Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1965 — Page 16
Page 16
THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER
SATURDAY/APRIL 24
Chicago Negroes 'ready
to take to streets' school segregation
over
CHICAGO—A civil rights not to renew his contract, leader warned this week that The marchers, half of them segregation in the city’s public teen-agers or younger, were orschools must end or Negroes ganized by the Coordinating will “take to the streets.” Council of Community OrganiIn an article appearing in the zations and the Clergy for current issue of Look Maga- Quality and Equality. Mro,WJf,T»”o?.’ CHICAGO’S 530,000 public Kanization, said that "the entire sch ° o1 P“P ,ls are essentially Negro community is angry, and segregated as soon as they start we’re united in our anger. We’re school, said ihe Look article, ready to take to the streets.” Ninety per cent of the elemenThe Woodlawn Organization ^ students go to either allis one of Chicago’s most mili- » hlte , 0 , r “ hools - I ”- tant civil rights groups. grated high schools are atTHE MAIN TARGET for the a^Vn'te Per " school critics is Benjamin C, , . . ,, . , Willis, general superintendent , A '? 0 . duoted in the Look of schools, whose third four- art ' cle 'j. E d wln C. Berry, ex-
year term expires in August. “
Said Rev. Stevenson:
“If he (Willis; is reappointed by the Board of Education, you will see demonstrations such as you have never seen before.”
Urban League, who said: “Chicago’s school system is both second-rate and segregated; the Jim Crow schools are third, fourth and fifth-rate. The city graduates students from
Scene in
Fort Wayne
Rev. John Dixie Jr. is president of the alliance.
The Adult Club Council of the McCulloch Recreation Center announced plans for its Eighth Annual Youth Incentive Scholarship Program that will close on Teen-Age Sunday, May 16. A special program will be held at Turner Chapel
Conference to be held in Gary a.M.E. Church at 3:30 p.m.
FORT WAYNE—The Associ- ° n May 22, * * * SlarshTn w^nnpr ^ilf’sneRk 1 ated Churches of Fort Wayne Lerov T Nard son of Mr A C vk° 1P ? vinne . r ’ Y. 1 8 P eak - sponsored Good Fnday services and Mrs . Fletcher Nard, 1420 the^enter"Tnd ^.^Alle^ChaH^aldwe^pp ofjhilo^ 1 ^- lis^Tefen ^net^Sho^craf^ln ° f ^ SCh ° lar -
tist Church, served as chair- • * • snip P r °K rdm -
By Jp and Eb
Mrs. Alberta Blanks, 416 Dai-
Last week 2,500 persons the all-Negro high schools who marched from Buckingham cannot read at an 8th-grade Fountain to City Hall to pro- level, and it turns out some test against Willis’ policies and who cannot do 6th-grade arith-
urge the Board of Education metic.”
New Albany membership drive, buying campaign told
'DANCE TO FREEDOM': Tom Mathis (right), platter-spinner of Radio Station WIFE, presents a check for $200 to Mrs. Doris Ward, NAACP membership chairman, following a dance at St. Rita's Catholic Church gymnasium. Thomas Shackelford (left)
and Jack Durham, backers of the project, look on approvingly. A total of 400 teen-agers took out NAACP youth memberships for admittance to the dance. (Recorder photo by Jim Burres)
homes to rent or buy because “direct action committee” to be groes under 21.
of
. , an evening ceremony performed man of the serv ice conducted a t the home of his parents Sat-
Saungfn AXl of* IS: Re^^James^Bl'edloe 1 ,"pastor ^rafrE^rer 13 ^; 8 'Max^e
of St. John Baptist Church; ^“ams performed the cfre-
Lawrence Wyatt, pastor of m0 n y . Miss Barbara Nard and ^ f Rf n e Jt, Blank Q S nn an pu^!^
John °of ^ KcouX Mr^Na^Uem-
Hayden Street Church of God X yed a? t^e Dana Corp and Mrs - El ™ k - in Christ, and Samuel Walker, Mrs. Nard is a secretary for * * pastor of Jerusalem Baptist the International Harvester Co. ^ r - an< ^ ^ rs ’ Charlie Lyons, Church. * * * 1120 Hugh, entertained friends * * * The Ultra Art Club met re- r e c e ntl y with a Iate buffet Jerusalem Baptist Church’s tl t th h f M party. Guests included Mr. and annua! spring revival began Sne Brooks 2 Tl7 Weisser ^rs. Vernon Brown, Mr. and Monday.* night. Rev. G. T. p k p, ’ comoleted to Mrs - R - H ‘ Mlddleton » Mr - and Odom of Marion, Ala., is the |, r > ^ Ebon pjir f rs - I Jo !. e ' ,h Burnett, and Mrs. guest evangelist. The congre- back t0 our cit I jn Seotember . Lee Jackson gation of Jerusalem Baptist Mrs wi|lard H is presi . A ' , Church recently moved into ^ K Archie E. Patterson Jr. and their new church edifice, valued * * children, Cynthia, Leslie, Philip in access of $100,000. -Rev. and Archie III, of Gary spent Samuel Walker is pastor. . 6 ^ 0I ^ , , a ^ n , e . ^ 1 P ls f eria i the pre-Easter vacation with ‘ tt * * * Alliance Scholarship Founda- j^Ir. Patterson’s parents, Mr. Rev. Fred Craig of Marion, \ lon Y 1 ". bo ^ d 1 ^ s ‘‘fh annual and Mrs. Archie E. Patterson Ala., will conduct the annual Award Presentation program on g r 0 f 2620 Taylor. The junior spring revival for the Friend- ~y nda )l , May i? an d senior Pattersons motored ship Baptist Church. The re- /^ ur J} er v v? p >. A-M.E. Detroit where they visited
