Memphis World Memphis World Publishing Co. 1965-03-27 J. A. Beauchamp THIRD AIR FORCE OFFICER IN A FAMILY — Lt. Willie Rodgers, Goldsboro, N.C., left, was graduated from A&T College last week and was commissioned into the U.S. Air Force immediately following, is the third and final son in the family to become an Air Force officer. He accepts the commission from Dr. Lewis C. Dowdy, president of the college, as Maj. Richaid D. Santure, center, professor of air science at the college, look on from center. Winner Of Libel Suit Against Rep. Powell Attacks Him Anew Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, according to the best available sources, hasn't been seen in New York since last Oct. 3. Using this as a mainspring, Mrs. Esther James, victor in a $210,000 libel suit against the Harlem Congressman, launched an attack through the courts that could cost the dapper legislator his $30,000-a-year job. Mrs. James, a 67-year-old Harlem widow, had not received a penny of the money when she instituted proceedings last Monday at the Federal Court at Foley Square in New York City. The suit, a quo warranto (by what right) proceeding, is directed at U. S. Attorney General Nicholas deB. Katzenbach and calls upon the Justice Department to show cause why Powell should not be unseated for failing to spend enough time in his Harlem district. Mrs. James contends, through her attorney, Raymond Rubin, that Powell has violated Article 1, Section 2. Clause 2, of the U. S. Constitution, by not living long enough in New York lately to qualify as an inhabitant. The Constitution says that, in order to qualify as a U. S. Representative, a person must be an "inhabitant of that State in which he shall be chosen." In interpreting that provision, the House of Representatives has held that a "mere sojourner in a State was not qualified as an inhabitant." Using the word "inhabitant" as the key to her argument, Mrs. James contends the noun is not to be confused with "residence." She said the word "inhabitant" means "actually living in the State." Judge John Canella of the Federal court signed the show-cause order and set Tuesday, March 23, as the date it is returnable. The Congressman, who was reelected overwhelmingly last November, has avoided New York because he has been subject to arrest on both criminal and civil warrants growing out of a $46,500 judgment handed down in April 1963. Subsequent litigation favorable to Mrs. James has increased the amount to $210,000. The increase, pait of which applied to Powell's pretty wife, Yvette, stemmed from Powell's transfer of ownership of his $50,000 home at Cerro Gordo Beach near San Juan, Puerto Ricoto relatives in order to avoid having at $46.500 lien put on it. Meanwhile, it was revealed that Mrs. Powell was still on her husband's payroll. Congressional records disclosed that she received $1,575 for her services in January is a member of his staff. As for the $210,000 judgment, Powell said he couldn't pay up because he didn't have the money. It was reported that a group of his parishioners had started a "Powell Relief Fund" to help pay off the original $46,500 judgment to Mrs. James, where the balance is coming from, nobody seemed to know Wednesday. Accused Malcolm Slayer Received A Phony Check Norman 3X. Butler, one of three men indicted last week in the slaying of Malcolm X, received a check in the amount of $10,000 with a note attached: 'for a job well done." "Joseph Williams, attorney for Butler, confirmed that he had received a check but that it was a phony drawn upon an account closed in 1962. The account had been held by the Harlem Progressive Labor Party. Butler, now held without bail in city prison, was unemployed at the time of his current arrest and was free on $10,000 bail in the January shooting of Ben Brown, a New York corrections officer. Brown, an alleged Muslim, had split from the national organation to organize a mosque of his own Malcolm X, former Number Two man in the Black Muslims had broken from the sect also to form his own movement. Indicted with Butler before State Supreme Court Justice Abraham I. Gellinoff, was Thomas 15X Johnson, 29, New York, and Thomas Hagan, 22, Paterson, N. J. Butler pleaded innocent to charges of willfully killing Malcolm X "with a shotgun and pistols." No trial date was set. Pleading of the other two men was postponed. In a separate indictment stemming from the same case, Reuben Francis former bodyguard of the slam black nationalist leader, was accused of first degree felonious assault in the shooting of Hagan immediately after the assassination of Malcolm X. Hagan is presently confined in the prison ward of Bellevue Hospital. ELEANOR It may lie not so much in the glittering heroic act as in a stubborn persistence, or in the acceptance of hange. Courage is the quality men admire most Primitive males measured their manhood by it, and so do modern adolescents up to the age of Hemingway. Civilized, circumscribed people are dazzled by showy courage: the Mexican at Acapulco who dives off a cliff into an ebbing sea, racing - car drivers with chiseled faces, trapeze artists, bystanders who run through flames to save strangers. But there is a truer courage, more gallant arid