Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1978 — Page 2

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Piftf 5 INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER SATURDAY, SiPTMia t, 1*71

Htly Aagils students in knnor group The staff of Holy Angels Church, 28th and Northwestern Avenue, has announced the induction of four parishoners into the Society of Distinguised American High School Students. The scholarly four are Todd Combs, Ritter senior; Georgia Hayden, Northwest senior; Jeffery McMiller, Broad Ripple junior, and Kina Smith, -Attucks junior. The society, one of the nation’s foremost high school honoraries, inducted the students because of their “demonstrated excellence in scholastic leadership and civic achievement,” according to Brother Gerald Bleem, Holy Angels youth director. “I am extremely proud of these members of our parish community here at Holy Angels,” Bleem said. "They are beautiful examples of young people being involved members of a church and good students. It is, in a sense, a reward and also a challenge to them to continue .their course of excellence.” One of the society's guiding principles is to promote both academic and civic achievement on the high school level by recognizing students in its “Membership Registry” published annually and distributed nationwide.

Tuskegee alumni discuss centennial, recruiting

Representatives of the Indianapolis - Tuskegee Alumni Club attending the 35th North Central Regional Convention in Akron, Ohio, August 18 - 20, were Mr. and Mrs. Leslie F. House and son, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hart and son, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Chisholm and son, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Goler, and son and daughter, and Miss Thelma Neal. Other alumni clubs represented were: Gary, Ind; Chicago, Dayton, Cleveland; Buffalo. N.Y.; Pittsburgh, Louisville, and Detroit. Theme of the convention was; ‘Toward 100 Years of Academic Execellence”, with the following interested work shops being conducted; Centennial Fund Raising, lead by Leslie F. House of Indianapolis; Establishing and Reactivating Local Chapters, led by Randolph Baxter of Akron;Student Recruitment, led by James Woodson, executive director, Tuskegee National Alumni Association, and The Rolle of The Alumni in the

Will understudy at Williams-

Anita (Downing) Edmond earns mortician degree

receiving United Negro College

Fund aid. Dr. Luther H. a, » .

Two y ears of concentrated

Foster, president of Tuskegee stud ^ the field of mort and banquet sperter gave .dence will produce an Aa^

vital information relative to the

institute.

A plea is out to all Tuskegeeans residing in Indianapolis and surrounding areas to contact Indianapolis - Alumni Club president, Leslie F. House, 545-2902 or the vice president, Robert Goler, 253-

Loose ends remain in assassination probes

ate Arts degree for Anita (Downing) Edmond, when commencement exercises are held for graduating students of the Indiana College of Mortuary Science Friday at Abundant

Life Memorial Church.

After receiving her degree.

Tuskegee s 100th year. a „ honorary member of the Minority businessmen to attend Washington talks

WASHINGTON-

Three Indianapolis black businessmen are among the four personally selected by Senator Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) to be participants in meetings next year by the Small Busi-

Community. led by Dr. Velma ness Administration to discuss Blackwell, vice president for problems facing small busiDevelopment Affairs, Tuske- nesses and to propose possible

gee Institute. solutions.

Luncheon speaker was Those from the Hoosier capMartin 0. Chapman, principal itol include Nicky Morris, presiof Garfield High School and one dent of Morris Container Co., of the only two black principal manufacturer of corrugated in Akron. boxes and containers for over Chapman challenged all of seven years. Morris is also the black alumni of the North chairman of the Afro-American Central Region to support black Council on Business Opportu-

colleges financially, particularly the 44 private colleges

nity. Also Jonathan Goodrich, Ph.

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D., assistant professor of Marketing at the Indiana University School of Business, a consultant and marketing ana-lyst-strategist and author of several publications; Huerta C. Tribble Jr., executive director of the Business Development Center, funded and staffed by the Office of Minority Business Enterprise of the U.S. Department of Commerce to assist minority businesses in expanding, securing contracts and to provide technical advice. The fourth representative is Maurice Preston of Gary, executive for Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Preston is a member of the Million Dollar Round Table and six times a member of the President’s Conference of Top Sales. He is also a member of the Gary Board of School Commission-

ers.

Senator Lugar is especially hopeful the meetings will “address in particular the special problems and possibilities of

minority business.”

He has been named a “Guardian of Small Business” by the National Federation of Independent Businesses, based on

his Senate vote record.

SBA is sponsoring 12 regional conferences and 45 open forums to raise issues leading to a White House conference on Small Business in January.

