Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1967 — Page 16

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Pogc Sixteen

THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1967

Reliefers rights Parent Power' threatens

being denied, Senate unit told

bus boycott in Philadelphia

P HIL A DELPHIA, Pa., — charged that parents were three times before finally ac“Parent Power” was put into told about the busing only four cepting it early in 1967. action here recently when 150 days before school opened when The parents adopted a resoluenraged parents of the Harring- officials know about it in the tion asking that: ton Home and School Associa- beginning of August. 1. The school board push for tion told school officials they r) r Marechal-Neil Young overtime in order to complete

WASHINGTON (NPD—Wei- have until Oct 16 to complete District I superintendent, said the Newton-Coal building fare recipients are regularly rehabilitation of a b u 11 d i ng that while the board did not The parents be notified denied their constitutional across from the school. This kn ow about the busing situation P r0n l ptl y of 4 the rights, according to Atty. Leroy would eliminate the busing of it w as not known where the development of the building. D. Clark, spokesman for the 200 children to the old Leidy children would be bused. She 3 - . Th . e h ? me ® I ? d s . c t 4 .°® 1 NAACP Legal Defense and School at 42nd and Thompson said that it is official policy association have the right to Educational Fund, Inc., and the streets, or face a bus boycott, not to announce a busing situ- discuss busing, the capital budNational Office for the Rights The building, located across ation until a school location is an< * affecting of the Indigent. the street from the over- decided upon. their children directly with Clark told the Senate Fi- ®^ wd ® d H ^ arrington School, was Mr. Nicholson pointed out SC The narents^alsQ 5 expressed nance Committee that welfare school opened 3 Sept the-ebv lf the . board had acc f pted anger because they have had to recipients were also denied the necessitating the busing of Jie f he r Ug f eS K°-M^ 0 buy v. he P urc hase notebooks and crayons protection of the Social Se- children * * 0 6 building when the for their children, supplies curity Act and Federal regula- trnrrinptnn 8r « UP fiiL rS K P ^° P w Se ^7 ear which have heretofore been tions of the Department of g 7 nn aC ’ board might have supplied by the school. Health, Education and Welfare. ^ ed *£ he ta *P ayer s °me money i n rebuttal of this accusation, Clients receiving aid to de- ith a influxhnvp w0u d n0t Robert Stewart, school principendent children are among , d ^ m ° e pupl s aVe to be bused. pa^ sa i d t hat the supplies were those most frequently abused p ’ P r - Ernest Kohl, assistant in the school and were being under current procedures, Kenneth Lyons of the Har- chief of the board’s building opened as soon as possible Clark said. - rington capital and operating division, said the acquisition “However, he stated, “the

budget committee and Simon and renovaton of the building shortage of non-teaching as-

Among unconstitutional state N i c h o 1 son, member of the cost $310,000. The board turned sistants ha s delayed the distrirules, he said, are “maximum school’s budget committee, 1 down the parents’ request bution.”

limits on family grants, ‘sub-

stitute father’ rules, some em- ^ ployable mother’ rules, and *

CANDIDATES FOR JUNIOR MISS: Constance Brown (seated) and Sharon Brookins, both seniors at Crispus Attacks, are candidates for the title of Junior Miss Indianapolis in a Junior Chamber of Com-merce-sponsored pageant Nov. 5 at Clowes Hall. The winner will receive a $750 scholarship and an all-expense paid trip to compete in the State Junior

Miss Pageant.

Proposals call for end to

discrimination in schools I .

Clark added that “no state • • r

WASHINGTON, D. C., — money, talent and equipment. affords welfare die Two separate proposals, al- Judge Wright charged there constitutional rights to have a though different in implementa- has been “criminal” discrimina- hearing before their grants are tion, called for an end to racial tion here in the quality of edu- reduced or eliminated by wcldiscrimination in the nation’s cation provided for students in f are a gency officials.” capital public schools effective low-income, largely Negro ^

when pupils returned to their schools. He advocated for the classrooms last month. first time that it is just as unA court mandate called for constitutional to discriminate the end of bias against Negroes against the poor and a g a i n st and the poor and another new the Negroes segregated by de and admittedly racial proposal facto housing patterns as it is sought to carry out its aims by to discriminate by intent.