practically invisible, in the steadfastness of ordinary people in monotonous jobs, in parents who matter -of - factly by raise handicapped children, in those who live in never ending pain without hating the well, in adults who, stalwartly giving up malice and suspicion, teach themselves to relax and trust. This kind of courage people rarely recognize in themselves. A Canadian vetemns' hospital had a patient for many years who became a legend because of all the pain he endured. A sniper's bullet in Korea had smashed his hip and sent a hundred splinters of bone through his body. When his dressines were changed he bent steel rods in his hands and screamed. Yet he commented that he was better off than the amputees. The amputees, however, considered themselves lucier than the blind and the blind felt sorry for the paraplegics. The paraplegics didn't regard themselves as courageous — the really brave man was the one dying quietly of kidney cancer. But that patient was convinced he would recover. This stubborn bravery is a far cry from what might be called nervous heroism. Adults have leaped into rivers to rescue the drowning, only co remember too late that they themselves cannot swim. Nobody self - sacrificing men have pushed adrift lifeboats containing only women and children, who subsequently perished through lack of sea knowledge. Clerks have had their needs blown off fussily protecting the petty cash. There is also what the British royal physician, Lord Moran, in his book The Anatomy of Courage calls "the courage of a vacant mind." Reduced to the state of a dazed simpleton, when his brain cannot tolerate any more noise, horror or pain, the soldier in battle may perform feats of incredible bravery for which he s truly not accountable. Discipline and instinct inspire many acts of courage, People seem to have a reflexive tendency to protect life that is in danger, Andrew Carnegie took special note of this responsible kind of courage, and the anual list of citations by the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission is a moving testimonial to the nobility inherent in the ordinary person. One notable case among the many catalogued was that of the young girl who in 1959 swam, to the aid of a man being devoured by a shark and towed him to shore. She received a Silver Medal and a cash award. Fear is a form of energy that generates itself spontaneously in every human emergency, and quiet, nonacting courage is a dam against its release. The dam must eventually give way if the health and sanity of the individual are to be preserv ed. The mother who under tight control gets her battered child to the hospital may faint afterward or go into shock, Sailors off wartime convoys had foul tempers, displayed and relished brutal barroom fights. Sustained, long - term courage, therefore, is truly superhuman. James H. Meredith, the first known Negro to attend the University of Mississippi, exhibited such long - term courage. So sometimes do the poor in health who refuse to allow weakness to deter them from making their existence count. The English philosopher Herbert Spencer had a nervous breakdown that destroyed his health when he was 40. Nevertheless, he commenced a ten - volume SYNTHETIC PHILOSOPHY. The pains in his head were so severe that he had to dose himself with opium to sleep at night. Finally he could dictate only ten minutes at a time, five times a day. He wrote PRINCIPLES OF SOCIOLOGY that way! Courage is a private thing. A prizefighter may have none of it. Being bonded instead of course opportunity and good reflexes —while a man who apologizes to his own son may have waded through crocodiles. Everyday heroism seldom reaches visibility. "Our banal daily life makes banal demands on our patience, our devotion, endurance and self - sacrifice" wrote philosopherpsychoanalyst. Carl Jung, "which we must fulfill modestly and without heroic gestures, and which actually need a heroism not seen from without. All growth requires this ind of invisible courage, Giving up a long held convection or prejudice is like an amputation; yet to go on, human beings must valiantly keepshedding themselves. While some people can move agilely to absorb new information and points of view, for others advancement is scary. Admiral "Bull" Halsey made a famous comment on heroes. "There are no great men," he said, 'only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet." Few great challenges crackle with the unmistakable drum - roll of destiny. Yet, inconspicuously, courage makes its daily triumph over misery, death, frustration and injustice — in wretched homes kept spotless and planted with geraniums, in the daring vitality of many old people, in gentle poets who lay railway tips for a living and send their tons to college, in churchmen who risk censure rather than keep silent on important issues. Courage in its highest form, moral, courage, is what makes a man indestructible. And there is a momentum to it. Each act of courage adds to man's faith in himself, in the purpose and dignity of all life! By each brave act he enlarges his ability to be brave - and -eventually the process is irreversible. 