New York Amsterdam News — 1963-00-00062
1963
1 pages
✓ Indexed
to • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Jan. 20, IMS
Graham, Ministers Say South Will
Be First To Solve Race Problem
Fund Marks Tenth Year
The Fund for the Republic! ject "Challenges to Democracy
land its Center for the Study of in the Next Decade.”
dWM.UUd person.
with a convocation on the sub-!*re expected
He made the statements in
swer to newsmen’s queries on his
position concerning a statement
last week by 28 young Methodist
ministers who endorsed a “no dis
crimination" church stand.
“We should voluntarily deseg
regate all public facilities,” said
Dr. Selah. “We should treat men
not on the basis of color, but on
the basis of conduct.”
JUSTERINI4
B
R
O
O
K
S
ATLANTA — Evangelist Billy
Graham said he agrees with a
Methodist minister of Evanston.
111., who aajrtlnr~magazine ar
ticle that the race problem will
be solved in the South before it
is in the North.
Graham made the comment
here to reporters who talked to
him after he attended services
during a stopover en route to Los
Angeles.
,
The Rev. Dr. Dow Kirkpatrick
made his prediction in an article
in the February issue of Togeth
er, a Methodist magazine now be
ing distributed.
come to church to worship are
the families that want to bring
them as servants to weddings and
funerals, and have them lit in
with the family.”
’ While he commended Southern
churchmen for fighting bigotry,
he remarked that he wished they
had provided stronger leadership.
"This is a difference of opinion,
not a matter of courage or con
viction,” he commented.
Snide Remarks
Commenting further on the is
sue of individual warmth and
contact between whites and Ne
groes in the South, he said:
Warm RelaUonahip
The minister said the South will
solve the race problem sooner
than the North because "South
ern people have a warm, person-
to-person relationship with Neg
roes that I do not find in the
North.”
“The real agony for the South
is to preserve this warmth for
Negroes while shifting it out of
the traditional master - servant
context into a normal pattern of
human relationships,” wrote Dr.
very families that would
object to allowing Negroes to
*T heard more snide remark:
about he Negro and the Jews in
the first few weeks I was back
North than I heard all the time I
lived in Georgia. It is the kind
of thing infinitely more subtle
than outright prejudice — and far
more difficult to deal with.”
JACKSON, Miss. — A white
pastor of the largest Methodist
church in this state said this
week that he believes forced seg
regation is wrong.
Dr. W. B. Selah, of Galloway
Memorial Methodist Church here,
said he favored voluntary deseg
regation of all public facilities.
Grant Given Central State
Mayor Bids
Architects
To Compete
Mayor Robert Wagner has in
vited architects throughout the
nation to submit competitive de
signs In an effort to Improve
the quality and beauty of design
In urban renewal projects in the
city.
The Mayor said Milton Mollen,
chairman of the city’s Housing
and Redevelopment Board, has
approved of the East River Ur
ban Renewal Area, in the area
bounded by 106th and 111th Sts.
First Ave. to the East River,
to be the subject of the Fifth
Annual Ruberoid Design Compe
tition.
WILBERFORCE, O. — Cen
tral State College has received
a grant from the National
Science Foundation which will
enable the college to train 8
special 12th grade students in
Chemistry during an 8-week per
iod this summer.
The grant is part of a pro
gram which will send 6,500 •
perior secondary-school students
throughout the country into spec
ial training in science and math
ematics next summer in an ef
fort to accelerate their educa
tional development. The CSC
grant covers Research in the
field of Chemistry, and will be
gin June 10 and continue through
August 2.
Asserting that the East Harlem
community offers an excellent
opportunity to improve design In
housing, the Mayor said the use
of the national design compe
tition "offers the opportunity of
focusing on a single renewal
project the fresh thoughts, ingen
uity and talents of many arch
itects from all over the nation.”
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HONORING NEW YORK VIS
ITORS TO JAPAN - The State
flag Is shown being readied by
a Japan Air Lines cabin crew
(or permanent display at Tokyo
International Airport. The good-
wD gesture is in recognition of
the increasing number of peo
ple from New York visiting Ja
pan each year. Purser Hiroy-
asu Yoshida is assisted by hos
tesses (left to right) Kimiko Ok-
uhara, Setsuko Kitazato and
Yoko Endo.
Hails Improved Relations In The South
Race relations in the South
ere “much improved” and
“much better” than they used
to be, a leading Southern news
paper publisher aaid this week.
Writing In the current issue
of Look Magazine. Ralph Me
Gill of the Atlanta Constitution
took issue with those “wbon.ourn
that relations between white and
black have deteriorated in the
South.”
”It is not true. . .They (race
relations) are not, to be sure, In
the old paternalistic pattern. But
respect and understanding are
Increasing, and the more mean
ingful relationships are sounder,”
McGill wrote.
Although "the story is one of
progress almost everywhere,"
McGill warned that there are
parts of the South where resis
tance to change is still strong.
He cited the “monstrous evil"
of White Citizens’ Council power
in Mississippi which has "para
lyzed churchmen, educators and
others who might support mora
lity,” and said that Alabama is
almost equally handicapped.
’’But, however long delayed,
change will come in those states
too," McGill said in Look, add
ing:
•
"Today, the national con
science is committed to what
we have called the American
dream.”
Marine Injured,
Pal Dies When
Hit In Bronx
Two Bronx youths were Injur
ed, one fatally, early Sunday
morning at 161st St. and Gerard
Ave., Bronx.
They were struck while cros
sing the street.
19, who lived at 42 WelUot Pl.
died from injuries in Morrisania
Hospital. Police said the youths
were struck by an auto driven by
Ellis Richardson. 43, of 320 27th
Ave., Astoria, L.I.
Police at the Sedgwick Ave.
precinct said Richardson’s auto
also swerved and struck a taxi
driven by Joshua Carson, 53, of
1670 Seward Ave., Bronx.
Richardson was given a traf
fic summons.
U.S. Marine John Melia, 20, of
1221 Sheridan Ave., suffered in
juries and William McPartland,
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week. Out every Thursday.
Listen to Rocky Groce’s “Rhythm Express’’- WLIB—Weekdays 2:30 to 4 P.M.
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Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com