Lighthouse and informer. (Charleston, S.C.) 1941-1954, July 07, 1951, Image 2
? LIGHTHOUSE and INFO]
. N.A.A.* IP.
Progress 1
_ t ATLANTA ?ThrTTgf.> mot
Tv- W the NAACP last yeaiMvere
r, Rights Mobilization and .the i
??oinionn ending LUufrcgMt ion at
_y_ Oklahoma, accordmir to the 1
soeiution, "Civil Rjghts at" Mi
week during the NAACP 42
The tion, -wl.'ir.h
: ' . brought more than 4.000 *dCcLv"'
Botes from 35 states to Washington,
for a three-day civil right/
Conference"and 'lo-bbying session.
, January 15-17, wa^ one of the
large** *nd" most imorofrwe
demonstration^ of its kind, ever
to take place in the nation's capita,"!.
More than ofte liundred national
organizations participated
In the Mobilization, which fire
Association tailed on mandate of
tt5^40th annual convention in T.o*
.. An**eV-?i. in 1040
The Pnpretae Court rulings
on- June 5, ordering: the admls^
-vision of Herman M. Sweatt to
the University of Ti xav and
ordering: the University of Ok
lahloma to c^ase segregating
graduate student G. W. Me.
Laurin, "undermind the entire
legal structure of segregation,"
the NAACP report states. It
notes that Dr. Benjkmiu Fine,
_ education. editor of the New
York TIMES, asserted in that
newspaper on October 23, 1950,
that a thousand Negro* students
are pow attending soqthern
.. colleges and universities from
which they had previously
been barred.
Resurgence of Mob Violence
On the barker side of the picture,
the Association reported a
resurgence of Ku KJux Klan activity
and other forms of mob
violence as it pushed its program
for the total abolition of segrega
tlon, "Not only were hapless
> NegfroeS victims of attack?; ttptm
- - ^ f i awanw Vt a 11* , y\T*A?A t*f \T
wictr pcrsuns, innr rpruj/ui \>y auu
report states, bu^gwhite citizens
who defied racist traditions were
atep strbje t tv, attack.
>' Dwnite evasion. trickery
?d hoodlunu?ui," the report
_ SwMitlniwe, "important gains
were male daring -the year."
Notable among these were the
compliance ml a jpumber of
r* southern .railroads with the
Supreme. Court- decision out__
?la wing Jim Crow arrangements
v In dining cars, progress in inNAACP
Mapping
Segregation In I
ATLANTA?The NAACP drive
^legation Hum all
. phases of American life will be
^extended to the local leve|, Thurgood
Marshall, special" (iduriVelr
anounced following a closed conr<*rnr\pfl
r?f?40?civil?rights?law?
yers attending?42nd?annual
convention of the NAACP which
closed here Sunday.
The lawyers agreed, wjth the
concurrence of state leaders of
the Association, upon priorities
for attacking racial segregation hi
(1) publifc education. (2) transportation
with emphasis on local
streetcars and buses, (3) health
=: housing?and recreational?fataliv
ties, (4) public gatherings and
-?-<5)* all places of public accommodation
wherever any such segregation
is required by state 'onstitutiona
and statutes, local or__?dinanrrc
public or private regu> '
lotions.
On ^he professional and graduate
school level, Mr. Marshall
said, precedents have been e?:?statrttehefl.
"All that remain-; Is
Don't Be Misled
tfXP' Look Instead
ROOMS & SOFT DRINKS
COM) BEER AND WINE
Clfmm and Clfaurettea
Fried Chicken and
Sea Food Dally
Vv/
TAXI SERVICE
DAY or NIGHT
WRIGHT
| ^ |
HOTEL CAFE
. .. , i
_ PHONE 9186 f
. nmg ' If
W&& : i
... :
yF^L . i .
'SttL
Tk'
. r
RMER, COLUMBIA, S. C. ' Sa
Ills i H' T
A.
; lieports (.