'Condensed from 'Love, Hate, Fear, Anger and the Other Emotions' by June Callwood in Reader's Digest March 1965). What Is Courage? It may lie not so much in the glittering heroic act as in a stubborn persistence, or in the acceptance of hange. Courage is the quality men admire most Primitive males measured their manhood by it, and so do modern adolescents up to the age of Hemingway. Civilized, circumscribed people are dazzled by showy courage: the Mexican at Acapulco who dives off a cliff into an ebbing sea, racing - car drivers with chiseled faces, trapeze artists, bystanders who run through flames to save strangers. But there is a truer courage, more gallant arid practically invisible, in the steadfastness of ordinary people in monotonous jobs, in parents who matter -of - factly by raise handicapped children, in those who live in never ending pain without hating the well, in adults who, stalwartly giving up malice and suspicion, teach themselves to relax and trust. This kind of courage people rarely recognize in themselves. A Canadian vetemns' hospital had a patient for many years who became a legend because of all the pain he endured. A sniper's bullet in Korea had smashed his hip and sent a hundred splinters of bone through his body. When his dressines were changed he bent steel rods in his hands and screamed. Yet he commented that he was better off than the amputees. The amputees, however, considered themselves lucier than the blind and the blind felt sorry for the paraplegics. The paraplegics didn't regard themselves as courageous — the really brave man was the one dying quietly of kidney cancer. But that patient was convinced he would recover. This stubborn bravery is a far cry from what might be called nervous heroism. Adults have leaped into rivers to rescue the drowning, only co remember too late that they themselves cannot swim. Nobody self - sacrificing men have pushed adrift lifeboats containing only women and children, who subsequently perished through lack of sea knowledge. Clerks have had their needs blown off fussily protecting the petty cash. There is also what the British royal physician, Lord Moran, in his book The Anatomy of Courage calls "the courage of a vacant mind." Reduced to the state of a dazed simpleton, when his brain cannot tolerate any more noise, horror or pain, the soldier in battle may perform feats of incredible bravery for which he s truly not accountable. Discipline and instinct inspire many acts of courage, People seem to have a reflexive tendency to protect life that is in danger, Andrew Carnegie took special note of this responsible kind of courage, and the anual list of citations by the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission is a moving testimonial to the nobility inherent in the ordinary person. One notable case among the many catalogued was that of the young girl who in 1959 swam, to the aid of a man being devoured by a shark and towed him to shore. She received a Silver Medal and a cash award. Fear is a form of energy that generates itself spontaneously in every human emergency, and quiet, nonacting courage is a dam against its release. The dam must eventually give way if the health and sanity of the individual are to be preserv ed. The mother who under tight control gets her battered child to the hospital may faint afterward or go into shock, Sailors off wartime convoys had foul tempers, displayed and relished brutal barroom fights. Sustained, long - term courage, therefore, is truly superhuman. James H. Meredith, the first known Negro to attend the University of Mississippi, exhibited such long - term courage. So sometimes do the poor in health who refuse to allow weakness to deter them from making their existence count. The English philosopher Herbert Spencer had a nervous breakdown that destroyed his health when he was 40. Nevertheless, he commenced a ten - volume SYNTHETIC PHILOSOPHY. The pains in his head were so severe that he had to dose himself with opium to sleep at night. Finally he could dictate only ten minutes at a time, five times a day. He wrote PRINCIPLES OF SOCIOLOGY that way! Courage is a private thing. A prizefighter may have none of it. Being bonded instead of course opportunity and good reflexes —while a man who apologizes to his own son may have waded through crocodiles. Everyday heroism seldom reaches visibility. "Our banal daily life makes banal demands on our patience, our devotion, endurance and self - sacrifice" wrote philosopherpsychoanalyst. Carl Jung, "which we must fulfill modestly and without heroic gestures, and which actually need a heroism not seen from without. All growth requires this ind of invisible courage, Giving up a long held convection or prejudice is like an amputation; yet to go on, human beings must valiantly keepshedding themselves. While some people can move agilely to absorb new information and points of view, for others advancement is scary. Admiral "Bull" Halsey made a famous comment on heroes. "There are no great men," he said, 'only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet." Few great challenges crackle with the unmistakable drum - roll of destiny. Yet, inconspicuously, courage makes its daily triumph over misery, death, frustration and injustice — in wretched homes kept spotless and planted with geraniums, in the daring vitality of many old people, in gentle poets who lay railway tips for a living and send their tons to college, in churchmen who risk censure rather than keep silent on important issues. Courage in its highest form, moral, courage, is what makes a man indestructible. And there is a momentum to it. Each act of courage adds to man's faith in himself, in the purpose and dignity of all life! By each brave act he enlarges his ability to be brave - and -eventually the process is irreversible. 