Church. —
alleged discrimination by employed when negotiations Clothing for needy Negroes vival is scheduled to begin on ^urcn. Rev J. H. Crawley is f r j e nds and relatives. some real estate agents; (3) fail to produce results, and (5) of Selma, Ala., is being collect- Monday at 7:30 p.m. Nightly chairman of the foundation and
hopes of new administration the NAACP’s national theme is ed at New Albany’s five Negro services will be held through
NEW ALBANY—Plans were plaints and goals include (1) adopting a non-discriminatory “Come Alive in ’65” which will churches. The items can be de- April 30. Rev. P. H. Love is mapped for a membership drive alleged discrimination in the policy in regard to New Al- he a guiding principle for the posited at Mitchell’s home, 318 pastor. and a “direct action campaign” hiring practices of three of the bany’s 762 units of public hous- New Albany chapter. GalL * * * in the months ahead when the city’s largest factories and in i n KJ (4) Southern Indiana rep- Recruitment of members will A • d i The Hayden Street Church of New Albany NAACP chapter the admittance policies of the resentative for the NAAC P be C n a systematic block-by- r Oi rOfllZC KCCOrdOf God in Christ held its annual
met recently.
The Negroes’ major
city’s two swimming clubs; (2) Robert R. Mitchell said the New block basis with special efforts com- difficulties in finding decent Albany chapter must form a to enroll white citizens and Ne-
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Women’s Day Program recently. Mrs. John Dupree served as chairman. Rev. John Dupree
is pastor.
:> *
New Bethel Baptist Church is celebrating the fourth anniversary of its pastor, Rev. R. C. Davis. Special services are being conducted nightly. The celebration will close with a banquet to be held in the ! church dining hall on Monday, April 26, at 6:30 p.m. * * * i Progressive Baptist Church ■ held its Easter Sunrise Service at 5:00 a.m. Sunday. Rev. Jesse White is the pastor. * * * The Indiana Industrial Education Association is holding its 33rd annual convention April 22-24 in the Hotel Van Orman. “Challenges to Meet and Promises to Keep” is the theme. Exhibits featuring student I projects, panel topics on vocational guidance, and discussions on the future of industrial edu- ! cation are highlighting the convention. A panel discussion on “Ca- i reer—Choice vs. Confusion is a feature. Fort Wayne persons) on the panel include Dr. Dayton L. Musselman, director of I pupil personnel, Fort Wayne J Community Schools; Nelson T. ' Cummings, Jr., director of education and youth incentives, Fort Wayne Urban League; ; Wayne Rothgeb, farm service director, WKJG-TV and radio, and Robert Eastman, personnel j director of Tokheim Corp. s * * The Fort Wayne Urban League Guild announced plans to hold its fourth annual Debutante Cotillion on Friday, June 11, in Cutters Chalet. Fifteen j graduating high school girls will be presented. * * * The Fort Wayne Urban League is playing host to Indiana Urban League executives on Friday, April 23. Plans will f be completed for the annual Indiana Urban League’s State Judge dismisses! charges against 534 at Selma MOBILE, Ala.—A Federal court here, last week dismissed charges against 534 civil rights workers arrested at Selma, and ordered Dallas County Sheriff | James Clark to protect Negroes in peaceful demonstrations. District Judge Daniel H. Thomas dismissed the charges t of parading without a permit, j j unlawful assembly and “viola- ! tion of an Alabama statute." j. He sent four cases back to Dal- , .| las Circuit Court for trial, inj eluding that of Rev. C. T. j Vivian. The minister was j charged with contempt of court ! and criminal provocation after j a courthouse altercation during j | which Sheriff Clark slugged
1 him.
A panel of Thomas and two ; other judges ordered the sheriff to disband his posse and en- j joined him from: ARRESTING, holding under) unreasonable bail, prosecuting, j punishing or threatening to ar- j rest . . • any person seeking | ! to vote, to register to vote or to use public accommodations. PREVENTING persons from i i organizing, meeting or assembling to discuss or advocate the exercise of their constitutional j rights. | i USING unreasonable force ... against persons exercising or seeking to exercise their constitutional rights. FAILING to provide ordinary ; police protection to persons at- I tempting peacably to exercise ^ their constitutional rights.
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Ardella Evans Mrs. Ardella Evans, 67, 1320 Roache, died April 12 at her home. Services were held April 15 at Summers Funeral Chapel with burial in Woodhaven Memorial Park. Mrs. Evans was born at Hanceville, Ala., and had lived here 25 years. She was a member of Community Baptist
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