Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1957 — Page 2

2—The Indianapolis Recorder, August 10,1957

NEGRO TO PASTOR WHITE CONGREGATION IN N

NUtfDA, N. Y.-

Y.

(ANP)—The

congregation leaders of the Nunda Presbyterian Church, which has HD all-White congregation, vevealed this week that the Rev. Df. IfWin W. Underhill of Philadelphia, Pa., had been chosen as their pastor and had accepted. The choice was made by the congregation after Dr. Underhill had been a guest preacher on July

21.

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James (Step) Wharton President Beryl W. Steiner Secretary-Treasurer Harlan B.Livengood Certified Public Accountant Conrad Epply Public Relations Atty. P. L. Hardin, Resident Agent Our Motte: Superior Service to the Community. Listen to WISH Sunday 11 A. M. to 11:15

Mrs. H. A. King Again Heads Baptist Women Mrs. H. A. King, Second Baptist, New Albany, was re-elected president of the Baptist State Ministers’ Wives Council Wednesday at sessions held at First Baptist, North Indianapolis, Elder F. F. Young, host pastor. Others elected were Mrs. Mattie Tavlor, Muncie. first-vice president; Mrs. J. T. Ward, Indianapolis, i second vice-presideht; Mrs. Annie Mae Hatcher, Indianapolis, recordI ing secretary; Mrs. Mary Minor, Indianapolis, assistant secretary; Mrs. L. A. Manuel, Indianapolis, corresponding secretary; Mrs. W. I. Ray, treasurer; Mrs. S. Summers, l.awrenceburg. organist, and Mrs. C. V. Jeters, chorister. Guest speaker for the meeting was Mrs. J. M. Battles, Milwaukee, ; who stated that as the wife of a church leader, the minister's wife ! should be careful of how she talks, what she says, and to whom she

speaks.

She told tne gathering that a minis er’s wife must recognize that her husband is also her minister and conduct herself so as to bring him no discredit.

Third Time May Be A Charm BOSTON, Mass.—(ANP)— James M. Toller, 1957 graduate of Technical high school, has been officially notified that he won first State and Regional Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild Award, senior division. The award was for the building of a model of outstanding car design. Young Toller will receive a check for $900 and an all-efc-pense paid trip to Detroit where he will compete wjtl^ other regional winners for national awards. N In 1954 the young designer also v on the state and regional awards; in 1955 seerfnd place in the state awards; 1956, honorable mention.

HAIRCOLORIING SPECIALIST: Mae Coyle . Meredith 1837 Perkins Avenue, has just returned from a work and vacation tour of New York City where she attended an accelerated course in haircoloring cglled "Vacation With Pay" at the Clairol Institute of Haircoloring, the largest hqircoloring instruction center in the world. The accelerated course of instruction in haircolorihg offered at the Institute provided the latest techniques in haircoloring and hair care. They included use of Miss Clairol Hair Color Bath and Come Alive Gray rinse to oeoutify gray hair. After a very full work day and instrution at the school, sne tpured New York City with 20 other leading shop owners and beauticians in a specially arranged program. Mae Coyle Meredith is associated with the Madam Walker Beauty School here in Indianapolis and the Girlies Glamour Bar, 542 N. Senate Avenue.

Teacher Integration Vanishes At Attucks

While teacher , integralioh at Short ridge high school has been

increased with the addition of a Negro social' science teacher, tho Attucks staff has become “deintegrAted,” it was learned this

week.

Both James H. Mann .and Robert E. Meyer, the white teachers on the Attucks Staff last year, have been granted transfers to Tech. Another white teacher left last January, and thds the mixing of the Attucks faculty has at least temporarily come to a halt. Louis B. Rutan. principal of

I nr srood printing “In a hurry,” j School 17. remains as the onlv

Recorder

prinGng Co.. MF.. 4-1545. Tod will I establishment.” School 17 Is no

phone The Indianapolis

white educator in the “Attucks

i be pleased and proud of the Work, longer the junior division of At-

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tucks, however, but an independent school. Principal Alexander Moore said the' Attucks teaching staff is complete for the opening of •chool next month. . MEANWHILE MRS. MARY t. WALKER became the third Negro member of the Short ridge faculty and the first to be assigned in an academic subject, ly taught at Attucks. iMrs. Walker was transferred from School 26. She had previouspreceding her on the Shortridge staff were Tom Harding, physical education and freshman ieach, and Julian D. Coleman, Jr., ifidu^trkil arts. PRINCIPAL MOORE revealed that Harry L. Pettrie, former Attucks teacher who has been in private business os an accountant, will return as head of the business education department at At-

tucks.