'Condensed from 'Love, Hate, Fear, Anger and the Other Emotions' by June Callwood in Reader's Digest March 1965). COMB AWAY GRAY Just comb and brush to add color tone. Washes out. Will not rub off. NOT A DYE. Easiest, quickest way to add color gradually AVOIDS THAT SUDDEN DYED LOOK. Brush attached for removing excess coloring. Prevents soiling, rubbing off. Comes in Plastic Case. Can be carried in pocket or purse. Comes in all shades: Black to Platinum Blue. Just write, state shade. Pay only $1.98 on delivery plus postage Money back if not delighted. Gold Medal Hair Products, Inc. Dept. St-1, ooklyn 35, New Yo WITH THIS COLOR COMB BRUSH Just comb and brush to add color tone. Washes out. Will not rub off. NOT A DYE. Easiest, quickest way to add color gradually AVOIDS THAT SUDDEN DYED LOOK. Brush attached for removing excess coloring. Prevents soiling, rubbing off. Comes in Plastic Case. Can be carried in pocket or purse. Comes in all shades: Black to Platinum Blue. Just write, state shade. Pay only $1.98 on delivery plus postage Money back if not delighted. Gold Medal Hair Products, Inc. Dept. St-1, ooklyn 35, New Yo Civil Rights Roundup Up Because Tanglewood park could not be legally operated on a segregated or integrated basis, an annual steeplechase here has been cancelled. The park was willed to the board of trustees by the late Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Reynolds on the condition that it would be operated solely for the area's white citizens. But under the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the park is unabe to host spectator sports on a segregated basis. A Superior Court judge ruled that the board of trustees could not violate the terms of the will nor the provisions of the civil rights law. Harold Kludge, 44, who identified himself as an evangelist from Marshall, Ill. hoisted a sign lauding Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace during a ciivl rights sympathy protest here and was ejected from the demonstration. Police arrested Frodge after he refused to step out of the parade line. Hs sign read: "Negro mobs must not rule the land. Law must not break down;" and "George Wallace, a great governor; Alabama, a great state." Roy Wilkins, NACP executive director, sadonically asked the Pennsylvania based Hammermill Paper, company: "Are you not proud that Hammermill by building in Selma, will be helping to support the Wallace storm trooper kind of state government?" The company earlier rejected an appeal not to proceed with plans to build a new plant in strifetorn Selma. The NAACP last week requested that the national YMCA put an end to a "policy of racial exclusion" being practiced in Memphis and other southern cities. In a letter to Leo Marsh, YMCA national secretary for counseling and interracial services, the Rev. Edward J. Odom, Jr. NAACP secretary f for church organizations, noted that "this discriminatory action appears to be at variance with the policy of the YMCA national board." Ferber B. Pearl, president, Q. W. Siebert company, a 96 - year - old diversified investing and operating company, rejected a bid of the Southeast Mississippi Industrial Development council to build additional facilities in that state. In response to a letter from A. W. Wright, executive director of the Mississippi agency, Pearl stated "We cannot condone murder, beatings, burnings and police state, activities in general, whether in the North or tm South .... We have no desire whatever to locate in your area and employ the people who are responsible for the outrages against the persons and the dignity of a large number of our fine, though colored, Americans." BOXED IN Because Tanglewood park could not be legally operated on a segregated or integrated basis, an annual steeplechase here has been cancelled. The park was willed to the board of trustees by the late Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Reynolds on the condition that it would be operated solely for the area's white citizens. But under the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the park is unabe to host spectator sports on a segregated basis. A Superior Court judge ruled that the board of trustees could not violate the terms of the will nor the provisions of the civil rights law. Harold Kludge, 44, who identified himself as an evangelist from Marshall, Ill. hoisted a sign lauding Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace during a ciivl rights sympathy protest here and was ejected from the demonstration. Police arrested Frodge after he refused to step out of the parade line. Hs sign read: "Negro mobs must not rule the land. Law must not break down;" and "George Wallace, a