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PAGE SIX
To Outlaw Klan
Menace
Ik 'yf'
‘ ing the “mere existence” of the
, Ku Klux Klan as a "'constant
► menace,” State Attorney General
> Nathaniel L. Goldstein began court
i action last Monday to outlaw an
I organization of that name in New
i York.
Supreme Court Justice Benja
min F. Schreiber signed an order
starting the proceedings to revoke
the charter of the Knights and
Women of the Ku Klux Klan, Inc.
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EASTERN STANDARD TIME—SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
THURSDAY, MAY 9th
WTOC 1290 KC
6.00 A.M.—lnternational News Events
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7:00 A.M.—Milkman’s Serenade
7:45 A.M.—News
7:55 A.M.— Weather Report
8:00 A.M.—News of the World
8:15 A.M.—Airplane Trip
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9:00 A.M.—Front Page Features
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A.M.—Snow’s Tello-Test
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10:15 A.M.—Radio School
A.M.—To be Announced
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i J £ ™ ~-£ ate Smith Speaks
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11’15 A.M.—Our Gal Sunday
12 :00 M.—Morton Downey
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£’M~ Your Comfortable Home
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a .00 P.M.—The Music Shop
p M.—Waitin’ for Clayton
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« E £ ob 1 Trout and the News
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Z S in Heace and War
5’22 P M —Andre Kostelanetz
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9:30 P.M.—Mr, Keen
^■oo EM~~ News and Analysis
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10:45 P.M.—To be Announced
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6:00 A.M.—lnternational News Events
6:30 A.M.—News; Milkman’s Serenade
6:45 A.M.—Southland Echoes
7:00 A.M.—News
7:15 A.M.—Milkman’s Serenade
7:45 A.M.—News
7:55 A.M.—Weather Report
8:00 A.M.—News of the World
8:15 A.M.—Airplane Trip
8:30 A.M.—News; P. Isle & M. Basket
9:00 A.M.—Front Page Features
9:15 A.M.—Words and Awards
9:30 A..M.—Strange Rom. of E. Winters
9:45 A.M.—Snow’s Tello-Test
10:00 A.M.—Neighborhood; Interlude
10:15 A.M.—Radio School
10:30 A.M.—To be Announced
10:45. A.M.—Tobe’s Topics
11:00 A.M.—Kate Smith Speaks
11:15 A.M.—Big Sister
11:30 A.M.—Romance of Helen Trent
11:45 A.M.—Our Gal Sunday
12:00 M.—Morton Downey
12:15 P M.—UP News
12:30 P.M.—Holum Flavor Rangers
1:00 P.M.—Second Mrs. Burton
1:15 P.M.—Breakfast in Hollywood
1:30 P.M.—Afternoon Airs
1:45 P.M.—Views of tire News
2:00 P.M.—By Request
2:15 P.M.—To be Announced
2:30 P.M.—News; Interlude
2:45 P.M.—Your Afternoon B. Crosby
3:00 P.M.—G. E. House Party; News
* 3:30 P.M.—Sing Along
4:00 P.M.—Cinderella, Inc.
4:30 P.M.—Your Comfortable Home
4:45 P.M.—Variety Discs
5:00 P.M.—The Music Shop
5:15 P.M.—Waitin’ for Clayton
5:30 P.M.—Texas Jim Lewis
• 5:45 P.M.—Rob’t Trout and News
. 6:00 P.M.—Musical Interlude
6:15 P.M.—up New’ Pn^pball Scores
A 6:30 P.M.—News; Old Salt
6:45 P.M.—Three Star Final
7:00 P.M.—Aldrich Family
’’ 7:30 P.M.—Kate Smith Sings
8:00 P.M.—lt Pays To Be Ignorant
8:30 P.M —Moore and Durante
9:00 P.M.—Danny Kaye
9:30 P.M.—Maizie
10W P.M.—News and Analysis
* 10:15 P.M.—Ginny Sims
10:45 P.M. —To be Announced
11:00 P.M.—News; Tony Pastor
11:30 P.M.—Columbia Master Works
12:00 A.M.—News
After nearly two years of quies-;
cence in New York, the Klan re-1
turned to public notice on April 5 ;
by writing a threatening letter to '
Miss Dorothy Langston, executive
secretary of the New York Com
mittee for Justice in Freeport.
This committee was sponsoring a
meeting at Manhattan Center on
April 9 to protest the killing of
two colored men by a policeman
in Freeport, Long Island.