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the requirement of minimum periods of absense before desertion can be determined.” Clark added that “no state • affords welfare clients their

est assurance against is insurance,' says firm

poverty head

CHARGED IN ALLEGED PLOT: Anthony B. Monteiro (left) is guarded by Deputy Sheriff Ed Korsa outside a Chicago courtroom where he later waived extradi tion to Philadelphia. Monteiro is charged with solicitation for murder and arson and possession of explosives in an alleged plot to incite a riot in Philadelphia and then poison city police and officials. Our Servicemen

other business institution.” owned, have plans to cover any He said that through a vast type of protection and that

Candidates to speak for the Citizens Forum

Mayor John Barton

By LEON L. LEWIS

FORT WORTH, Texas — He said that through a vast type of protection and that SAN ANTONIO, Tex. — Air- as a air policeman. ( NPI> — ‘Every time we pick ownership of financial re- “millions of these poor people m^n Horace Miles, son of Mrs. Airman Gregory is a 1967 up a newspaper, or turn on sources, insurance companies whom we hear so much about Willie Miles of 1726 Illinois, graduate of Roosevelt High the radio, we hear self-styled would give the poor, poverty- being in dire poverty are the Gar y> ha s been selected for School, experts in government, busi- stricken and family groups an backbone of our resources. technical training at Sheppard * * * ness and the professions, tell- opportunity to do something “These people don’t want AFB ’ Te * as a us - Air Force sp/5 Samuel Eugene Clark ing people how to not be poor for themselves without making dole — and they get only a ail *craft maintenance specialist. j r j s serving a one-year tour or d?pendent ■ ■ - g ~ ent »-oSolsr a iL h p eTr t a p ™ b ™,r g ^ — firs*trrA

ment - they want a place in C d A F B H t ^ schools' M -- Sa ^ el ?. Clark Sr.,

subsidies,” stated Joe A. Ter rell, president Texas Life Inand surance company, last week.

“separate and unequal” educa- Among terse plans he sug- „ T , __

tion of the disadvantaged. eested was the busing of Negro Mayor John Barton and sura nce company, last week. “Insurance companies,’■ Ter- the sun: they want a chance tn " x . s riew scnooi « rTor-ir'lo' The special survey group re- children from overcrowded slum Wa^wfll ^^the^tJaker^^t Terrel1 emphatically chirped, said - “ Copld spend as muc . h solve their own financial prob- ^ ? 0 "?' serving as an Advisory Team port to the District of Columbia , ch ools to empty classrooms in ^ “ The only assu rance against money as the government is i e ms; they want to live as ^ and whl 1 ch conducts hundreds an Advisory

Cuizens p OV erty and old age depen- now spendmg trying to elimi- American citizens, and not as v^ide^te^ch 12 ^ll C ° U * Se ^ ^ Pr °* P * * *

huh tu me uismct oi Columbia sC hools to empty classi

S "students, ^ru m Thursday, Oct

n po 8 p‘°U- pl^Iornirlatly 0 white* schools^this

tion is 93 percent Negro. It semester. portunity proposed compensatory educa- answers tion and diminished emphasis The court’s deadline for the On integration as a plausible or schol board to submit a revised useful goal. plan for assigning teachers and

dency is insurance, period.’

nate poverty, without allocat- wards

Fort Worth business ^neratinn^ rt^TVa 1 - 6 t0 reaucraci es; they want to prove sDac^for^e ^ natlon s aer0 ' i op- executive, who has released m P n th „ t ^ 0 .4, ld to themselves and the world Airman Miles iQfifi amH

and through the press and radio, would get f u benefit S and te th 31 b 0111 ^ Poor i8 a disease uate of Emerson High School OI AiaDam ^, moianprogressive statements of ad- ^ssured of ‘comnWe* ’ that Can be cured by a special - attended Southern Univers^v a P° lis In - was graduated from