great governor; Alabama, a great state." Roy Wilkins, NACP executive director, sadonically asked the Pennsylvania based Hammermill Paper, company: "Are you not proud that Hammermill by building in Selma, will be helping to support the Wallace storm trooper kind of state government?" The company earlier rejected an appeal not to proceed with plans to build a new plant in strifetorn Selma. The NAACP last week requested that the national YMCA put an end to a "policy of racial exclusion" being practiced in Memphis and other southern cities. In a letter to Leo Marsh, YMCA national secretary for counseling and interracial services, the Rev. Edward J. Odom, Jr. NAACP secretary f for church organizations, noted that "this discriminatory action appears to be at variance with the policy of the YMCA national board." Ferber B. Pearl, president, Q. W. Siebert company, a 96 - year - old diversified investing and operating company, rejected a bid of the Southeast Mississippi Industrial Development council to build additional facilities in that state. In response to a letter from A. W. Wright, executive director of the Mississippi agency, Pearl stated "We cannot condone murder, beatings, burnings and police state, activities in general, whether in the North or tm South .... We have no desire whatever to locate in your area and employ the people who are responsible for the outrages against the persons and the dignity of a large number of our fine, though colored, Americans." HOISTS SIGN; GETS ARRESTED Because Tanglewood park could not be legally operated on a segregated or integrated basis, an annual steeplechase here has been cancelled. The park was willed to the board of trustees by the late Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Reynolds on the condition that it would be operated solely for the area's white citizens. But under the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the park is unabe to host spectator sports on a segregated basis. A Superior Court judge ruled that the board of trustees could not violate the terms of the will nor the provisions of the civil rights law. Harold Kludge, 44, who identified himself as an evangelist from Marshall, Ill. hoisted a sign lauding Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace during a ciivl rights sympathy protest here and was ejected from the demonstration. Police arrested Frodge after he refused to step out of the parade line. Hs sign read: "Negro mobs must not rule the land. Law must not break down;" and "George Wallace, a great governor; Alabama, a great state." Roy Wilkins, NACP executive director, sadonically asked the Pennsylvania based Hammermill Paper, company: "Are you not proud that Hammermill by building in Selma, will be helping to support the Wallace storm trooper kind of state government?" The company earlier rejected an appeal not to proceed with plans to build a new plant in strifetorn Selma. The NAACP last week requested that the national YMCA put an end to a "policy of racial exclusion" being practiced in Memphis and other southern cities. In a letter to Leo Marsh, YMCA national secretary for counseling and interracial services, the Rev. Edward J. Odom, Jr. NAACP secretary f for church organizations, noted that "this discriminatory action appears to be at variance with the policy of the YMCA national board." Ferber B. Pearl, president, Q. W. Siebert company, a 96 - year - old diversified investing and operating company, rejected a bid of the Southeast Mississippi Industrial Development council to build additional facilities in that state. In response to a letter from A. W. Wright, executive director of the Mississippi agency, Pearl stated "We cannot condone murder, beatings, burnings and police state, activities in general, whether in the North or tm South .... We have no desire whatever to locate in your area and employ the people who are responsible for the outrages against the persons and the dignity of a large number of our fine, though colored, Americans." NO HELP FOR SELMA Because Tanglewood park could not be legally operated on a segregated or integrated basis, an annual steeplechase here has been cancelled. The park was willed to the board of trustees by the late Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Reynolds on the condition that it would be operated solely for the area's white citizens. But under the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the park is unabe to host spectator sports on a segregated basis. A Superior Court judge ruled that the board of trustees could not violate the terms of the will nor the provisions of the civil rights law. Harold Kludge, 44, who identified himself as an evangelist from Marshall, Ill. hoisted a sign lauding Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace during a ciivl rights sympathy protest here and was ejected from the demonstration. Police arrested Frodge after he refused to step out of the parade line. Hs sign read: "Negro mobs must not rule the land. Law must not break down;" and "George Wallace, a great governor; Alabama, a great state." Roy Wilkins, NACP executive director, sadonically asked the Pennsylvania based Hammermill Paper, company: "Are you not proud that Hammermill