Juring 195
<1 siguifuaTTraceomplLsTHncnls ?
the National Knjorgcnoy Civil t
inanimoiis Supreme Court de- *
Um lTu1vtM\sil v m ri'\*ms and I
ati>uial report of the A^v- *d-Ocntury."
released here last *nd
annual convention. . I
n-j, ration In the Air Force and
Navy, and the defeatSgf the
efforts ,of FTTxieorat congress- l-'
j men to impose segregation in v
j legislation for the armed for- p
| ees. LL
-?He Tense?uf.?Soi vu'oiuon?<.i v
Top Priority ^
I ? I
I At the -onset of the Korrr.n
i war, the Association receive? j
many complaints -I'mp1 ?11
tnatory treatment' of Negrn r.I v>
.who were fighting valiantly h
i the ' front line*-, in- scgd'-egatr.v- Kunits.
Starting with the court u
. martial conviction - anfl sentence -Hi
of Lt. I.ron A. Gilbert, the TTA_ |>
ACP ri fan to intervene In co' rl
rmart'ai c-?ses involving Negr ti
(lull A uVtnrrrnd ~
..V-r Klllllll IX UctirilUIU, KL
, an^ defen-c of the GIs was given d
'tup priority on the Association's?
| agenda. ' *
"The enfcige qrganlzatiofn? P
i the national office as ?? 0
j the branches?was g?r?red to 'r
| th'fl tflslc," thi> rnprtrh notes. Ja
"The chief responsibility, however
fell upon the Legal De- C(
partment, which afforded the rr
legal defense for accused GIs, y
and the Washington Bureau,
which carried on the fight for ir
leglislative action against dis- t!
crimination and segregation in ai
the ajrmed forces^" u
In addition to detailing "the
work .of the NAACP tn Conner. m
tion with the fighf against Jim rj
Crow in the armed forces, the ^
annual report devotes chapters to "
the legislative program, legal t
work, membership, the Boston ^
convention, public relations, the"**
role of the church,. the CRISTA ~~j
magazine and fund-raising activl
-- ^
NAACP TO MEET ,
ATLANTA,? The 781 ??Je- 1
gates from 40 states attending the
42nd*~3nnual convention of the
Natirmal Association for the Advancement
of Colored People to- ,
dc
day voted to hold the next con
-vention in OktaTToma City du?ing
the latter part of June.
. an
Pi
Plans To Knockout
se
Svery Nook, Spot
? 1-?- _th
a- problem of research on logu. bf
procedure to prevent delays in mt
state' like Georgia where time?
?
princiiminif
Luujuiiiuig m.uu pi uceuures delay
application for relief to the f<-d-r"
liral courts,"' he asserted.
. , t-h<
On the elementary and second- rio
ary school levels, the NAACP v^c
v',.
kWtiSi0%'
TIIUROOOI) MARSHALL an
counsel pointed out, there is m(
arc
need for development of legal ,
procedure for filing one- suit to
cover nil such schools in n given , ,
r u i
st^ate. The fight against Jim Crow (?j
travel on the local level includes |n
action against segregated waiting- cj0
rooms and restaurants, in train
stations an^ nifporte. Legal precedents
already available in the ye8
school cases may also be applied jyg,
in the fields of health, housing ^un
and recreation, the lavtyers a*- edi
pfreed. The attack on- segregation gro
in pnhiir ,'Lidh Hnf1" - rid in placet sta*
of public accommodation** will Ge
follow the establishment of pre- da.
cedents In xhe other fields. J fi
I
l
I 1 ^
??
v?
turday, July 7, 11)51
In- NA <
' ?
' '
iites '
0 -- - ?|
tole Of NAACP
? :
,auded By
Vesirient HST i
A,_f ' r ' "
ATLANTA ?'Coicbal ^veciuts
and iiearty good washes"'
<;rc extended by President Tru-1
"n b? the 7AI delegates, nttondLg_the-42nd
annual Convention
1 ' ' ' ? i \ i \ I, 1 ' W]l 1011 'MCI'i "
i nday. The message. read .
ic opening scs ion.'i' roavmii.,!
ie rwA-cntion that it was 'bn<?otVi
ri'?r f> 1 f fv4-i?moment in?Too"
orUl's history."
' li e ft roes >.f imperialist
vs?.on -4>av(? orrrc again T7o5i?
nleashed a smallei'. weaker
r-iiThb'T. Rut this l-iinc they have'
eon turned Back bv the* ioint!
ffort of the -freedom loving naons.