■A iMr; i* -Pettrie-; -replaces CJ Walker, who has been rea as director of the Attucks

hihg school. Incidentally he is the

is going to £hortridge.

husband of the Mrs. Walker who The previous night school head. Wilbur L. Chenault, has become a vice-principal, taking the place from which Modfe moved up to

principal.

Moore said that James L. Simpson, who was teacher in charge of the industrial arts department last year, lias been named head of that department. (Mrs. Doris M. Bradford had resigned as director of publications, but reconsidered and will continue in that post. ■' One more shift of assignments j in the Attucks coaching staff is probable before school begins.

>ssignRi ch ks cm

Bishop Nichols Continued from Page 1 . * ^ ______ Alva Shaw of Columbus, O., who served as secretary of the committee. BISHOP NICHOLS stood silently with head slightly bowed as 1h£ Rev. Shaw read the counts which included; Charge 1 — Illegal handling of general budget funds. 'Specification 1 — Failure to organiz he Finance Committee— guilty. Specification 2 — Failure to report the total public offerings to the minimum salary fund, guilty by a vote of 4 to 1. Charge II — Placing burdensome assessments upon the church and ministers for his own personal gain. Specification 1 — The Presiding Elders of the Florida Conference were required by Bishop Nichols and/or his agents to pay $172.25 per district for furniture to be; placed in his private home. Specification 2 — The Presiding Elders wfere 61so required by Bishop Nichols to pay unauthoirzed and illegal dues in the Presiding Elders’ Council—Not guilty. Charge III — Disobedience to the order and discipline of the AME Church, substantially the same as charge 1. Guilty. Charge IV — Levying unauthorized assessments—allowing the machinery of the AME Church to be used to sponsor an unauthorised project. Not guilty, but accused acted imprudently. Charge V — Maladministration at Edward Waters College. Guil-

ty.

) The prosecution through its chief witnesses, former president of Edward Waters College, William B. Stewart; H. Talcott Stith, a CPA assigned to audit college business offices by the general board; William Pierce, former business manager at Edward Waters College; Dr. Reid Jackson of Paul Quinn College and Presiding Elders M. M. Lindsey, who filed the charges, and Frank Allen, placed into the records a preponderance of evidence on all

the charges.

Bishop Nichols was completely riddled by he rapier-like thrusts

of Attorney Alexander.

SEVERAL OFFICIALS of the church referred to the conviction of Bishop Nichols as one of the most significant steps in the church since its founding 200

years ago by Richard Allen.

“It is regrettable that it takes the suspension of a distinguished bishop to convince the fathers of our church that we intend to regulate our church finances. It is the intention of the new church laws to make the bishops of the church our spiritual leaders while an appointed and qualified general board administers the temporal affairs,” a church

spokesman said.

Bishop Nichols’ attorneys announced immediately after the verdict that he would file an appeal ; with the Judicial Council the Charcli which may

Banquet Speaker

i *■ .

For Baptists

Jamaicans Protest Murder Of Negro Woman In U.S

By WILBERT E. HEMMING KINGSTON, Jamaica (ANP* — The United Nations’ World Council was fiercely attacked by debaters in the Kingston and St. Andrew city council recently, fr its apparent indifference over an incident of race hatred in the United States. Councillors raged and condemned what they said wlas the murder of a Miss Rosa Jordan, a Negro woman in Birmingham, Ala., early this year. Councillor Roderick Francis brought to the attention of the council, the atrocity meted out to the colored

woman.

The city council then contacted j the Secretary of State for the ; Colonies and asked the British

i government to object.

Replied the British Colonial

Criminal Career

Cimtinoeq from rare i

Chfirch

consider the gad?'‘till points of church, law. Judge Perry B. Jackson of Cleveland,' Ohio, is chairman of the Judicial Council.

REV. BERNARD L. WHITE | Secretary ' The Secretary of Dr. Bernard L. Wnite, pastor of i State for the Colonies holds thjd St. John Baptist Church, South an action would amount to Bend, will be guest speaker Aug. ! interference in the United Na10 for the banquet of the Indiana Dons Organization private busiBaptist State Asociation at 6:03 Il . ess a mc ^kj r , coU /d r }/. an acn m lion not provided fpr by the char-

1 ’ ’ ter of the United Nations.” For good prlotlng “liw a hnrry,** Dr. White recenliy returned SAID THE COUNCILLORS: “It phone The Indianapolis Recordef from a European tour with a , shows, after al, the UNO does 1 Printing Co.. ME. 4-1545. Yon will group of religious educators. * — - - - - - - _ -

Other guests expected at the festivities in the dining room of

the colored people have no place in the councils of the world. ’ said

Councillor Francis.

