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New Pittsburgh Courier from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 27

Location:
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WOLFGANG Bretholz of Die Kultur, anti Nazi, anti Communist paper ol Germany, who traveled widely in Africa, and whose article "No New has appeared in English in "Atlas, the Magazine of the World Press," for June, 1961, has said some hard things against Africans and even ridicules them though he says, "I had no intention of mating fun of the 1 there." What I shall do here is to give the facts and let him ridiculous! ile J. A. Boxen judge who is or the Africans? I quote him: "While in Accra I also came upon a copy of the English language newspaper, the Evening News, published last August." "It contained the third in i SsCAPEP SLAVE WHO became a great leader among the Seminole inpiAms op florioa with the TITLS OFPROPHET AND CHIEF COUNSELLOR? IMPlANS WELCOMED ESCAPED SLAVES, SOME OP WHOM MARRIED DAUGHTERS OF CHIEFS AND BECAME CHIEFS. OSCEOLA. GREAT SEMINOLE CHIEF.

WENT TO WAP WITH THE UNITED STATES IN 1836 WHEN WHITE SLAVEHOLDERS SEIZED HIS NEGRO. ABRAHAM WAS DESCRIBED AS OVER SIX FEET, PLEASANT WITH WORDS THAT FLOWED LIKE OIL? Cn TSSO, WHITES AMP NEGROES WERE SO MIXEP, ESPECIALLY INI S. CAROLINA AND SOME OF THE RICHEST PERSONS IN THOSE STATES WERE COLORED. IN THE CIVIL WAR, SUCH FOUGHT ID HOLD THEIR SLAVES. A UNION OFFICER WROTE FROM LOUSIANAC DEC'S, 1S63 WOULD BE AMAZED TO SEE THE SWARMlNG MULAT TOES, QUADROONS AND CCTOROONS WHO POSSESS THIS REGION AND CALL THEMSELVES AMERICANS.

SOME OF THE WCH History Shows Byj. a. Roger, st ailment of a series of articles by J. A. Rogers that had been running for many weeks under the title, 'What Were the Blacks Yesterday? What Are They Today? What Will They Be This third article on The Fame of African Art, carried the general title, 'Beethoven and Haydn Were and presented whole columns explaining that these two composers had been falsely described as members of the white race and regarded as contributors to Western culture when they were in reality Negroes." The Evening News, he says, is Ghana's official paper.

Incidentally M. June Meyer of New York, while attacking Bretholz for his views on Africa agrees with him that Beethoven and the ancient Egyptians were white (July Atlas). NOW, WHO SAID Beethoven showed a marked Negro strain? Noted German writers and Germans who knew him. Among the former are Paul AT MAIN STREET ANJ? SOUTH TEMPLE OH WHICH APPEARS THE NAMES OF THREE NEGROES, IN SALT LAKEOTViUTAHf THEY CAME WITH THE ORIGINAL HARTY LED BY THE FOUNDER CFTHECUrBRlGHAM Y0UN6C JULY 23,18471 THEY ARE GREEN FLAKE OF N.CARO Uf4A(1825 l905); HARK LAY OF MISSISSIPPI (1823 1890 AND OSCAR CROSBY 0815 18719. Bekker, Frederic Rudolph Rocker and Brunold Springer.

When I told Dr. Otto Neuratli of the Mundaneum of Vienna that Beethoven was of Negro ancestry he not only confirmed it but son! me Beethoven's genealogy. He also mentioned Goethe, Germany's most famous writer, as being of that stock. Rocker also names Goethe and Martin Lulher, along with Beethoven, as among those who lacked almost completely the external marks of the Nordic race. (Nationalism and Culture, pp.

319, 1937.) Some who knew Beethoven bear this out. Fanny del Rio, who was in love with him, for instance. In her book. "Ah Unrequited Love," dedicated to Queen Victoria, she says "his flat, broad nose, ra'her wide mouth swarthy complexion, gave him a strong resemblance to a mulatto." His life mask in the Beethoven House in Bonn (very, very rarely shown in America), shows a very flat nose, wide a v. I AKA'S SALUTE ACHI CONSULTANTS Supr.m.

Baiiitus MrjorI Parktr, AKA Sorority head, with Soror Lois Towe Cactar of Sn Francisco, Soror Zolma Bll. far right, Mid wattern regional director, saluto ACHR consultant Effio Kayo Adams Quick, second from Uft, Texas educator. The regional, held in Denver, was mad doubly interesting by the marriage of Soror Adams to Dr. Lorenzo Douglas Quick. The bride is a consultant in elementary education in Longview, Tex.

Howard Johnson JEFFERSON VI LLEr Ind. (ANP) Law suits, seeking a total of $40,000 damages from the owners and manager of a How mouth with full lips and other Negroid features. It is reproduced in "Sex and Race," Vol. 3. In this book and in Knows No Color Line," I have given abundant sources and quotations from German writers.

The New York Times. July 1, 1940, also cites Brunold Springer of Beethoven's Negro strain in an article, "Negroid Blood In Hirer's Aryans." William Joyce, Hitler's American stooge, known as Lord Haw Haw, had been short waving to the world that white American's were mongrels, and that Winston Churchill was really a "mulatto," as his mother was "a Negro woman from New Orleans." ifkydn and others objected to by Brethoix next week.) FROM SUPERMAN TO MAN PER COPY 12.60 SEX AND RACE 3 VOLUMES S4.S0 EACH 100 Amazing Facts About the Negro Ift.uuu B. v. to pratant with v.UMrLcTE proof king. qunt.

pop. prtidnti of th Olr' and Niw World. Kara picturai il.00 WORLD'S GREAT MEN OF COLOR (200 of tham) 2 Vol. $4.50 ach Nature Knows No Color Line. $5.00 i Africa's Gift to America i Si.00.

Mall Sail ENTIRE SET $34.00 "9ND 4c STAMP FOR ILLUSTRATED CIRCULAR J. A. ROGERS Restaurant Sued ard Johnson restaurant were filed in Clark Circuit Court, here, by two prominent Indianapolis couples who claim they were denied service because of race. The plaintiffs allege that as they approached the restaurant, the manager put his arm across the door and said: "We're hot integrated, yet." Atty. Charles D.

Walket filed four suits on behalf of himself and Mrs. Walker and Mr. and Mrs. Al Ferguson Jr. of Indianapolis.

Mtr Iw Ytut MMtj la Tfct Cwnar Negro History $tudy Meeting in October DURHAM, N. Some, of the nation's leading scholars will he among speakers and consultants for the 46th annual njeeting of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History at the North Carolina College. Oct. 12 14, Dr. J.

H. Taylor told the ASNLH exwutivp rnunril in Washington, D. July 21. 17 MCRNINeSIDI AVENUI NIW TOM 24, NIW Y0M.

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About New Pittsburgh Courier Archive

Pages Available:
64,064
Years Available:
1911-1977