.'In thi- effort, our iouii y
has takeri the leach' the Pro.-,:
out said.
"The National Association fTT"
he Advancement of Colored
eople is numbered among the
rganizations which are foremost
i working for the universal enyment
of equal, justice and
qual opportunity to which our
:>untry Js dedicated." Mr. Trulan
' said ija, his letter. "With
our support' r and assistance,
rnch progress has already been
lade in the armed services, in
le Federal government itselfr
ad in such areas as housing, edcation
an dtransportation."
The President reiterated his doand
for the enactment of civil
ghts a<nd urelfore .
Ve must insure," he .repeated,
that these rights - on equal
rms - are enjoyed by every
ttzem? ?-? 1
Mrs. Baeoats Tells
Integration ' In Tfr
A summary of an
he panel discussion Jr-"
nterracial of thf'^IBK'ri^
Missionary and Educational i
:onvention given by Mrs. I. B. t
tacoals)r - ' 1
One o* the tasks of American i
mocracy is to educate all ot j
i citizens by adequately pro- (
ding public fechools, colleges
d universities. In July 1946 the s
esident of the United Staes, t
*rry S. Truman, began some) <
rious thinking on the question r
d problem of equal education i
r all Americans and on how If
e _ Fe.deril Government?
>st assist the institutions to;
>et the challenge of pro\idingj?
Mh educational, opportunities j ,i
e Presidential Cnfnmissron ap- j
inted by President Truman re-,r
ft led the "Kcnriomic Barriers."
I 1
J?iviu inl?emrf?Religious?Bar-' y
rs" and the "Restricted Cur-ij
ulum Barriers" to equal edu
tional opportunities. It cttodi
i Negro citizens as outstand?
oxanvpflbs of " these " bar-,
rs and as being deprived i
many opportunities rightfully ?
longing to them The com- '
ttee further revealed that 17
0"- .i! id TtTe IJ -1? ict of fnluin
maintained segregation ' of
groes in education by law, and
t su h. schools maintained for
groes were inferior <n every:
pec t ? housing facilities, teach,-and
supervision. It cuncludthat"Regregat
ion lessen* the
ality ("if eudcation for wlvtes
>well as for the Negroes," and
it "The inequality of educated?cTppuiluuity
f? a violation"
a major American nrincmle
1 is contributing to the grow;
tenslon in one of the crucial
4a* of our democracy."
Hie Committee's released re
rt started much agitation for
1 integration and the N.A.A.has
been in the forefront
forcing doors that have been
sed\ The Crisis of May 1951
lorts that "Vvtories in N.A.A
court actions Jn recent
irs have opened graduate and
Sessional eduontoinal oppor- '
iiti?s in .state supported white _J
J^atioPal i'natitiitrions to Ne- '
es in all southern and border '
tes with the exception of *
orgin, Soulh Carolina, Florl- I
Alabama, rind Mississippi." 1
Itatistics reported from^ 1940, j
I -
.CI' For
Baptist Ladies t
To Raise Funds h
For New Home I*
SUMTKR (Special)- -The Wn-j Jj,
mans Baptist State Convention.'
under the leadership ^of
K. Howard, held a r?.K?.ment vasi<
:-onvont'->i) m Bonnet*. V;lk la.V. t.dn
\vrck. One t,f the hijjhlirthly w \ Ml:
nroi^anc-e of a plan to rnisoHh
tun .C'T: fcssary t/? (root n " u
J::eor.t?rnie:; ru; at" M'>t! ;.-e
Cel h ire. ' j si,
lii:.-. ^ hii.l'i-injj V\_i 11 f.)(> name jV
f?? Mrs. M. K. F Toward.-" S.va .1 !
'hundred- dollars vert taken at' "
t'uy Convention a+vt plan; w.. : !