Councillor Bygrave: “If my memory serves me right, what ihappened in Hungary sometime ago, was brought to the attention of the United Nations and discussed. But when it comes to discrimination against colored people and Negroes, they tell us it is something that cannot be discussed by them. It must be left to the nations committing these crimes. I have never heard of a man who has commited a crime being asked to condemn himself.” Councillor Keble Munn: “It must be brought to the attention of peoples of the world that we in Jamaica are not going to stand lor color discrimination of any

kind in the world.”

Mayor Balfour Barnswell: r Tt is unfair to charge the United States alnoe. We have the same thing being practiced under the

Union Jack.”

the host church. First Baptist,

DR. WILLIAM DOWNS North Indianapolis, include Dr William Downs, pastor of Fast Mt. Zion Baptist. Cleveland, O.: and Mrs. F. C. Mayfield, field mission ary of the Senior Woman’s National Baptist Convention o f America ahd president of the Kentucky State Baptist Woman’s Convention. Elder F. F. Young is host pastor and Miss Bessie Ford is banquet chairman.

not stand for all it professes. We be pleased and proud of the work,

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Williafti Phelps Services for William Phelps. 43. Rocky Mount, N. C., were held Aug. 8 in the" King and King Chapel, with burial in New Crown. He died July 31 in Rocky Mount. His mother, Mrs. Leslie Phelps, and brother, Namon Phelps, are residents of Indianapolis. t Other survivors include a daughter, Gloria Jean Phelps. Omaha, and two brothers. Waller Phelps, Kokomo, and Robert Phelps. Springfield, Tenn.

James Hall Services for James Hall, 54 609 J 4 W. 10th. were held Aug 8 at Hopkinsville, Ky. He died Aug. 3 in General hf-,pital. Born at Hopkinsville, Mr. Hall had lived here 17 years and worked 10 years for the Harry Hooley Construction Co. He was a member of Mt. Zion Baptist church in Hopkinsville.

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clothing store. He said he received no answer to his first question, “What are you doing?” Edging awtay, the man turned and ran along the rear wall of the building. Watt said he drew his revolver and fired one shot as a Warding that followed his repeated commands tn halt. Coroner Edward S. Shelby said the bullet caught the fleeing mah In the back and entered the

heart.

Joined by other police and police officials who responded to his call to headquarters. Watt, not sure he had hit the victim, i found a raincheck for a Cleveland Indians baseball game in the iban’s pockets. On the sidewalk under the display window of the store officers found a Cub Scout shirt and i another scout shirt with a brick in it in the rear of the store, which they sUrmissed the man Jropped as he fled. POLICE SPECULATED t h e shirt might have been placed on the sWewalk to deaden the Sound cf falling plate glass after beine

broken.

Two wallets found on Roberts : contained a social security card I and $15 in bills which police be-

j lieved had been stolen.

The body of Roberts was buried Thursday morning in the St. Joseph County Infirmary’s cemetery, the official name of “Potters Field.” To date no rela-

tives had been found.

Police here await complete details of Rpberts’ life and criminal activities from the FBI. Named To Harvard Post CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—(ANP)— Frank S. Jones of Greensboro, N. C., who was manager of the Harvard University football team in 1949, was appointed last week as an administrative assistant to the' dean of the Harvard Business

School.

The announcement was made by Dean Stanley F. Teele.

IKE APPOINTEE: Rev Archibald Carey, Jr., prominent Chicago minister a nd excity councilman and former UN alternate delegate, has been appointed chairman of the President's Committee on Government Contracts that furthers removal of racial restrictions in employment, in business and industry. He is the first Negro to head the committee of which the Vice-President is a former chairman. A-2CO KILLS CRABS IMMEDIATELY! G«t fast relief! A~t00 killi ’ Crabs, Lice, and their eggs ' —in minutes! Easy to use—like a shampoo. Not a greasy ointment, won’t irritate your skin — won’t stain your clothes. Washes right out. Go to the drug store and buy A-fOO today! Uit SF7TEV...kr McKCSSON CHE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER

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