Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1951 — Page 9
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Ore. U. Co-ed, Doctor's Son in Mixed Marriage
Widely Known Dentist Dies
At New Orleans
VANCOUVER, Wash. (ANP)—A University of Oregon campus romance, which caused a white coed to leave her sorority house, for dating a Negro sturent, was climaxed recently when DeNorval Unthank Jr., married Miss Doris burgess in St. Luke’s Episcopal Church. The Rev. Leo Owen Stone, recior of St. Philip s Church in Portland performed the ceremony, witnessed by about a dozen friends and relatives. Unthank is a mem-
ter of the Rev. Stone s parish, j By JAMES B LaF0URCHE The courtship of the white NEW ORLEANS (ANP) — Hr coed and her architectural stu- Taylor Segue, a practicing dentist dent sweetheart received much here for more than 22 years wa publicity because of its interracial | buried last Wednesday. He di“c’ nature. Sorority sisters and the suddenly of a heart attack last alumni asked her to stop dating Monday at Flint-Goodridge hosp.the Negro; she refused and con- t a l- H e was a graduate of How
requently left the sorority house, j ar< * university.
{ Dr. Segue was a graduate o'
The bride, a slender, pretty, the dental cla s of 1922 a* Howblond, wore a summery blue voile ard, and on returning to the city, street-length dress. She had white married the former Miss Elma pumps, a white cloche, and white Marie Mathieu in 19?3. gloves, and white shoes. She car- They were parents of two chil
INDIANA’S
GREATEST
Ifllf twrUer
W EEKLY
Fifty-sixth Year
Indianapolis, Indiana, July 21, 1951
Number 29
21 Violators of Drug Law Convicted in June
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ned a bouquet of red roses. Her only attendant was Miss Ruby Brock a close friend, who was dressed in a green and white silk print. She wore a gardenia
corsage.
dren, Mrs. Wilhelmina Segue Carbon, Washington. D. C.. and Tavlor Jr., ,a junior pre-medical student at Marquette University, Milwau-
kee, Wis..
Dr. Segue was a sports en.husiast, belonging to the colorful Ori
The bridegroom wore a dark. g ina i Illinois Carnival club, and blue suit, with a flower in his t he Crescent City Golf Association buttonhole. His best man w a s t He usually spent his summer vara Thomas A. Hardy, a white school- ; tions fishing a nd motoring in the mate. I environs of the Great Lakes, or
^ , I on the Massachusetts shores.
Jittery in the traditional man- pj p was a mern b er Q f chi Dell ner ot bridegrooms t h e world, ta anc j K ap p a Alpha Psi Ira-
over, Unthank smoked cigaretts 1 ternities
HL* « C , h ’ in L J a ,"l P fht d ’ n i d „ < ! 0 hU I The receased was highly rated the floo. betore liie arnva o . dentist, and was a staff mem-
bride. However, when his bride
joined him, he was all smiles, and if there remained any trace of nervousness it didn’t show.
ber of Flint-Goodridge hospital, and a member of Xavier University’s faculty. In 1930 his name appeared in “ w ho’s Who In Col-
The most excited members of: 0 red America.”
the household prior to the wedding were Unthank’s sisters, Lesley 9, and Thelma 11, and his brothers James 12 and Thomas 14. With no member of her family present to take her to her wedding, Miss Burgess left for Vancover with her prospective par-
ents-in-law.
After the wedding, the couple
Born in Louisiana Dr. Segue was a past president of the Pelican State Dental asso ciation and a member of the National Dental Association. He was born »n Shreveport. La the son of the Rev. Taylor Segue and the former Miss Lou Pear! Mayo. He received his early education at old New Orleans univer
left for a short wedding trip. whenever he went to
They will be home to friends in
a week at Eugene.
Unthank has two more semesters of study to complete work for his degree. He is the son of Dr. and Mrs. DeNorval Unthank of Portland. The bride is the daughter of the late James M. Burgess, former superintendent of
schools of Astoria.