.IkilM _fc?r o_ yiiiuirL_dilv^ U. cmli .!
n < x t Jutif. All missionary .-u^ io ' '
tics nnd churches were urged f<? i* *
hold a:-. M. K. Uowary fo'l rx- s
[ (
ship tc;>. Uonirs nr<> In he T-r-nt '?
t<> Mts Albertha Sinmns, .9-11 1
Oak St.. ('i !unib'n.. '
Mi s. L\ . ??Caulden of Ml", -1 '
berry is -jxin.soring a "ral'-v. oi J 1
the" <*nlintkv." ' Tbe'details of th<s\ 4
rally will "hi- 'sent to missionary I 1
societies, district auxiliaries and c
individuals who will participate!
in this project at the Bapti-t Col- P1
egr-m" Sti inter. b<
~~t i
Florida Court X
__ A
oars Five . .
? y-A-LbAILAS.SRB.- yta. ?" ThCTU
Florida Supreme Court last wcekjtlturned
down* the petition of five 1 th
Negro students who have been te
seeking to enter the University r?
of Florida sinoe 1949. * ; tk
In substance; the tribunal heidjes
the quintet had failed to present j
sufficient reasons for ad riis-bn, fo
but left the way open for i rc-1 c<
newed appeal from ajower slate1m
court ruling.- ' - " j. .
?Instruction?in?various?courses; S
is being" sought by the appli-- ii
cants'- all men - which i>' nott c
offered at Florida A. and M. Co''-; p?
- I
? 1 f
Women Of . "
location - ?^
L KV < enrolled pi white" *
hi^her learning, a-!^
jbv. the Ma.on Dixon line. This'cf*
lumber is incomplete as manyj^1
tniversities did not keep statis-jof
-it's by race. Little nr r> r\ rl i c/> vi *-? ? ? S(>
__ ~ W-. ? - v-r utav'l iill" |
nation was shown, for the Negro'
;tudent< partieipaled in nil phncoq shj
if <v)Uege life. They captained f'1
basketball and fqotball teams. "
sang in the glee clubs and choirs. W
aecamc presidents of their class- m
es, ofticers in student govern- 1
nent organization* an,i in some1
nstances have Men inducted in
o local chapters of National
'Irrek-lctTJr-' Tr a ternit i cs.
More than 70 Negro instructors
ire teaching in white institution*. ^
ind in Now York City a NVgro ""
> John B King has .just h.rn ' ' '
>QininatOi] as n-s:-;fani wo.win??rndenl.
Raleigh, North Carolina *Ur'
ia.s a "rec ently olo 'tod school ":i
>onrd mcmbrr, Mr P J. Ca:-?i- : '
Co.
Truh the dawn if eompleh .aogrntiorv
:n higher e.iuo!;on
ow hoi-kotK and we nrav "ha'
co.
ur youth w.l! l)o ready*!, *aU<*
drantagc ,.f i-pp utunita ast
as fhov arc truuh nvadv,:.. , "
^? i 1 '* i * ??.?
W'
firs
LABOR WATCHDOG ? ,n?
Clarence Mitchell, above, told n>ir
NAAC'P delegates In Atlanta jOe
ast week that job disrrimina- will
Negro workers, that the right jpro
to work was not-jet asm rod --jtrr->ut
progress in a number of ; nnr
spheres wa? being made to- I the
wards full integration of the jnf.p
American worker.
?
\ *
? K
ly-secoiK
-V- - ^
bishops Ask Trial I
t^ainstPatters'n 1
dropped ^1p
WAS! :NCJTON, DC, ? Two jjRjl
~ ch j ..; JPTj"'nr. i tnc:r tarn- , M
es, If' i delegation t0 the Juv- ;ro
a IJt- t.mrnl >oV June 18 to m
?? i 1 1 v i ' " | ' . 1?
a'.wr,;f oJ'T.'tli.asu L. Patter ' IS
vil K t OjngVi s,-'.
Put v. .is iridic to J lor g?|
'r?u:ltv i)l ' lollwv, ing a House
Lo!)l)\ { oiiunitlec hearing at ,
ivhieh ( j-ofgit (. ong.V.ysumiL 4 __
i<m<u <*> I,:ui)>.ini (I)cni.) i
ailed !. in a "Mark s.o.b." anu i 11
iartrii t?> assault him. At I'.it- J ^
.v.hite jury refused to convict | s|
liim. Federal Judge IloltzofT | 15
"edhimmdrrt tlifft tlie govern- d
iiom drop its indictment. Hut ) >r
lie Justice Department hits j ai'
leverlheless scheduled a sec- ' <>
?nd trial for October.
