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10c VOLUME 40—NUMBER 36 THE T-W-O WEATHERS: By ANDREW F. FRUEHAUF, C.S. +++ Droughts, Hurricanes, Floods: DEVIL'S ADAM-EVE LORD GOD'S ! (Gen. 2:7. etc.) EXCESS RAIN. HEAT. COLD OF SATAN BOUND: JUDAISM. R.C.. PROTESTANTISM, MATERIA MEDICA, ET AL! THE UNIVERSE IS 100% THE MANIFESTATION OF THOUGHT 1 God's Christ Scientist-THE REAL: "IN ATMOSPHERE OF LOVE DIVINE. WE LIVE. AND MOVE, AND BREATHE/' AND HAVE OUR BEING I— CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HYMN. HEAVEN AT HAND WITHIN YOU! E-X-C-L-U- S-l-V-E RE-A-L-I-TY OF GOD'S HEAVEN AND ETERNAL LIFE NO BIRTHS! DEATHS, SIN, MATTER, HELL AND THEIR FATHER THE DEVIL GIGANTIC ADAM-EVE FRAUDS AND M-Y-T-H-S ! Genesis 1:26: MAN— GOD'S IMAGE DIVINE. 27: GOD'S MALE AND FEMALE IN O-N-E AS PER C-H-I-L-D-L-E-SS JESUS ! AND GREAT EST MARY, BAKER EDDY'S MORE THAN 40 YEARS I V. 31: "AND GOD SAW E-V-E-R-Y THING THAT HE [THE ONE R-E-A-L PARENT ! CREATOR HONORED BY THE C-H-I-L-D-L-E S S CHRIST JESUS!) HAD MADE, AND, BEHOLD, IT WAS [—l S—] VERY GOOD "! "KEEP FIGHTING ! REMEMBER EDWARD EVERETT HALE'S IMMORTAL LINES: Human Events, Your Washington Report, 7/28 "I AM ONLY ONE, BUT I AM ONE. I CAN T DO EVERYTHING, BUT I CAN DO SOMETHING. AND WHAT I CAN DO, THAT I OUGHT TO DO. AND WHAT I OUGHT TO DO, BY THE GRACE OF GOD I SHALL DO." "19 DEAD, 120 HURT - 'BASEBALL SPECIAL' WRECK BLAMED ON A FAULTY RAIL" ! OF 'COCK EYED' 'THINKING' (?) LABOR AND MANAGEMENT! FEATHERBEDDING DEVIL'S ADAMS AND EVES I HARRISBURG, Pa. Railroad officials said yester day a section of faulty rail apparently caused three cars of a "baseball special" train to jump the tracks and plunge down an embankment into the Susquehanna River, killing 19 persons and injuring at least 120. * * * "HOW RUSSIANS GET ULCERS" "NEUTRAL INDIA GETS MORE CREDIT" N.Y. Trib. Ed'ls. 8-2. MAKES SENSE AS PER C S. MONITOR. TOO. * * * Th« great dream of every Soviet family, one which ha* proved far more elusive than the conquest of outer space, is to have a place to live. See ULCERS, Page 9 CAN SWAINSON DEFEND THE NEWS ED'L? "LET THE PEOPLE VOTE - "WHO'S AFRAID NOW?" Detroit News, 7-24 NOW who is afraid of the people ? George Romney has proposed that voters be given a chance in the Nov. 6 election to decide for themselves whether they want a State Senate chosen on a straight head count basis or a Senate districted on a formula including both area and population. Gov. Swainson s answer is NO ! Swainson blusters that Romney is fomenting legisla tive defiance of the State Supreme Court. That body's Democratic majority has ordered the Legislature to adopt See VOTE, Page 2 SEE BACK PAGE FOR REVELATIONS OF - EXCLUSIVE REALITY - ETERNAL PERFECTION OF GOD'S CREATION - YOUR TRUE BEING I - EXPOSURE OF THE M-Y-T-H-S - DEVIL. HELL, SIN, BIRTHS, DISEASE, DEATH. WARS. MATTER I ADAM-EVE. MURDEROUS CAIN. JUDAS - "GHASTLY FARCE" - FOOLING SAULS OF TARSUS, 90 YEARS PLUS RIP VAN WINKLE. - "LORD-GOD" - NON-CHRIST SCIENTIST CLERGY I LAYMEN, LEADERS, MASSES I udlrau^&^rlwime, mJT?| SATURDAY, AUGUST 11 K/iOnal Lawyers Guild Unit To Aid Southern Attorneys Plan Gives New Hope To Negroes In Dixie Help the Negro South compel the White South ‘to obey the Federal Constitution. This was the plea made by a group of Southern Negro Attor j neys to the National Lawyers Guild, an organization comprised mainly of Northern Attorneys, Negro anu white. Airmen Rhoden and McNamara Are Reassigned LACKLAND AFB, Tex. Air man Basic Kenneth V. Rhoden, son of .Mrs. and Mrs. Victor K. Rhoden, 2510 Marquette, Detroit, is being reassigned to the United States \ir Force technical train ing course for radio and radar maintenance specialists at Kecs lei AFB. Miss. Jfo " KENNETH RHODEN . v - ‘ • '■**•>. } > 1 V V V I ’ | TERENCE McNAMARA Airman Rhoden, who has com pleted his basic military training (Continued on Page 8) Hands off Bill of Rights' Jem Tell Senate WASHINGTON “Hands off the Bill of Ki^lils!” This was the buttle cry di rected at Senator James C. Kast land (Pom.. Miss ), Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, by letter, telegram, postcard and telephone call from every section of the country this week following a Committee hearing on proposals to amend the Constitution. The hearing was called to con sider legislation aimed at upset ting the recent U. S. Supreme Court decision that outlawed the New York Regents’ prayer as an infringement on religious freedom. Typical of the protests against proposed Constitutional changes Election News Rep. Charles C. Diggs, Jr. State' first and only Negro was renominated by nearly 3 to 1 over Mrs. Jessie P. Slaton A Negro attorney. 