The letter was on the station
ery of the Klan and signed “James
H. Hanley, Great Kligrapp.” Mr.
Goldstein told how the charter
was obtained by a stratagem on
WSAV 1340 KC
6:30 A.M.—Musical Coffee Cup
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7:30 A.M.—AP News
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8:00 A.M.—Honeymoon in New York
8:30 A.M.—Morning Devotions
8:45 A.M.—Robert St. John
9:00 A.M.—Movie Musical
9:15 A.M.—AP News
9:30 A M.—Road of Life
9:45 A.M.—Music that Charms
10:00 A.M.—Fred Waring
10:30 A.M.—Music of Manhattan
10:45 A.M.—AP News
11:00 A.M.—Studio Party
11:30 A.M.—Art Van Damme Quintet
11:45 A.M.—Maggi’s Private Wire
12:00 M.—Cliff Edwards
12:15 P.M.—AP News
12:30 P.M.—Carolyn Gilbert
12:45 P.M.—Morgan Beatty
1.00 P.M.—Guiding Light
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1:30 P.M.—Woman in White
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2:15 P.M.—Ma Perkins
2:30 P.M.—AP News
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3:00 P.M.—Backstage Wife
3:15 P.M.—Stella Dallas
3:30 P.M.—Lorenzo Jones
3:45 P.M.—Young WidT»- Brown
4:00 P.M.—Community Call
4:15 P.M.—Portia Faces Life
4:30 P.M.—Lighter Side of Life
4:45 P.M.—Musical Matinee
5:00 P.M.—Treasury Salute
5:15 P.M.—Strictly Dixie
5:30 P.M.—Bulletin Board: News
5:45 P.M.—Sports; Show Time
6:00 P.M.—Supper Club
6:15 P.M.—News of the World
6:30 P.M.—Come and Get It
6:45 P.M.—Kaltenborn
7:00 P.M.—Burns and Allen
7:30 P.M.—Dinah Shore
8:00 P.M.—Music Hall
8:30 P.M.—Village Store
9:00 P.M.—Abbott and Costello
9:30 P.M.—Rudy Vallee
m :0n "p ivr —AP News
10:15 P.M.—Sammy Kaye Time
10:30 P.M.—This is the' People
10:45 P.M.—American Legion
11:00 P.M.—News Room; Bandwagon
11:15 P.M.—Bandwagon
11:30 P.M.—Design for Listening
12:00 A.M.—News
, FRIDAY, MAY iuth
WSAV 1340 KC
6:30 A.M.—Musical Coffee Cup
7:00 A.M.—World News Roundup
7:15 A.M.—Musical Coffee Cup
7:30 A.M.—AP News
7:45 A.M.—Reveille Roundup
8:00 A.M.—Honeymoon in New York
8:30 A.M.—Morning Devotions
8:45 A.M.—Robert S 7. John
9:00 A.M.—Movie Musical
9:15 A.M.—AP News
9:30 A.M.—Road to Life
9:45 P.M.—Music That Charms
10:00 A.M.—Fred Waring
10:30 A.M.—Man on the Street
10:45 A.M.—AP News
11:00 A.M.—Studio Party
11:30 A.M.—Art Van Damme Quintet
11:45 A.M.—Maggi’s Private Wire
12:00 M.—Cli£f Edwards
12:15 P.M.—AP News
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12:45 P.M.—Morgan Beattv
1:00 P.M.—Guiding Light
1:15 P.M.—Today’s Children
1:30 P.M.—Woman in White
1:45 P.M.-—News: Listen Ladies
2:00 P.M.—Woman of America
2:15 P.M.—Ma Perkins
2:30 P.M.—AP News
2:45 P.M.—Right to Happiness
3:00 P.M.—Backstage Wife
3:15 P.M.—Stella Dallas
3:30 P.M.—Lorenzo Jones
3:45 P.M.—Young Widder Brown
4:00 P„M. —Community Call
4:15 P.M.—Portia Faces Life
4:30 P.M.—Musical Matinee
5:00 P.M.—Voice of the Armv
5:15 P.M.—Strictly Dixie
5:30 P.M.—Bulletin Board; News
5:45 P.M.—Sports; Show Time
6.00 P.M.—Supper Club
6:15 P.M.—News of the World
6:30 P.M.—Bouquets in Melodv
•6-45 P.M.—Kaltenborn
7:00 P.M.—Fireside Serenade
7:15 P.M.—Bandwagon
7:30 P.M.—Duffy’s Tavern
8:00 P.M.—People Are Funny
8:30 P.M.—Waltz Time
9:00 P.M.—Mystery Theatre
9:30 P.M.—World’s Most Hon. Music
10:00 P.M.—AP News
10:15 P.M.—Battle of the Baritones
10:30 P.M.—World’s Great Novels
11:00 P.M.—News Room; Bandwagon
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11:30 P.M.—Three Sons
11:45 P.M.—Lee Sims, Pianist
12:00 A.M —News
the herald
September 10, 1923', for an
sibly ihitvccHt Greek letter fra
ternity, Alpha Pi Sigma.