— oft r the past 8 six SthTS ^N^ ^4" h ;™ f^at^

sunft were'^released ‘ Va?tVaaii“^ fhit^ tf/chS J Sr^ftraU^^extt tJ'Tn JlM nTl* ^"^hael d. Gregory, ^He two to four Teacher^ exfenTftfjS^KftttnTJ ‘ Dr. Swftproposed Keep- who solved ^^^100,?^ ^ “r^^a's* fol tg^er^rl he ^ ^ Ce" t^ ftd ‘^rfteftlea^ Skelly Wright called for im- Jan ^ ar y- - ing scho( ? 1 buildings open 14 pressed and starving people, it 0 ur prosperity.” -° ut Ga r y -. h . a s b e e n selected for at hom£, will report to his first

The

SAN DIEGO, Cal., — Marine Private Andrew Holland, son of Mr. and Mrs John Holland of 2541 N. Alabama, Indian-

our prosperity.’

mediate changes i n "education D r. Passow’s report, the re- hours a day, six days a week,^ was the business man. He said that lnsurance com _ p r o blern 7 dn sompthinp here in a 182-page Federal sults of a study made by 180 to enhance community support. “Q, yes, these gave him panics, both white and Negro-bout tS” something

court decree he issued three educators, lessened the imoort- This would double the city s temporary relief from an acute months ago. ance of classroom desegrega- Sc 'hool expenditure. situation; but if it hadn’t teen Judge Wright’s document for- tion - 4 for the far-sighted business bids discriminatory practices, He called for a recruiting men in Private industry—plus, however, Dr. Passow calls for urogram to bring into the sys- During the Civil War, about of course, the war—we would unequal education to promote tern new white teachers, includ- 200,000 Negroes enlisted in the have still teen in a depresequal opportunity” among poor ing a large number of white Union Army and 30,000 in the sion, and the people who were Negro students. college graduates. They would Navy. Another quarter of a mil- y° un g then, would be old-age The judge is overseeing the devote two or three years, as lion Negro men and Women dependents on public relief.

his sweeping order to n end n dis- wort'as'telchere^ft teacWng l^teMs^Trs^nurt^^ooft fortf- greatest business in this na- of^tatJ^an^iisS wn^ro* let 11 ge ‘ far - He should ’ ve ^"Te'^r^^h* MS a n^ent Dr te»^r ™ ^".^'‘sWies Bag. 3.)

Reaction of Rusk's relative is 'unmistakably negative'

and the poor of both races in present teaching staff here while many more served the allotment of e d u c ational mediocre and poorly deployed, guides, spies and scouts.

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week elicited their reaction to Some residents of Rusk’s nanews of his daughter’s inter- tive territory were more disraaal marriage. turbed over Rusk’s rejection of In North Georgia s Cherokee the role of the indignant father County, where many of Rusk’s than the fact of the marriage, relatives still live and the “In the eyes of Georgians,” said schools are integreated, “the a local newspaper publisher reaction was tempered but un- “he did a bad thing when he WME t L n Sep g t a 29 V il;ue. SayS •" ra ‘ ked ^ the and ^

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Effective use of Black political power is urged

CHICAGO, 111., — How to make “black power” of the political variety more effective in solving Negro problems was the main item on the agenda when 300 elected Negro officials met this week at a three-day National Conference SJ Negro Elected Officials. Percy E. Sutton, the Manhattan Borough president and conference co-chairman, f-all e a for “use of the power that is inherent in our offices to solve the problems that breed riots. He said the meeting of Negro officials from coast to coast was to exchange ideas and experiences and tactics t h a t might make “responsible efforts of elected officials more effective in moving white power structure to help bring about “meaningful change” in ^ ® housing, education and job problems that plague Negroes.’ “The Negro voter of today will not be satisfield by the tactics of yesterday in the appointment of a single black face in a visible position as a special assistant in charge of Negro problems, “Mr. Sutton declared. He challenged the officials by saying: “We, as elected officials, can no longer expect to get Negro votes unless we have a problem that satisfies and serves our constituents.” State Representative James Del Rio of Michigan said one solution to Negro problems was more aggressive use of black political power within the twoparty system. Negroes already have “swing vote” power that can be better marshaled, Mr. Del Rio pointed out. Mrs. Sutton predicted more

Negro public officials in the entire range of public offices, both North and South. He denounced advocates of black power through violence.

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