Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1984 — Page 14
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Pud sett forth hi* own tailed Us personal liberty for the food of others. Moreover, bodily appetite requires discipline. This lends to a solemn warning against the contamination of idolatry, and to the dear statement that the communion of the Lord’s Table precludes participation in pagan religious banquets. A heathen sacrificial feast, in other words, is a recognition of idolatry and an apostasy from Christ. As for buying meat in the market, or when dining at an unbeliever’s table, the Christian need not inquire whether the flesh offered him
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CHICAGO TMtUNK GOLUMNIST TAKES OWJN LIFE CHICAGO- r' ^ ^ awaMaeinning opinion writee for the Chkago Tribune,
taper following
eek committed suicide hi her Hyde i»ark home" ll^,l * >, *** TheCotdtCotMtyMedfcal Examiner said LesaHa MrChln was found dMd May 29 of an overdose of procription drugs by a former tribune employee. Police said the 32-year-old journalist, described by a oowoker as a “sensitive” woman plagued by personal problems, left a note telling of her
depression. "
Ms. McClain, a divorcee who lived alone, had tried suicide several years ago, a dose friend of the newspaperwoman told
USA Today.
She received national attention last July when she wrote an article for the Washington Post criticizing Chicago and the
fP«Mtf. racial overtones of Washington's bid to become the city’s first Lafayette black mayor. The article, “How Chicago Taught Me To Hate .. . nCT ; "J* Whites,” sparked an unsuccessful attempt by the City
elected president of the Council to demand an apology from the Tribune’s first Mack
Hooster State Press editorial board member.
Association Saturday at a In a Tribune column published two days before her death, meeting of the organization’s Ms. McClain called an alderman’s lawsuit to remove board of directors here. He Washington from office “a laboratory specimen of racism” will Ukeoffice July I. and “a slap in the face of both the mayor and the Mack
Other officers elected community.”
Saturday include Richard RAMPANT DRUG ABUSE HURTS CHILDREN: STUDY
Harney, publisher of the NEW YORK-
Parke County Sentinel, vice- One in every 20 New York adults is a frequent drug abuser president: Becky Grissom, and the children of addicted parents suffer most from the co-publisher of the Mitchell problem, a recent study reveals. Tribune, secretary; and Research done by the New York Divisioa of Substance
Eugene S. Pulliam, publisher of The Indianapolis Star and The Indianapolis News,
treasurer. y
Two new directors will begin three-year terms on the board July I. They are W.J. McCarthy, publisher of the Hammond Times, and Philip E. Hand, publisher of the Royal Centre Record. McCarthy will represent daily newspapers and Hand the
weeklies.
The new HSPA president
is serving his second term on the board of directors and was its vice-president last year. He succeeds William
Connelly of LaGrange. Applegate .has been
publisher of the Lafayette Journal and Courier since j 1975. He holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Kansas and an MA in journalism from
the University of Iowa. After beginning his
newspaper career in 1959 with the Salina (Kans.) Journal, where he was a reporter. and district editor, he moved to Fort Hays State University as a news-service writer and
journalism instructor. In 1965 he was appointed
L r / ■Si
historic resurrection there can be no Christianity, with Christians the pathetic victims of falsehood or tragic
error.
Much of Paul’s instructions are of vital use today. Our churches are yet ex-
k . .
t . ri . i nr "7 h.., if periencing similar problems mu sacrificial or n ot. b“t'f ant j concerns. Often we must the fact was pointedly aMune ourselves to II *° h,s Timothy 3:16, “AU scripture challenge emerges, and the is ^ by inspirjltio ^ of
God, and is profitable for
roof, for
CLARKSVILLE-
Malcolm W. Applegate,
publisher of the
Journal and Courier, was
Christian must stand firm.
Above and over all stand doctrine* for
the comprehensive rule of co^kh,, for , ll>lnic „ OB in
doing everything to God’s righteousness ••
glory. Such was Paul’s sane ruling. It is still valid (8:13). Year by year the problem shifts its ground of emphasis, but remains fundamentally similar in import and
solution.