Howard
At the time of his death. Dr Segue was an associate of Dr Ernest Cherrie. They occupied t modern office building in the up per section of the city. Survivors are the widow, the two children, Mrs. Hazel Segue Kinf, De Ridder, La.; Mrs. Joseph A. Bartholomew Sr., Nev\ Orleans, and a host of other relatives.
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Suits Pending To End Jimcrow Schools in Ark. PINE BLUFF, Ark. (ANP)— Twenty-four local citizens have engaged Harold Flowers, attorney, o file in federal court five sepirate suits aimed at breaking segegation in the public school of \rkansas, it was announced re-
ently.
Four of the suits will be direct'd specifically at five schools in our counties. Flowers declined to
eveal details of the fifth suit. ino her potential danger from mis-
i'ing of a sixth suit is a possi-
ility.
Attorney Flowers said:
“We plan to bring up the ques-, , . . . ... ion of segregation and lind out I sex hormones (estrogens) whirl it it is constitutional ” i were aI ° distributed d-rect to con u it is constitutional. ; sumers by the Los Angeles pro Suits Filed at Little Rock i moters. x
j “Both the male and female sc
Schools named in the suit are— hormones are of very great valu Hickory Ridge and Center in Con- when used under supervision o
WASHINGTON, D. C. (ANP)— People who have sex hormones in their possessionn were warned by the Food a nd Drug administration this week that their use without medical supervision may cause irreparable injury. Men, particularly, were warned not to take tablets of the male sex hormone, testosterone, which have been distributed coast-to-coast by two Los Angeles mail-order concerns, with directions for self-administration. Dr. Erwin E. Nelson, medical director of the hood and Drug Ad •ninist irtion, said: “There is no doubt that improper use of testosterone can stimulate grow.h of dormant cancer ceils present in the prostate glands of many men. These incipient cancer cells an most often found in the prostatic glands of men in their 40’s ami 50’.‘ the very age group appealed to by the mail-order promoters. Re peated taking of testosterone b those hoping for sexual rejuvena tion mav stir these cells into ac-
tive growth.”
Dr. Nelson said that sterility is
use of testosterone. He likewise warned adginst serious injury to ‘he reproductive organ of women from unsupervised use of female
III 1 '
Bir " wm
way County; Fordyce in Dallas . ounty; Bowie and Parker’s Chapel in Union County, and Kingsland Negro school in Cleveland
’ounty.
Flowers said that a suit con- • erning Hughes schools in St
qualified physicians after aile quate examination and diagnosis/ Dr. Nelson said. “Ror the lay man without such supervision tiu are extremely dangerous drugs.”
Banned by U. S. Court
The warning followed a Federa’
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FOR DEFENSE OF A NATION: Bishop D Ward Nichols, left, of the AME church; Admiral James F. Blandy, wartime Commander of the Atlantic Fleet, center, and Civil Defense Director of New York City, Arthur Wallender attended a recent meeting to discuss plans to revive public interest in Civil Defense projects. Bishop Nichols was one of the principal speakers.
Afrita’s Products, Problems % Discussed by State Dept. Aid
CHICAGO (ANP)—The Institute “ ~ on Contemporary African affairs confuse the present day Euroconducted at Northwestern Uni- F ean with his less liberal grandversity by Dr. Melville Herskovitz, f, heard George C. McGhee, assistant Africans rightly insist, howU. S. Secretary of State in charge ever, that wprds must be backel of Near Eastern. South Asian and U P b X deeds. On the whole the African Affairs, tell about Africa postwar performance of the metroand its problems of the moment politan powers shows that steps wee j t are being taken in the right di-
rection. Contrasted with the retro
G°odGetsHo-a'dStaid Observer Tells scholarship Story of Qcero Riot
WASHINGTON, D. C. (ANP)— Forty-four scholarships totaling
If a Ne-
Vll the suits will be filed in Litle Rock exoept those against Bowe and Parker’s Chapel schools, which will be filed in El Dorado. The suits will be patterned after the recent South Carolina •ase which has been appealed to ihe United States Supreme Court, (nthis case the special three-judge court upheld the legality of racial segregation in that state’s schools, but warned that equ.il facilities must be provided for Negroes. The court set a six month ime limit for the officials to show hat the Negro schools in Clarendon County, S. C. were being made appreciatively equal to the
white schools.