by building in Selma, will be helping to support the Wallace storm trooper kind of state government?" The company earlier rejected an appeal not to proceed with plans to build a new plant in strifetorn Selma. The NAACP last week requested that the national YMCA put an end to a "policy of racial exclusion" being practiced in Memphis and other southern cities. In a letter to Leo Marsh, YMCA national secretary for counseling and interracial services, the Rev. Edward J. Odom, Jr. NAACP secretary f for church organizations, noted that "this discriminatory action appears to be at variance with the policy of the YMCA national board." Ferber B. Pearl, president, Q. W. Siebert company, a 96 - year - old diversified investing and operating company, rejected a bid of the Southeast Mississippi Industrial Development council to build additional facilities in that state. In response to a letter from A. W. Wright, executive director of the Mississippi agency, Pearl stated "We cannot condone murder, beatings, burnings and police state, activities in general, whether in the North or tm South .... We have no desire whatever to locate in your area and employ the people who are responsible for the outrages against the persons and the dignity of a large number of our fine, though colored, Americans." Y'S NOT FULLY INTEGRATED Because Tanglewood park could not be legally operated on a segregated or integrated basis, an annual steeplechase here has been cancelled. The park was willed to the board of trustees by the late Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Reynolds on the condition that it would be operated solely for the area's white citizens. But under the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the park is unabe to host spectator sports on a segregated basis. A Superior Court judge ruled that the board of trustees could not violate the terms of the will nor the provisions of the civil rights law. Harold Kludge, 44, who identified himself as an evangelist from Marshall, Ill. hoisted a sign lauding Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace during a ciivl rights sympathy protest here and was ejected from the demonstration. Police arrested Frodge after he refused to step out of the parade line. Hs sign read: "Negro mobs must not rule the land. Law must not break down;" and "George Wallace, a great governor; Alabama, a great state." Roy Wilkins, NACP executive director, sadonically asked the Pennsylvania based Hammermill Paper, company: "Are you not proud that Hammermill by building in Selma, will be helping to support the Wallace storm trooper kind of state government?" The company earlier rejected an appeal not to proceed with plans to build a new plant in strifetorn Selma. The NAACP last week requested that the national YMCA put an end to a "policy of racial exclusion" being practiced in Memphis and other southern cities. In a letter to Leo Marsh, YMCA national secretary for counseling and interracial services, the Rev. Edward J. Odom, Jr. NAACP secretary f for church organizations, noted that "this discriminatory action appears to be at variance with the policy of the YMCA national board." Ferber B. Pearl, president, Q. W. Siebert company, a 96 - year - old diversified investing and operating company, rejected a bid of the Southeast Mississippi Industrial Development council to build additional facilities in that state. In response to a letter from A. W. Wright, executive director of the Mississippi agency, Pearl stated "We cannot condone murder, beatings, burnings and police state, activities in general, whether in the North or tm South .... We have no desire whatever to locate in your area and employ the people who are responsible for the outrages against the persons and the dignity of a large number of our fine, though colored, Americans." HIT EM WHERE IT HURTS Because Tanglewood park could not be legally operated on a segregated or integrated basis, an annual steeplechase here has been cancelled. The park was willed to the board of trustees by the late Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Reynolds on the condition that it would be operated solely for the area's white citizens. But under the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the park is unabe to host spectator sports on a segregated basis. A Superior Court judge ruled that the board of trustees could not violate the terms of the will nor the provisions of the civil rights law. Harold Kludge, 44, who identified himself as an evangelist from Marshall, Ill. hoisted a sign lauding Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace during a ciivl rights sympathy protest here and was ejected from the demonstration. Police arrested Frodge after he refused to step out of the parade line. Hs sign read: "Negro mobs must not rule the land. Law must not break down;" and "George Wallace, a great governor; Alabama, a great state." Roy Wilkins, NACP executive director, sadonically asked the Pennsylvania based Hammermill Paper, company: "Are you not proud that Hammermill by building in Selma, will be helping to support the Wallace storm trooper kind of state government?" The company earlier rejected an appeal not to proceed with plans to build