tactics of white real estate dealers has been launched by the State’s secretary John P. Lomenzo, it was announced here last week. The drive is in answer to a number of complaints from the New York City area which have come before the secretary of state criticizing widespread violations of state law. The initial drive will center around Queens Village, with subsequent probes into complaints emanating from Laurelton, Cambia Heights, and Springfield Gardens in Queens; Hempstead, Bellport, Wyandach and East Meadows, on Long Island; East New York, in Brooklyn; and White Plains and Glenwood Lakes in Westchester County. Block-busting is a technique some real estate dealers use to convince homeowners that their neighborhood is about to undergo a radical racial change, and that as a result property value will fall. They then buy the property at less than face value, and resell it to members of minority groups at a huge profit. Among those who have registered complaints was Kenneth B. Daley, a Queens Village res-
Michelle A. Paige
Rites for seven-year-old Michelle Angeline Paige, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Paige, 871 Eugene, were conducted Nov. 11 at Holy Angels Catholic Church, with burial in
Floral Park Cemetery.
Michelle died Nov. 7 at Methodist Hospital of a brain tumor after three weeks hospitaliza-
A native of Boston,
ident who reported on his experiences when he visited three real estate offices. He told the Secretary of State that in one office the salesman had placed “black dots" on his personal pad next to addresses near Negro residences. When he asked for a house in South Queens, he was told the neighborhood wasn’t: integrated because the whites were leaving in a hurry. In another office the salesman’s * mention that the area was not “clean" lead him to think that the garbage collection was bad. However the salesman corrected him by pointing to the black rims of his horn-rimmed glasses, and saying, “the people are like this." In refuting the charges of block-busting, Mark Leads, vice-president, Jamaica Real Estate board, claimed that the tactics resulted not from the actions of real estate agents, but rather the public’s attitude toward the probability of Negroes moving into all-white neighborhoods. He did not amplify on this.
Continued from Page 1 he was wounded in the stomach with a .22-caliber rifle. Foster and an alleged accomplice, 16-year-old Romie Brewer, were apprehended Sept. 9, 1963, as suspects in the robbery of a service station at 1111 W. Washington. Brewer, after being captured in a stolen car, admitted his part in both holdups and implicated Foster, police said. UNDER QUESTIONING, according to police, Foster readily admitted shooting Wagnei but claimed it was an accident. He said the university student was shot when he bumped into the .22-caliber rifle. During the trial, Foster denied making a confession and said the signature on the written statement was not his. He testified he was in Mississippi at the time of the robbery. Judge Eugene M. Fife Jr. has ordered a pre-sentence investigation. Brewer, 705 N. Senate, is presently serving a 10-year sentence for robbery.
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Lion campaign. -- <’-i quarters iq Washington, D.C. This year’s figures show On the day of his death, his that Mississippi added only uncle, the newspaper publisher, 4,000 Negroes to the rolls celebrated his 69th birthday, since 1960. Other states in In addition to his father and the South had at least seven mother, Mrs. Evelyn Perry, the times that number. Even Ala- deceased is survived by five
bama, which had 73,272 in 1960, showed an increase of 36,718 for this year, or almost 50 per cent. •••__ The largest improvement in the vote-eligibility of Negroes in these Southern states was. however, registered by South Carolina, with an increase of over 60 percent. In 1960, the state had an estimated 58,122 registered, and in 1964, 144,000. The overall increase in the area amounted to 43.1 per cent, and it is this rise in Negro vote participation which was felt in the landslide victory of the Democratic party that annexed the electoral votes of all but six states—five which -represented the old Dixiecrat party stamping grounds, and the home state of the defeated and soundly trounced GOP presidential standard bearer.
t
PHILADELPHIA (NPI) — tion. A S^v r . Muides ,e pu,
dangerously diluted by the ad- newsnaner and nenhew of ents » include a brother, Wilherence to the age-old Southern the p aper - g publisher, E. Wash- liam Paige Jr.; a sister, Deirda attitude toward justice, that a j n eton Rhodes. Young Perry E - Paige, and the maternal white man will never be con- died in the Naval ho f pital grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Edagainst a NegnT" ^ lnjUSt,Ce Bethesda, Md., of leukemia. ward Brown, Boston, Mass.
NOT ONLY will this hango- He was found to be suffering over from Mississippi’s unen- from the killer disease less than lightened past be contested, but two months ago when he comalso another important aspect plained of pain and continuous of American life—the right to bleeding from the wound of a vote. recently extracted wisdom Despite the fact that more tooth. He had joined the U.S. than two million Negroes were Marine Corps last June and eligible to vote during the past was officially retired from serv-
election in 11 states of the Old i ce last Oct. 1.
Contederacy, Mississippi, as us- A bright recruit, he had ual, lagged far behind its fel- quickly risen to the grade of low states in the numbers of lance corporal and was transNegroes added to the registra- ferred to the Communications tion rolls during the pre-elec- Division of Marine Corps head-
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