Flowers says that the time he will file the suits will depend upon when he gets a transcript of the South Carolina case. “We want to look over the records of that case, and plan our
strategy by it.”
Flowers says that he will time the suits so that if an appeal is necessary, it will coincide with the South Carolina case before the
Supreme Court.
An Arkansas precedent for the suits was set two years ago when
CICERO 111 (ANP) _
S17.825 have been awarded to stu- 1 g ro ba( j sbown up on the Cicero anc * you haven’t been here for dents throughout the country to rnob scene that has shocked Clxi- two - y° u don ’t like it here, go enable them to attend Howard cu ^ 0 w jth its Nazi implicati ns, back home or somewhere. Try
University in September, it was . A more likelv and do this under/Joe Stalin. . , , ,
announced today by Dr Willi an | ^ u p dead rather than a'vl 1 Only Negroes to aopear near n suit Stuart Nelson, Dean ot the Um : This statemenl was ma de by sten ? of mob action during versity. Russell Babcock, head of the Illi- thl * we <* w <* re a the darks the The recipients of $12,500 in j nois Interracial Commission, a «er re al estate^ man, y n, dentificd
he had spent a night on the scene aI ‘d umu ntihtn Ne
scholarships were selected through a national competitive scholarship examinatoin which was given to high school students by field representatives of the University.
scholarships was a'varded to high school students and regular Howard University students based up-
= rthat 8 they* mighT e ta k n ;
which 1 a B rf o 0 penin ( ! e up P l’o 0 r t peoplii Herfkov" "'nsmutron'Af?lca D ^ 0,1 lh< ; ir P ast st ' h ° o1 ret0 “ l and
whoknow theterrltory and Sndor that It does not seem to have at- P^sent needs. traded Negro students. \Vhite peo- Alcee Odell Courtnev, Garv pie are feverishly preparing them- Ind , a g ra duate of Roosevelt selves to invade this new world j high school, who will enter th. area which is opening up. Those j School of Engineering and Archiof African descent appear less j tecture at Howard University in
of action where National Guardsmen finally quited 6,0(X) whites
yelling for blood.
Those whiles opposed the entry to their city of a Negro family
of four as residents.
Babcock, weary from his allnight ordeal, termed this riot “the
gro photographer. All except the
photographer appeared Monday | teachers
when the Clarks moved their lurniture into the apartment, accord-
ing to Babcock.
The photographer appeared later, he said, but was not allowed to get near the place. Hostile
rancis County might be included, court ban against unres ricted i>
terstate shipment and sale of se> hormones by Vita Pharmacals, In (R’-O-Paih'c Pharmacy) and the Maywood Pharmacal Co. (Hndso Products Co.), Los Angeles The^ firms had been conducting a N:< tion-wide order campaign to pro mote sale of the prodducts to la.
men.
Danger in Drugs Cite! The Court of Appea’s for th Ninth Circuit, on June 18. snppor ed the Food and Drug Adminislra tion’s charge that hese drugs wen mherentlv dangerous and not sa 4 " for unsupervised lay use. Thnnellate court directed the Lo Anngeles District Court to issu permanent injunctions restrainins the firms and persons from inter state distribution of male and ft male sex hormones with directior for self-addministration. The an pellate court held that the onlproper labeling for prescriptio drugs is a direction that they b dispensed only on the prescrip tion of a physician, i Before the injunction could fc issued, the defendants launched <• “going-out-of-business” sale, quot ing special prices for last-chance •rclers. On July 5. Federal Judgf Harry C. Westover granted a tem porary injunction to prevent dis rb’dion w : thont physicians’ precriptions. pending appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court. FDA reported 21 convictions In the Federal courts in June for violation of the Federal Food, and Cosmetic Act.