Paul agonized over those 10 chapters. He was weary when he turned to the
State jobless rate dips to 9.3 percent Indiana’s unemployment
problem of ecstatic utterance rate f e || below 10 percent in in Chapters 12 and 14, weary April as 24,500 Hoosiers with rebuke and stem rulings returned to the labor force, on immense misconduct. Figures released WedBut, as so often the case, nesday by the Indiana EmPaul breaks free from the’ payment Security Division painful and the controversial p| ace d the April jobless rate to provide some magnificent a , 9.3 percent. The number and universal teaching. Q f working Hoosiers rose to The disorders at the table 2,346,200 for the state’s led him to write, first of all highest employment figure
the New Testament writers, since November 1981.
of the institution of the The March jobless rate
Lord’s Supper, enshrined to W as 10.2 percent,
date in the oral iradition -positive movements in (11:23-26). Progressing fur- the labor force were greater ther, he introduces the telling , han usua | in Apri,.” exfigure of the body and its pained division spokesman
members and nses to lyric Dave Selby
heights with the song of love, | n A p ri , | 983j the sta , e - s
before turning to
ir'i
i *-!
SALUTE WAR DEAD: Members of the Moutford Point Marine Assodadoa gathered at Floral Park West Cemetery Saturday to conduct memorial services for the war dead, la top photo, are (from left) Joseph A. Young, association chaplain; William Motley, president; and Henry D. Shackelford, past state commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars
mm and Anwricaa Legion. In bottom photo Montford Point members are pictured with the Ben Davis High School Marine ROTC Color Guard. From left are Ben Black, David Harwell, James Cofield, William Motley, Henry Shackelford, the color guard, Sgt. Jesse Oliver, who heads the Ben Davis ROTC program; Joe. Young, Ed Ramsey, and James Edwards. (Recorder photo: Jaares Burres)
Upcoming elections ore focus of Rondolph Institute not'l confob
“tongues” problem again. percent. Selby said.
Finally, he gives the first account of the resurrection, and refute the minority, whose philosophical speculations had not spared even that vital event, and to show that, without an
‘The Reagan Presidency
•l** unemployment rate was 12.2 has spelled disaster for blacks
Seminar in Atlanta for Mack execs ATLANTA--National Urban League’s Black Executive Exchange Program, which offers advice from corporate experts to students of predominant-ly-black colleges and universities, will discuss business careers during its 15th anniversary seminar here. The three-day seminar, which opens Wednesday with remarks from Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young and Urban League President John Jacob, will look at the changing structure of corporate America in manufacturing, consumer products and communications in addition to coping with stress and other career conflicts. A report on how black colleges can prepare students for business careers will be issued during the seminar by a group of chief executive officers from major corporations. The seminar will also include symposiums on collegiate’sports, chemical abuse and industry. An awards banquet is among other activities planned. For more information, write: Black Emcutive Exchange Program, National Urban Lengne, lac., 5M E. find. New York, NY IM21. "Humor is the cantempletian of the finite from the point of view of the infinite." -Christian Morfenstem «MMBh_nmnw-
Terre Haute News
and for all working people, Norman Hill, President of the A. Philip Randolph Institute told over 750 black trade unionists and community leaders who gathered in Hollywood, Florida, recently for the Institute’s 15th National Conference. “The administration offers no programs that would serve to retrain black and white workers displaced by
Rev. and Mrs. Ronald the deep recessions which hit Willis Jones of Spruce Street steel, auto and manufacturAME Church and Mrs. Bet- ing. It offers no concrete tie Davis of Allen Chapel initiatives to deal with the AME Church attended the rising rate of black and white Indiana Conference Branch poverty. It offers no soluWomen’s Missionary Society tions to the flood of foreign AME Annual Re-dedication goods which are coming into
Service “Mission Concept our country.”
’84” on Sunday, May 27, at Under such circumstances. Bethel AME Church, In- Hill asserted, “The principal dianapolis. There was also a task for blacks and the pageant entitled, “A principal task for all workers Panorama of Faith,” by must be to work for the Dorothy M. White. defeat of Ronald Reagan and
* * * * for the election of a pro-
Women’s Day at Allen worker, pro-civil rights, and Chapel AME Church will be therefore pro-black admini-
observed Sunday, June 10, at stration.”
3:30 p.m. with Mrs. Elaine Hill’s keynote address also Walters as guest speaker, focused on the primary camThe public is invited to at- # paign of the Rev. Jesse tend. Jackson. “We are certain
* • * * that there is no fundamental
Senior Usher Board of rift between Jesse Jackson’s Shiloh Baptist Church will supporters, many of whom have a program Sunday, are black workers, and those June 10, at 3:30 p.m. trade unionists, black and
* * • * white, who have supported
Vacation Bible School at and worked for Walter MonAllen Chapel AME Church dale,” Hill asserted. “Prowill be held the week of June Mondale blacks and pro18 through June 22 at 9 a.m. Jackson blacks have found to noon, with classes for all themselves, temporarily on ages. different sides of the political
* * • * fence. Yet their differences
Rev. and Mrs. J.C. Tyson are far smaller than the and Mr. C. Latrall of River- principles and interests which
side, California, have returned home after visiting
friends and relatives.