By that time, the parade of
hooded Klansmen and burning of
fiery crosses in vacious part of
the State had resulted in enact
ment of the Walter Anti-Ku Klux
Klan law, which provided that
every organization putting its
members under oath must file
with the State a roster of mem
bers and officers. Labor unions
and college fraternities were ex
pected.
Cloaked by that exception, Mr.
Goldstein explained, the Klan
functioned until October 10, 1925,
when it quietly changed its name
to the present title.
None of the incorporators of
Alpha Pi Sigma can be found by
his detectives, Mr. Goldstein said.
Asking the change of name to
the Ku Klux Klan were L. Miller
Clark, then president, and J.
Archibald Wilson, secretary, of
Alpha Pi Sigma. Their attorney
was Clarence S. Nettles of 233
Broadway. None of them can be
located, the Attorney General said.
If the authorities can discover
no one upon whom to serve pap
ers in the suit, the last known
officer will be notified by news
paper publication. If no one ap
pears in due course, the court
will revoke the Klan’s charter,
Mr. Goldstein said. This process
will take about six weeks.
Although the disclosure of the
threatening letter to the Freeport
committee was the first public
knowledge of revived Klan activ
ity, Mr. Goldstein said he actual
ly had been investigating the or
ganization since March 18. He
had received seven letters since
then giving information and com
plaining about renewed Klan in
timidation of Negroes, Jews and
labor unions in the metropolitan
area.
Ethiopian Chieftian
Arrives
NEW YORK,—(NNPA).—Ras
Imur, Ethiopian chieftain who
was seven years a prisoner in
Italy until liberated by the Allies,
arrived in this country last Mon
day aboard the Italian liner Vul
cania, accompanied by his wife
and two daughters.
Ras Imur, a cousin of Emperor
Haile Selassie, was on route to
Washington as the Ethiopian
Minister to the United States.
Wearing a neatly tailored gray
suit, the little general who man
aged to elude capture until Dec
ember, 1936, in the final phase
of the war which began in Oct
ober, 1935. said that his country
Strictly Fresh
’J’HERE may be international
repercussions over word
from Paris that wasp waists are
coming back for women. Our
government has already stated
that we’ve got to spread the
breadbasket.
* * *
Maybe it’s a good omen that
Lake Success voted a welcome
to the United Nations. Even if
they are telling each other to go
jump in it.
* * *
It cost a New Jersey man $5O
in court for making his own
auto tag. He was guilty of
license.
* * *
It was hardly news when an
Indiana court ruled that insanity
is insufficient reason for remov
ing an elective official from
public office. But one wonders
how long the case had been
pending.
* * *
You can look for a lot of
jurisdictional disputes if the
move to unionize major league
baseball players is successful. |
For instance, the musicians and
actors will demand membership
of managers like Leo Durocher,
and the U. S. Conciliation Ser
vice will probably take over in
place of umpires.
uas about recovered.
“Ethiopia,” he said, “is now in
position to furnish about 100,000
bushels of grain to the United
Nations Relief and Rehabilita
tion Administration for distribu
tion to the hungry of the world.”
In an interview in his state
room, from which his youngest
daughter, Judith, seventeen, acted
as interpreter, he told reporters
that the greatest difficulty in
Ethiopia today—as before the war
—is the struggle for economic de
velopment. Transportation, he said,
i s first reauirement. After
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that he placed education and the
development of industries.
The Minister expressed hope
that trade between the United
States and Ethiopia would broad
en. He said that Ethiopia does not
plan at this time to ask for an
American loan.
Ue was greeted officially by
Joseph Palmer of the United
States Department of State’s. Div
ision of African Affairs. Mem
bers of the Ethiopian Embassy
in Washington also were present
to welcome the % new minister.
MAY 8,