wilt special School District No. 1 to equalize facilities at two Negro schools. This suit resulted in improvements in the schools and also in the employing of two new
FEDERAL HOSPITAL PROGRAM FOR AGED PEOPLE PROPOSED
Ky. Man Named To West Point By Rep. Powell LOUISVILLE, Ky. (ANP)— Lewis C. Olive Jr., 22, former local athlete, was enrolled last week in the United States Military Academy at West Point. He is believed to be the first Negro from Kentucky to attend the Academy. He was appointed by Rep. Adam Clayton Powell (D., N. Y.) A 1948 graduate of Central High school here; Olive attended the University of California, Berkley, While at this uinversity, he broke ‘he freshman track record for the mile. Last year Olive attended the Military Academy preparatory school at Newburg, N. Y. At the prep school, he won the national junior Amateur Athletic Union 1,000-yard race. Olive’s father has been active ‘n Democratic politics for many years. He was Negro Democratic campaign chairman in 1948.
No Clues Found In Death of N. Y; Minister
BRIDGEHAMPTON. N. Y. <ANr p )—Officials investigating the death of the Rev. W. T. Collins had not found any reliable clues last week from the sudden disappearance and death of the minister. Rev. Collins was found lying dead a few feet from his car on a side road not far from the main highway. His shirt was torn as though he had been in a struggle with some one. He had been missing for six days. According to investigation^ officials. Mrs. Jiendetta Collins, the minister’s wife, reported that the minister left home on Tuesday ana said he was going to the bank and laundry.. He was to return after geting the family laundry. When he didn’t return by night, Mrs. Collins became uneasy and telephoned the police. Officers began a search for the minister, and airplanes were pressed Into service, but no traces of the ml» Ister were found. When the body was found, li was swollen and decomposition had set in. How the victim met his death, or why he was in the side road remains a mystery. Rev. Collins was pastor of the First Baptist Church here for 10 vears. A native of Covington, Virginia. Rev. Collins was graduated from Virginia’s Theological Seminary and college. Lynchburg, Va. He began his ministerial career in Covington, as acting pastor of the First Baptist church.
stand its peoples, and in others so they might be prepared to teach about it, learned about Africa’s Increasing importance in global
affairs.
, ... . u i crowds, mostly women, taunted strongest mob situatiop I bave 1 the Negroes with verbal abuse ever seen 1 have never seen peo- j anc | threats. They took it. he said, pie so angry. I Babcock was horrified, however,
r— t: o, u Ht.: : s ^ v Hi ^^, r ' a i 0 Y'osi e af r A' u s .un, P , 0 h«
r o ^were a 'een' by"Babcock^On j «' ^ | S /. ^ the oc^Uve side oi race Sations „ l'* ^ like he h ad recommended that the, Political Job I f iL It would have meant deach or p reside nt include in his legisla-
^ *** +*-•*•* i icLiuie cti iiuwuju university in , j. . . . . it. n wumu uavtr uitdin uedcu m president include in ms legists- c || # • L.A 9
Controlled by Europeans eager. Perhaps they are not aware September will be awarded one of he discussed attuucies oi certain any co j ored perso n who dared to ti ve program a plan which would idling 111 AAlSS. The continent provides a sizable 0l ' the , extent of the training avail- six $1,000 shtolarships to be re- police officers and “j show up. No Negro person should provide hospitalization insurance Bv JAMES B. LAFO
me comment proviaes a sizao.e able nor the opportunltles lt ceived by high schoo i students on »ertain spectators which indicated come ( . lose tQ this place .”
proportion of the strategic materials now required by the Western powers, Mr. McGhee said, including such minerals as copper, chrome, cobalt, maneancse. bauxite, asbestos, tin, industrial diamonds and uranium. It also provides rubber, sisal, hardwoods,
hides, fats and oils.