* • • •
Rev. Edgar Stewart, choir and congregation of Faith Baptist Church in Vincennes, Indiana, will be guest at Mt. Pilgrim Baptist Church on SaalHHIMUTLNgatS
unite them.”
Hill exhorted APRI leaders to go back to their communities and work as never before to motivate black voters to get out and vote on Election Day. “We must make sure that the enthusiasm with which blacks have thus far participated in the primaries is maintained through November 6th,” Hill asserted. “The black community has been heard. But only if we vote in numbers greater than ever before will we get rid of Reaganism and replace it with a humane, pro-worker Administration.” Hill’s remarks were echoed by other speakers who addressed in 1984 APRI Conference theme: “Turning the Tide: Blacks and Labor in the 1984 Elections.” AFL-CIO COPE Director John Perkins praised APRI for its work of “advancing the wellbeing of millions of Americans through the political process.” perkins sharply criticized the record of the Administration, asserting that Ronald Reagan “has been to the history of the Presidency what ‘Wrong Way’ Corrigan was to the history of flight.” Perkins told a conference plenary session that “Reagan can be had in November.” He rejected “the myth in the making of Ronald Reagan the invincible.” Perkins noted that “you cannot dump on millions of peopleon workers, on the needy, on minorities, on women, on the elderly-and strengthen your claim to reelection.” The focal point of the APRI Conference was the presentation of the 1984 A.
Philip Randolph Freedom Award to black choreographer Alvin Ailey and of the Randolph Achievement Award to AFL-CIO Vice President Frederick O’Neal. Ailey was cited for using “his art to raise important social and political issues” and for “integrating African, Caribbean, and black American influences into the mainstream of the American
dance repertoire.”
O’Neal was honored for his "outstanding contribu-
tions to the causes of civil assistant dean of the William rights and trade union free- Allen White School of Jourdoms.” A Special Recogni- nalism at the University of lion Award was presented to Kansas, and he joined GanRosina Tucker, the 102-year- nett Co. Inc. as manager of old former National Secre- recruiting and training in
tary-Treasurerof the Ladies’ 1969.
Auxiliary of the union He was named editor of founded by A. Philip Ran- the«lthaca Journal in 1972 dolph-the Brotherhood of and given the additional role Sleeping Car Porters. of publisher in 1974. He Other speakers at con- became a vice-president of ference plenary sessions in- Gannett’s central division in eluded: APRI Chairman 1981, and as such he overseas Bayard Rustin; Postal Work- ‘he operations, of six out-of-ers’ President Moe Biller; *‘a‘e newspapers, as well as AFL-CIO Civil Rights Direc- ‘hat of the Journal and
tor William Pollard; La- Courier,
borers’ International Vice F° r ‘he past year, ApPresident Robert Powell; plegate also has discharged United Black Labor Execu- additional responsibilities live Director Velma Hill; with regard to the Florida State AFL-CIO Pre- distribution of USA Today sident Daniel Miller; and in the states of Michigan and
AFT Human Rights Director Indiana.
Barbara Van Blake.
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Notional Youth Weak Is planned by NAACP NEW YORK- , , . „ . The NAACP National In a proclamation. Hooks Youth and College Division c f ,led upon an , , OC ?L 1 and
Ms dttifnaltd SmxlaylhroYoulh Week to LT'C
Conference participants also heard a detailed account of the South African black trade union from Donsi Khumalo of the Pretoriabased General Workers’ Union. Longway Kwelimthini, president of the Council of Unions of SOuth Africa, delivered a major conference address on “Apartheid: A Crime Against Humanity; An Insult to Human Dignity.” Mr. Kwelimthini, who heads one of the two major
standing service-motivated black youths,” executive director Benjamin L. Hooks
announced Monday.
During that week, each NAACP youth unit across the country will select four youths who have demonstrated outstanding achievements in civics, academics, athletics and religious affairs. Each unit will then conduct a special program to
week with appropriate activities supporting the recognition of the accomplishments
of our youth.”
The Youth and College Division first initiated (he National Youth Week concept in 1943. Then it was called “National Negro Week.” Its purpose was “to focus attention of the nation on the needs, aims, achievements and aspirations of
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nition during a ceremony at
the annual convention in ^JJ,ribu-
tkms to the growth and development of the NAACP
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