a new plant in strifetorn Selma. The NAACP last week requested that the national YMCA put an end to a "policy of racial exclusion" being practiced in Memphis and other southern cities. In a letter to Leo Marsh, YMCA national secretary for counseling and interracial services, the Rev. Edward J. Odom, Jr. NAACP secretary f for church organizations, noted that "this discriminatory action appears to be at variance with the policy of the YMCA national board." Ferber B. Pearl, president, Q. W. Siebert company, a 96 - year - old diversified investing and operating company, rejected a bid of the Southeast Mississippi Industrial Development council to build additional facilities in that state. In response to a letter from A. W. Wright, executive director of the Mississippi agency, Pearl stated "We cannot condone murder, beatings, burnings and police state, activities in general, whether in the North or tm South .... We have no desire whatever to locate in your area and employ the people who are responsible for the outrages against the persons and the dignity of a large number of our fine, though colored, Americans." NAACP Hails LBJ's Vote Message As Eloquent And History Making Executive Director Roy Wilkins of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People hailed President Johnson's voting rights address as an "eloquent and historymaking message." In a telegram to the President thanking him for his speech which Was delivered before a joint session of Congress and the nation via television and radio Monday night, March 15,. Mr. Wilkins said the address "was a plea to your fellow Americans to vindicate their personal and their country's ideals," and added: "It will rank as a moment at the summit in the life of our nation and in the interpretation by a President of our high national pur-pose." The NAACP head said: "We salute your reiterated pledge to use your chance as President to eradicate the condition pictured in your warm and moving lines: 'And somehow you never forget what poverty and hatred can do when you see its scars on the hopeful face of a young child." Mr. Wilkins added: "The NAACP continues its dedication to the task of making those scars but a haunting memory and offers its full support to the president in this endeavor." In a press conference at NAACP headquarters, Tuesday, March 6. Mr. Wilkins continued to heap praise on the President for his voting rights message. Mr. Wilkins said he believed Mr. Johnson was sincere and would press for passage of a bill guaranteeing all cans the right to vote. When asked if he thought demonstrations should cease during Congressional debate on the voting rights bill, Mr. Wilkins said he would not suggest that all all protests be called off. Referring particularly to the recent demonstrations in Selma and Montgomery, Ala., which are being directed by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the NAAOP leader called them "a magnificent stimulus" to the voting bill. He said he anticipated, that they would continue there as long as Dr. King and his co-workers thought them necessary. Mr. Wilkins, however, said he caution those "people in Des Moines, Chicago, New York and other places who get happy all of a sudden and say 'let's demonstrate,' just for the sake of demonstrating," to consider what possible effect on the legislation their protest would have. Mr. Wilkins said further hat he did not think attempts at filibustering would "weigh very heavy" on Congress pointing out that the proposed voting "rights measure has support from both political parties. In acknowledgement and praise of that bipartisan support, Mr. Wilkins disclosed the text of a telegram which the NAACP had sent to Senators Paul H. Douglas (D-Ill.) and Clifford Case (R., N. J.) who have introduced a voting rights bill. The wire said: "We appreciate the introduction of your bipartisam voting rights bill which is in line with the President's all - out declaration in his magnificent speech last night. We trust that the legislation which emerges will reflect in detail the President's and your own concern that obstacles to the participation of every voter in elections be demolished speedily through a simplified and effective remedy in law for the ills that now beset the prospective Negro voter." waaN Ohio Mothers Give $12,000 To The Scholarship Fund Several hundred women from thirty-six states and twelve foreign countries are expected to attend the Eighteenth Annual Convention of the National Association of Central State Mothers on the campus May 7-9. The local Mother's Chapter of Dayton, Ohio, will be hostess for the 1965 national assembly which has selected as its theme: "The search for belonging, expectations and concepts." Organized in 1947 with five mothers by Mrs. Elizabeth Anderson, former Dean of Women" of Central State College and her sister, Mrs. Sadie T. M. Alexander, prominent lawyer of Philadelphia, the National Association today has over 2,200. members. The group has donated approximately $11000 to the Central State College Elizabeth M. Anderson Scholarship Endowment Fund during the three year presidency of Mrs. Cleo Jones, 16211 Lawton Avenue, Detroit, Mich. They have also made substantial contributions