Three-fourths of the inhabitants of Africa are under the control of European powers McGhee asserted but he warned that the Soviet rulers have become increasingly aware of the importance of Africa. Conditions exist in many parts of Africa which can well play right into the hands of Communist agitators. McGhee pointled out. Low standards of living, attitudes of white supremacy and the disintegration of tribal authority which formerly held people fast gives Russia plenty oi of opportunity to sow discontent Modern Program Planned Summarizing some of the steps which have been taken by the various member nations of UN who have overseas territories in Africa, the state department offiicals mentioned the following: . The United Kingdom has allotted some $500,000,000 under the colonial development act of 1915 to promote the development of the resources of the colonies; a Belgian 10-year plan which calls for an expenditure of $500 million on railroad lines, electric, marine, health and various economic projects. Similarly the French government has begun an extensive development program in its African territories and is planning io spend billion dollars on irrigation,, hydro-electric, roads, hospitals and
schools.
“If a true partnership can be worked out lielween Europeans, Africans, Asians and Americans— based on mutual self respect end understanding and the acceptance of mutual responsibilities,” said McGhee, “non-Africans will be less apt to confuse the African of today with his unprivileged grandfather ana Africans will not
promises.
a national basis.
that the heat of Cicero’s ire may
be subsiding.
Jimcrow School's "Tax Program Sustained by S. C. High Court
NC School Head
Gets Life Term For Burglary
‘Flaming Youth” on Hand
provide hospitalization insurance! Bv JAMES B. LAFOURCHE up to 60 days a year for persons JACKSON. Miss. (ANP>—A U. 65 and older and dependents of S. grand jury has convened here
Mich. Civil War Veteran, Age 107, Dies in Hospital DEARBORN, Mich. (ANP)—The last surviving Negro member ot the Union army in the Civil war, died in Dearborn Veleran hospi-
tal last Friday.
He was Joseph Ctovese, 107 year old resident of Pontiac. He was also the state's lats survivor
of that war.
Clovese was born in slavery on
. _ „ Rahenek said that orieinallv the deceased persons insured under for the purpose of airing the c Dorn ln i slav ery on A Po,iceman s Story , * « n the old-age and survivors insur-! stench rising from a “vicious job •Tsti- 30, 1844, on a plantation in The following S tory of a police H CZSi | teHIn* racket." which far out- S. Bernard Parish. Louisiana, ‘utenant and a mobster was his ^ , P ,, ,. ' . , TI , distances anv thing contrived dur- He fled the plantation whue in his
j! nits 1° "drain a tic - * m0bSUr j Hood" If this plan is approved by Con-' distances any thing contrived dur- S WnedThe Union ! A uiT civ f™t hnckv nn i iP p hums from all over the city have ap- gress it will be very beneficial mg the heyday o so-called Ne p lieuten-nt had «abted J mobs terF Peared on the scene. Most of them to aged persons of the lower in-: |ro dorn.nanee I oughout the fir,, as a drummer He“d Ute hoodlum a t0 an in,: j we« •-;> agers and young men in |come ^upsjho ne^ much more, Souihjo.iowmg the Crvi, War.^ , ami then an infantryman. He was
provised first-aid station at which | s -
fellow guardsmen were treating
'itereThow Babcock described Ired
a trooper whose face was bashed the psychology of the mob:
COLUMBIA, S. C. (ANP)—The in trom a brick.