970 GRATIOT AVENUE, DETROIT 7, MICHIGAN f And it became the objective 1 of a task undertaken in response i to the plea “to till tiic gap lclt by tlie Bar in tiie Southern States” in desegregation eases. By providing legal assistance to harrassed Southern Lawyers, ilie t»uild has taken large strides i toward its objective. In a report made public last week, the Guild, through its Coin- I mitlce to Assist Southern Law- I vers (CASL), related how its pro | „ram has brought new hope to the Negro in Dixie who has been | deprived of legal help in his I battle for equality. Few attorneys in the South' will undertake a ease, civil or criminal, arising from the de segregation movements, the Guild' said. Those who do, it reported, “and have vigorously lougiit lor their client's constitutional rights, have | frequently suffered financial loss, social and professional ostracism and have been otherwise intuni dated and harrassed.” CASL enlisted Guild members to assist the Southern few with research, preparation of briefs and arguments, and active parti cipation in Soulhcrg* Courts. Vol unteers who receive nu legal fees have from 38 cities and 14 states and 4 Whnbcr have had their first experience in a Southern Courtroom. As two CASL lawyers reported (Continued on Page 6) Pres. Kennedy Demands Albany Officials Act j WASHINGTON President John F. Kennedy's demand in his press conference Wednesday that the city officials of Albany, Ga. meet with Negroes and settle the racial controversy there won high praise from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Negro leaders across the country. Dr. King told the press: "I am grateful that President Kennedy saw fit to speak so forthrightly on the Albany situation and ex press his views on the need for negotiation." Dr. W. CL Anderson, leader of the Albany movement, said that (Continued on Page 8) was this statement by Shad Polier of New York, chairman ol the national Governing Council of the American Jewish Congress: •’For months the same Senator Olin B. Johnson (Dcm., S. C.) who presided at the Senate hear ing on Constitutional changes has held up the appointment of Thor good Marshall as a Judge of the U. S. Supreme Court of Appeals. One may well doubt whether Senators Eastland and Johnston arc as concerned with the preset (Continued on Page 8) Autotowners Star In 'Music Man' The Autotowncrs. newly crown ed as ninth place winners in in ternational competition for SPE-j BSQSA. will appear in the choice quartet spot in the Civic Center Theatre production of “The Mu-j sic Man’ at the Aqua Theater on Belle Isle on August 15 and 17. This excellent group is gaining prominence every year in the Society for Preservation and En cour*z*nient °t Barbershop tjuar tel Singing in America They cur rently travel around the country Comedian Dick Gregory (second from left) re ceived a plaque for donating his service to the NA.UT s 1902 Freedom Fund Dinner in Detroit. The plaque was presented at a reception at Dr. i and .Mi>, Howard McNiiTs estate in Bloomfield ■•Wills Saturday. City-County Building: Public Fallout Shelter The City-County lluild m;_i ini downtown Detroit Monday be- ' came the area's first government-! operated building to file a Fall out Shelter License or Privilege to qualify as a Public Fallout Shelter. Charles G. Oakman, as general manager of the Detroit- 1 Wayne Joint Building Authority, and Detroit mayor, Jerome P. Cuvanagh. signed the papers lor participation in tne Federal Government's National Fallout Shelter Program. Under the agreement, the City- County Building’s basement, cor ridors and other common areas are accessible to the public for temporary use as radiation shel ter, in the event of actual or imminent nuclear attack. Workers of the Detroit Os lice of Civil De-| tense will move quickly to mark olf shelter areas, post directional and designation signs, and furnish shelter necessities to the desig nated areas ol the building. “Fm pleased, and a little amazed to know that we have 10..308 shelter spaces in the City County Building.” Mayor Cavanaugh : stated. “This takes care ol all regular city and county workers located here, and the general j public who would