Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1960 — Page 2

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2—The Indianapolis Recorder, July 2,1960

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Local, Stale Units Named at NAACP National Confab

By REV. H. L. BURTON President, Indianapolis NAACP ST. PAUL—The Indiana and

Indianapolis NAACP organizations both were singled out for honors at the 51st annual nation- | iff al convention held here last week.

The Indiana State Panca Notes, a newspaper organized by the state president. Rev. Ford Gibson, and edited by Mrs. Mary P. McGuire Connell, was cited in the state publication category. It is printed by The Recorder. The Indianapolis branch re-

ceived the Kivie Kaplan Honorable Mention Citation for Leadership in the Life Membership campaign. Much of the credit for this award goes to Atty. Henry J. Richardson Jr., who was the Indianapolis Life Membership chairman for 1959. The national organization is driving for 25,000

life members.

Triplet Son of Atty. Dickerson Drowns in Alaska

*

MAJOR EMPHASES at the convention were placed on housing, school desegregation, voting rights and employment. The keynote address was given by Dr. Robert C. Weaver, chairman of the board of directors. Regional workshops were held to discuss: (1) Coordinating the Assault on Segregation; (2) Political Action for Civil Rights; (3) Preparing Youth for NAACP Leadership, and (4) Selective Use of Economic Power. In the Region III workshop Robert Williams, Indianapolis and Indiana Youth Council Advisor, served as a consultant. * ROY WILKINS, national executive secretary of the NAACP since 1955, was hailed by the city of St. Paul as a returning son. It was here that he spent his formative years, attended school and he graduated from the University of Minnesota. A former newspaperman and onetime editor of The Crisis, Wilkins is considered one of the 20 most influential and effective leaders in America today. He was presented the University of Minnesota’s Outstanding Achievement Award by Dr. Malcolm M. Willey, vice-president of the University, at a mass meeting Sunday in Northrup Auditorium on the campus. T H E CONVENTION R E - JOICED greatly to learn that 45 lunch counters in previously segregated Northern Virginia will begin serving Negro and white customers together. Two drug chains. People’s Drugstores a n,d. Drug Fair, and two major department stores, S. Kann’s Sons Co. and Lansburgh’s, have announced they will start serving Negro patrons in Alexandria. Falls Church and in Arlington and Fairfax Counties. The Hecht Co. department store and F. W. Woolworth and G. C. Murphy stores were reported to be preparing to inaugurate the same general policy after onu Woolworth store in Arlington opened its lunch counter to Negroes. Enthusiastic youth delegates stole the show Wednesday by announcing plans for a “wade-in” campaign on segregated '^caches from New Jersey to Texas. Asked to comment on the forthcoming political conventions, Mr. Wilkins stated that the NAACP will work hard ^or strong civil rights plans in both party plat fftrms. THE DETROIT BRANCH led in the membership campaign, with

ALFRED DICKERSON Tragedy ended a trio composed of triplet boys last week when Alfred Dickerson, 20, step-son of Atty. Frank R. Beckwith, and son of Atty. Mahala Dickerson, was drowned while swimming in Goose Lake near Anchorage, Alaska. On the previous Wednesday he had graduated from high school in Los Angeles where he had spent the past year living with his aunt. Mrs. Harriet A. Smith, a member of the Los Angeles YMCA start. Alfred and his brothers, John and Henry moved to Indianapolis | in 1951 and had attended Public Schools Nos. 45 and 10 und Tech High School. He was the namesake of his uncle. Dr. Alfred C. Dungee, prominent Montgomery, Ala., physician. The triplets caused considerable comment when they served as pages in the 1953 session of the Indiana State Senate, sponsored by Senators Robert Lee Brokenburr, Hoyt Moore and Donald M.

Ream.

Other survivors include an aunt, Mrs. Erna Dungee of Mohtgom-

ery.

Burial was in Anchorage.

]i Josephine Baker Freed by Court 11 ; M H i MONTHEAL f ANY)—An appear-' ; ent move to embarrass singer Josephine Baker oacr.r.red last week v'hcn she was need by Canadian Judge Mare A* dr* Main of charg- , e s ,J - ill< : dly moving $10,000 , worth of goods into Canada from ‘ she United Sla:as. However, he* runner American agent, William Tatih, who brought the suit against Miss Baker, was scheduled to appear in court here this Thursday ,on a counter suit brought t - tbr* singer’s manager, Stephen Papich.

j Wherever you «,sk me mer rbant to Have Kecorders on sale* tor the < onvtme rice of his customers. Cel your co;.- 1 / oi 'the Record er each week

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PASSING THE HAT: Giving odditionol contributions os the local United Negro College Fund campaign nears its climax are (left to right) Rev. Clinton Marsh, pastor or Witherspoon Presbyterian Church whods vice-president of the Alumni Council, Mrs. Gloria Dozier, reoresentat.vo of Bennett College, and Rev. Landrum Shields, assistant pcstor of Witherspoon Presbyterian Church. Seated is Willard Ransom, president of the Alumni Council.

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a report of 22,290 members. Of these. 450 were $500 Life Memberships. At an “Africa Night” ess ion Wednesday, the convention was addressed by Professor Mlahleni Njisane, former professor of sociology at the University of Natal in the Union of South Africa, and now a visiting professor at Howard University, A documentary film on apartheid in South Africa, entitled “Come Back, Africa,” was shown to a capacity audience. INDIANAPOLIS REPRESENTATIVES at the convention included Earle Barnette, Rev. Alexander Bernard, Mrs. Mary P. McGuire Connell, Rev. B. T. Almon, Mrs. Virgia Davis, Mrs. Jean Stepney, Chandler Houston, Robert Williams and this writer. Youth representatives included William Hardy, Wallace Hollins, Miss Carole Stevenson and many other Youth Council workers.

White Couple (Continued t.om Pace 1)

not he filed against the ctfuple. The inspector said Davenport pointed out that Sears was a heart patient and had suffered 20 attacks in the last year, and that were he and his wife jailed there would he no one to take care of their 6-year-old son. It angeied him to learn, Inspector Schmidt said, that someone would take advantage of a delicate situation to try to cover his

own wrongdoings. IN THEIR ORIGINAL report, made early Tuesday morning - from St. Vincent’s Hospital, Mr. and Mr. Sears told officers investigating a report of another mugging attack. that two colored men had jumped Mrs. Sears as she emerged from their automobile to enter a restaurant, struck her several times, and attacked Sears before he shoved his wife back into the car, ran back around to the driver’s side and drove off. “The men had some kind of club, because they broke my windshield and door glass as I drove away,” the phony report said.

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