South Carolina Supreme Court j “Were you in the army?” the
last week declared constitutional officer asked, a 3 per cent retail sales tax and "Yes.”
approved a $75 million school “Was this what you fought hurt them. The whites keep shout-
less than the average income with day hearing. A Senate subcom- oFllowin® the war. he worked te^iW,?^. Ttetop/e SHSilyVohS iSlhVfSS I
ore running around. They don’t private insurance. as “brazen, widespread and open” w j res between New Orleans ana xealize one Negro family cannot i ncrea se in Costs | sales of post office jobs by officers Bii 0 xi, Miss. He came to Pontla.
cons!ruction bond issue. The tax for?” he asked as he pointed to the j ing the old arguments about low-| H iS u eS p t i7i at ^i 11 i t ^ a !. r< ll!i e d p P i^ i Committee and others, beca use 1 s/a te^o ff id a ?s°antici pated for?” he queViefas^e pohite^at ^“Wha^ the^shouWknow Tthat | who^ba^Teed^alTb^ coSitute That^groif which bolt-
of the Mississippi Democratic
judge special court which upheld the Negroes were slated to move, segregation in the schools. j “We don’t want no niggers,”
The decision was the result of a the rnan said.
— - ^® d against the Summerton “Our country is built on a sysRALEIGH, N. C. (ANP) - A ! tJbyth^NAACP ^h^thre^ Vudse* I C ° Urt ^ n0t t ° n that - an f d youthful Negro grade school prin-1 ‘01,0 choo, JU dfs- | so^er^nd^hfs^ructui” "I u1 P e bedro 0 om clo«t Ug of a whib tr ‘ ct , l ° e ",V? ll2e the Negroes’ | Tn the a? m y foH yeaT S . 1 woman, last week received two I of h ? bp S J bi ! didn ’t fight for that. Look, bud, I:r— — i ti n n i n* the Whites. The school distlict tn lht» lintr anH t#>11 them
kn^fT th^ surance for approximately 100,000 These political job panderers
Hie recent decision of the three- the apartment building in which the best thing for them to do is h'*pf t |f izat m n tadl s y uc h Md in S u“ a a I J , c 1 e cd n Uie U Dcmocratic Tarty'In ISIS.
not to move. Stay on their pro- wou 1 d protect ' those aged , needy perty. Ihiv aie running away d i k persons against having When they move. The property is depend upon charity or public theirs, and they should stay there. aid ^ w £ uld reduce federal, “I have never seen a lynch s t a te and local expenditures for situation, but that couldn’t be public assistance. It would also worse than what I have seen here, .reduce the deficits of hospitals
The National Guardsmen have that have to furnish free or P a rt-i a nd Curtis Beasley, former secbeen wonderful. Most of them are pay services. ! retary of the committee, used po-
forsaking Truman and rallying around the banner of the ill-fated
State Rights movement.
The committee investigating has reported that Curtis Rogers, secretary of the committee; Forrest Jackson, attorney; Frank Mize,
In 1948. His death leaves only five survivors of the Union army.
life sentences and three 30-year j £ c f v 'Ll* * ° Sf 00 dlstl K ‘ t i go back to the line and tell them j just youngsters who have never i Ewing pointed out that full costllitical power “to extort contributerms in prison after pleading D _ occ • ‘ ;. ^ report the pro- u hat f you.” been involved in a racial situation. 0 f f bese hospitalization benefits tions from persons seeking fedu 6 gress it is making toward equaliz- anri Old” I'hev are dnine a wnnderfid inh -- - - K
guilty to five burglary charges. When detectives caught Charles Alvin Chuck. 22. he had in hi r no -sP c ■''^o ,, r,r "’' nar>rtf rno- , e>’ whir)
gress it is making ing the schools.