lie closest to our shelter area.' Spoksmen for the Detroit Ol line of Ciul Detense reported r \ REP. ADAM C. POWELL singing m chapter shows and for meetings. Their competition per formance this year at Kansas! it> has given them top laurels in Michigan and points toward even higher standing next year. t As the Hiver City School Hoard, they show a natur«il gift for the comedy roles in “Music Man, and are having great fun rehear i sing for the show. An innovation in this Civic Center Theatre pro duction will find our school hoard members attempting to track down tha alusivt Music Man, SINGLE C OPY, TEN CENTS; PER YEAR, $4 5o Left to right are Arthur Johnson, Executive Secretary of the Detroit Branch of the NAACI*; Gregory; Dr. J J. McClendon. Chairman of Free dom Fund Dinner and Edward Turner, President ol the Detroit NAACP. Sonny Edwards photo I that in all of Detroit, 5.2D0 I buildings have already been in I spotted Many have two or more ! areas suitable for public tallout 1 shelter use. The U. S Army F.n 1 gineer’s Detroit Distrrct Office has told the Detroit O CD. that j they have identified 10.000 shel ter areas, providing 902.000 shel-' ter spates in office, plant and apartment buildings with accept able radiation factors and other physical requirements. Negro Airmen Face Bias In South Dakota RAPID CITY. S. 1) Members of the N'AACP’s Air Force chapter here this week called on Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara to investigate discrimination against Negro Airmen and their families. The Association s Washington Bureau is also working on the problem along with Congress- Charles Diggs of Michigan. The airmen, stationed at Ells worth Air Force Base, assert that they are denied service in local business establishments that hire white airmen in part-time capaci ties. These same businesses ad vert iso in military newspapers. Adam Powell, Speaker At Elks Convention Congressman Adam Clayton Powell will br ono of tho speak ers at Ihe 63rd Annual Grand Lodge Session of the I 8.1’.0.E of W. when it convenes in Coho Hall. August 24 31. it was an nouncod today by John 11 Burns, General Chairman of the Convcn tion Committee. Burns predicts that this conven tion will be the largest in the history of the Fraternal Order, lie expects it will attract more than 45.000 visitors to the city. An exposition dedicated to Mo- Harold Hill, by ancient automo bile. Because the Aqua Theater stage allows for larger than nor mal production, this feature has been added to the original show. With a cast of over 150, inclu ding a horse, this production will be the premiere amateur perfor mance anywhere of Meredith Willsons wonderful show that ran so long on Broadway. 4,000 bleach er seats are available under the stars at belle Isle for this event. Showtime is 8; 15 p.m. 10e 14-Year-Old Boy Is Beaten By Miss. Police GREENWOOD, Miss. A 14 year-old Negro boy was severely beaten by local police in what was called “another attempt'd Em molt Till case shat just didn t go through ” The attack on Welton McSwine was so described by Sam Block, field secretary here for the Stu dent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Protests and requests for ac tion have been sent to the U. S. Department of Justice in Wa.-h --ington by SNCC and the South ern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF). Block said that young McSwine was saved from 1 wither assaults, and possible death, by the arrival of his father at the police sta tion during the beating. Block described the boy as a “hard-working. Church going kid ’ who had never even been to the police station before in his life. The boy was taken to the sta tion for investigation after a white woman’s house was broken into The officers said to him: “All right, nigger, you know why you are here, and we want to know who broke into that white woman's house Wednesday morn ing. McSwine replied; “I don’t know anything about anybody breaking (Continued on Page 6) dern Negro laving will give De troit business people an opportuni ty to display their wares before the huge delegation from all over the United States, the West Indies. Central America and West Afri ca The Elks Exposition will tie under the direetion of Ulysses W. Boykin. Public Relations Coun sel. Burns stated Councilman William T. Patrick, Jr . is coordinator for the conven tion. Election News Top G. 0. P. Candidates Lead Romney Reid Bentley