Indpls. Business

Alliance to assist job opportunities Job assistance for disadvantaged youths through formation of the Indianapolis Business Alliance, was recently announced by the Indianapolis

Chamber of Commerce.

Chamber President Carl

Dortch said the goal of the organization is to create and identify job opportunities for persons desiring employment, as well as to assist those

persons in securing jobs. “The Indianapolis Business

Alliance for jobs demonstrates the private sector’s concern for

WASHINGTON--

House investigator* are tying up some loose ends of the John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King assassinations but scores of questions may remain forever unanswered ss they do in many murder cases. Was there a fourth shot fired at President Kennedy when he was assassinated in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963? A loose end which may be solved during the House assassinations committee hearings this week on

Kennedy’s death.

Did Lee Harvey Oswald, the presumed assassin of Kennedy, meet with anti-Castro Cubans shortly before the murder? A loose end still tantalizing those who see a conspiracy at the root

of the assassination.

Was King warned in advance of his assassination in Memphis on April 4, 1968? His constant companion, the Rev. Ralph Abernathy, believes so but admits there is no proof. A

loose end.

Did James Earl Ray, the

Downing at 914 Sheffield. Gsnsrsl Motors glvos $6000 to

support QIC

Edward B. Colby, chairman of the General Motors Plant City Committee of Indianapolis and manager of Detroit Diesel Allison operations, presented a chekc from the General Motors Foundation for $6000 to the Indianapolis Opportunity Industralization Center at a re-

cent luncheon.

Accepting on behalf of Ken Morgan. QIC executive director, was Rev. Mozel Sanders, Indiana State QIC di-

rector.

“If it were not for GM and

other companies in Indianapolis no legal romifications.

and Indiana, we simply could The FBI’s national crime not function with the success records suggest that police that we have experienced,” solve murder cases more Rev. Sanders said. “We are successfully than any other indeed grateful for this check crime. Someone is arrested for and your support not only here t ^ e murder in 79 out of 100 but also in Marion, Muncie, and 04368 • 27 out of 100 Kokomo.” robberies were reported clear-

Colby noted the fine work by 40 arrest,

done by QIC in job training and Most murders attract little added that it was a pleasure to attention outside the cornsupport such a worhtwhile and mumties where they occur, important organization. Assassinations of national

sincere committment to find jobs for the unemployed,” expressed Dortch. Housed in the Chamber of Commerce Building, the local alliance is a consolidation of various Chamber employmentrelated activities, including Youth Works, the Volunteer

Alliance, and national Alliance

the urban unemployment, and a B us mess-

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leaders are entirely different matters, of course, the vast outpouring of public concern and the fascination contributes to the loose ends. Some 80,000 pages of FBI files on the Kennedy investigation, released last winter, showed that agents checked out hundreds of tips from drunks and mental patients across the

country.

he testified last month. Cowden had told a newspaper and Ray’s lawyer that he had seen Ray in a Memphis service station at the time of King’s death. Questioned under oath, Cowden admitted he made up that “completely false” story to

satisfy a friend.

Investigators and prosecutors say they have a critical responsibility in judging which

followed 6 u*"some^of*the l0OSe ends , are im P<> rtant and

i S wh ? ^ key <iuestio ” s ° f

case, for instance. Coy Dean ^ Ullt or innocence sometimes

Cowden was a loose end until linger forever.

ANITA (DOWNING).

EDMOND

national mortician’s fraternity,

Pi Sigma Eta.

When not involved in her mortician study and practices, Ms. Edmond enjoys amongst several hobbisd-bowling-and a number of religious related

activities at St. Paul Baptist thief who confessed to killing Chuch of which she is a Dr. King and then recanted, member. rob an Illinois bank of $27,000 a A sister of former Washing- few months before the aston and Indiana University sassination? Ray says no; the basketball star Steve Downing, FBI says its evidence suggests Ms. Edmonds resides with her not, but the committee hints to mother, Mrs. William H. the contrary. Another loose

end.

Such is the fuel of the endless range of conspiracy theories that have arisen about both cases and which, to a considerable degree, brought about the House probe. But loose ends are not uncommon to murder cases. Investigators say they quickly learned which ones are important enought to pursue and which ae trivial enough to forget. “Very seldom do you wrap up a murder investigation like Columbo does on television,” remarked Bill Ellingsworth, spokesman for the International Association of Chiefs of Police. “Even in what is called an open-and-shut case, there are still loose ends but these are questions of curiosity with

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