Approved by Governor
“Newcomers and Old”
Babcock reported hearing a member of the crowd comment to
They are doing a wonderf^gl job. can be p a j d 0U f 0 f present social eral appointment in Mississippi The police, too, should be praised, security payroll deductions; hence I —
w,,-.™ , n ae n „m,„ at ,„v t „ ^ M Race Relotions
that which the woman in whose tax ;. He call ed it a blow at those been bere f or e i gbt generations, of them are doing their duty” house he was caught had lost. His , se f^ ir }g to abolish segregation and — —
said it would help lift the state out of the “mire of illiteracy.” | CONTRACT AWARDED 1 FRONTIERS’ CLUB
finger prints connected him with four other robberies. C^’iek M firs* n’eidrtd to five first degree hurblary indictments.. His attorney later tendered pleas of guilty to accessory before the fact of first degree burglary in two cases and guiltv to second degree burglary in the other three. A graduate of Shaw University. Chuck earned $214 a month as principal of the Jeffrey’s Grove school. He is married and has an
infant son.
Many of Raleigh’s leading Ne gro citizens took the stand in de fense of Chuck. They said that
“The decision makes it cer- ON FALL CREEK BRIDGE
tain that we can help the school district in Clarendon County.
AT lOfh AND IND. AVE. Work on reconstruction of the
“So far as I am concerned had bridge of Fall Creek at Indiana there been no suit in Clarendon | a venue and Tenth street was County to abolish segregation, I rt^ b p d , dP H hoain late this week, would have urged this school pro- The contract for deconstruction of gram to help the white and col- the bridge was awarded to Smith
TO HOLD MEET AT AKRON JULY 26-28
NASHVILLE, .Tenn. (ANP) — The American Missionary Association’s Race Relations Institute at
ored children.
All five jurges concurred in the
opinion.
thev knew Chuck and his family well and that their reputations and character were beyond reproach.
and Johnson. Inc., this week on
a low bid of $117,599.10.
According to reports from the office of the board of public works
The actual operation of such { | HI GOB'S
a plan would be very simple, 1 - - , stated the FSA administrator. Mgc Denounced
When the physician or a person B ^w
entitled to these benefits determines that he should be hospital-
AKRON, Ohio — The nation’s ized, the doctor would make the t . a . . , only national Negro service club necessary arrangements whenever University last week heard a organization “Frontiers of Ameri- possible. The patient could remain professor at the University Uhi ca” will hold its 10th annual con- in the hospital as long as neces- ca S° denounce segregation and a vention here July 26-28, expected sary up to 60 days a year and the uni o. n official cite the need of edto be the largest in the history hospital costs would be paid di- ucat ing workers to accept Negroes
of the organization. j rectly to the hospital out of the
Speakers for the occasion will insurance fund,
include Judge Carl V. WeygandtJ Provides General Benefits chief justice of the Ohio State The hospital services provided S*«nreme Court: W. O. Walker, | under this plan are those services,
construction on the bridge has
been delayed on account of prior- editor of the Cleveland Call-Post, I drugs and appliances which the ities for steel, which were granted j and P. L. Prattis, executive edi-; hospital customarily furnishes its last week. tor of the Pittsburgh Courier. 1 bed-patients, explained Mr. Ewing.
ucating workers to accept Negroes. Dr. Joseph Lohman, professor of sociology at the University of
Chicago, said;
“When the basic rights of men
are denied, therein lies a threat to
the freedom of everyone.” He described the doctrine of "separate but equal” as a myth
Meharry Medical College Receives Check for $48,000 NASH VILLE (ANP)—Charles H. Bynum, director of interracial activities for the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, recently presented a o^eck for $48,800 to Dr. Michael J. Bent, dean of Meharry Medical College. This is the fifth annual educational grant made to the college. These funds now total $341,650 and were made possible by the March of Dimes. They help to provide instrmuction in pediatrics, orthopedic surgerv and a physical therapy program. The awarding of the grant was announced jointly by Basil O'Connor, president of the Infantile Paralysis Foundation, and Dr. Robert A. Lambert, chairman of the Interim committee at Memarry.
never possible of achievement. Mark Starr, educational director of the international Ladies Garment Workers Union, said: “Unle s organized labor overcomes the difficulties of race di» criminnation in its r-mks, its own major interests will be undermined/’