to the student emergency and short term loan fund. This year, the organization has pledged $500.00 to the Dr. Charles Wesley Research Foundation. With hundreds of members participating in the association's current nationwide financial campaign by selling raffles on a 1965 Valiant to be given to the holder of the winning ticket to be drawn during the national convention it is hoped this final report will surpass the $3,000.00 raised last year. In addition to Mrs. Jones, the other national officers are as follows: Mrs. Dorothy Williams, Columbus Ohio, first vice president; Mrs. Sarah Barber, Detroit, Mich., second vice president; Mrs. Eldora Ridley, Detroit, Mich., corresponding secretary; Mrs. Audrey Newsome, Central State College, Wilberforce, Ohio, executive secretary. Mrs. Nancy Banner, Washington, D. C. recording secretary; Mrs. Sylvia Whiting, Cleveland, Ohio, fi nancial secretary; Mrs. Mary E. Lee, Dean of Women of Central State College, Wilberforce, Ohio, treasurer; Mrs. Lanthe Jones, Cleveland, Ohio, historian; Mrs. Beatrice Woodall, New York, N. Y., sergeant-at-arms and Mrs. Sallie Hapson, Cleveland, Ohio chaplain. The local chapter presidents are: Mrs. Ann Gregory, Gary, Indiana; Mrs. Camillie Wilburn, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. Lillian Martin, Nutley, N. J.; Mrs. Maddine Brown, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.; and Mrs. Beatrice Woodhall, New York City. Mrs. Florence Fletcher, Cincinnati, Ohio; Mrs. Anna Stewart, Cleveland, Ohio; Mrs. Mary Claytor, Columbus Ohio; Mrs. Martha Favors, Dayton, Ohio; Mrs. Sallie Parker, Springfield, Ohio; Mrs. Jimmie Cox, New Castle, Penna. and Mrs. Blackwell, Pittsburgh Pa. Plans are being formulated to organize local chapters in Chicago, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, St. Louise and many other cities throughout the United States which have large student representation at Central State College. The association's influence has been strengthened and its membership increased by sending each member a newsletter four times a year, publishing a yearly national magazine and making contributions to the college's scholarship fund. End Hair Color Worries For Second Chance at Youth! You're younger lookinn...with a new permanent type hair color in mere minutes! Let Tintz re-color your gray, dingy hair with color as lustrous and natural looking as if you were born with it. Tintz leaves hair soft, radiant —young looking. No harsh color or dried-out hair, became Tintz is ammonia-free and has lanolin conditioner added. Only occasional touch-ups needed, Today, let Tintz give you a second chance at youth! All 14 different youthful shades shown in full color on Tintz package to help you select the exact life-lie shade you want your hair to be. Ask for Tintz at your favorite Druggist today. Ten Negroes To Get Awards As Good Americans Ten Negroes arc among 45 civic, business and professional lenders who will receive "Good American" awards at the annual dinner of the Chicago Committee of 100 in the Grand ballroom of the Conrad Hilton hotel, on April 7. Heading the list of awardees are Hobart Taylor, executive vice chairman, President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunities, and Dr. Robert C. Weaver, director Housing and Home Finance agency. The remaining eight are the Rev. T. Emerson Brown, Progressive Baptist church; Democratic State Rep. Corneal A. Davis, TJ. S. Rep. William L. Dawson (Dem.), Albon L. Foster, director, Cosmopolitan Chamber of Commerce; Frayser T. Lane, Chicago Urban League; and Aid. Ralph J. Metcalfe, all of Chicago; Aid. Vel Phillips, Milwaukee; and Dr. Queen Esther Shootes, dean home economics school, Tuskegee Institute. The awards arc an annual presentation of the committee of 100 in recognition of individual contributions to human relations and practices of basic principles of American democracy. The committee also will present certificates of commendation to business firms and institutions which "observe the fundamental right of equality or opportunity In employment, without regard to color, creed, sex or national origin." Winners of the commendations will be announced later. Senate committee upholds filibuster rule. CBS drops plan for Polly Bergen series. Simpler tax forms are sought for 1966. THEY JOINED THE MARCH — When comedian Dick Gregory (I) and actor William Marshall winged into the Atlanta airport Saturday Mar. 20 from different parts of the country they found they both had the same destination - Selma, Alabama, to participate in the civil rights voter protest march to Montgomery. The two were also joined at the Atlanta airport by such Negro notables as Dr. Ralph Bunche, U.N. Undersecretary; Mrs. Constance Baker Motley, Manhattan Borough (New York) president, and Gerald A. Lamb, treasurer for the state of Connecticut. Beauty Consultant BETTY ANNE WEST says. HERE ARE YOUR BEST BEAUTY BUYS PLMO HAIR DRESSING Black and White Golden Amber Hair Dressing gives dull hair a brilliant sheen; holds and controls stubborn hair, makes it sof and easy to manage. For men, women, children. Small size ONLY Black and White ULTRA-WHITE Hair Dressing, large size 50¢. 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