The Bisnops who brought the; A
<?a \\< rc Bishop John H Clay-! ^
>rn. ' uttle Hock,' Arkansas, of,
ic Alr.c.in Methodist Episcopal i^y
hurcl and Bi-hop T. IT Med-1'I
?rd of Washington, D. C. of th' j
ME Zion Church. !
c I
In a meeting with Assistant .
ittorney Generrtl Fayt Bishop a
layborft, whtT recently accepted
ic post of National Chairman ofi
le Patterson Defense Commit-<
ai
e, read the complete text of the
. solution recently adopted by ^
e AME Bishops Council, hight
body in the AME Church. fec
Bishop Clayborn said, "I speak ajc
r the seventeen bishops of my j
ingregation" and read- the
imes of all seventeen.
He continued, "We, the bihops
of the - African MethodKir
st -Episcopal church throughpai
tilt thq world do here and now
rot?9t--Agttlnst tiiP nfffWrn nf ^
lenderson I,ovcIaee Lanham of ,
for
ieorgia, who, while presiding _
ver a body in which the civil
ights issue was involved cur-*
ed and abused" will lam L.Pat- 1
vV
\fv ATI a V
cYr-'.-Stotv1"- I t
rt -V: v'? fc *hat Con-j^ ,
-"van Par j be reprimand ' ?
. or
add dismissed us a member of:
e committee and that the easel hri
contempt,, against Mr. Patt j trii
n be dropped." sufi
Bishop Clayborn also told As-:linl
LlllI Attorney General Fav, of i
at tl>e "a< isc persecution in'Jn
Villikie, May
Danger Ir
ATLANTA ? The nation a^, (
'TT.Tii that continued color dus?: .
natiort. and segregation are
iv< threat- tr, nur dfm.icr;,; -;
?? rrtTg
n { life hv n Negro scholar ,
I: :e
t a voting white politician who .?
. ? ' I : < > J
iv-d the platform at a mass
I'Mii! during the 12nd annual J,
i K IT'
.vontion of the National Asane-;
fori'
fnr t;u-, Advancement -f
Sored People w.vch closed here'.
1 ;kie
rv7a\*
h- ? n 1
, .-peckers were 1>;. 1 >r.ya ' t0-u
V Mays, president of Mor-- V(.s
< ?h go .and i'h:i 11[i?W?Ii -r-pr
Indiana State legislator ant dem
f the late Wendell W likle
Je.n.to continuing discriinjna-j j? ,
: aid segregation. Dr. Mays. >c;tj,
./ "new South emerging ,r| rno'i
ana of human relations." He; -p
el ra.-ted Him?LXiVulition f?pre , ,v. >
ling in the South of his South j <j0r.
\ \ i \f tn/lni' ejrv/l nif A/-I K/-? I - .
1 1 ; phis
winch had brought -sagm-1
"i^TT ^TiTuTTfr^ Tn ffiT? regi >n. ! ^or,
re-most Among those, he~rn-|orj?
uteri, -hpc herb. the NAArJpj ....
irh devised an effective way
achieve more freedom a.vl C
hoe through the fedordi#
The Negro himself," l^e|C
>rgin educator said, "is more a
t rmined today to become r \
t class citizen", hut not detoi- #
led enough. "If the deter- i;
nation is to he measured hyimj),
number'of Negroes who are #
ling to pnv for their freedoms \
cess of the law an(j courts and a
paying for It by runtrUmtj'iK \?
mallv to organizations li'ce /
NAACF and the Southern 1
riona| Council, the determinVC
n is not very strong " i
*
fl An in
^ . ' I
Wm *
ralpii m xriie _S.
t.'ivi.S l??.ys ? K;t(;i;il itpp-.
nation and ihe .South'!* tired
>v altering its racial practices
> u.i -lid to America's leaj^r'?l?
in a free world was the
distance c?l Dr. lialph ,J.
- f
unche's < above) address Sunay
afternoon before the closu>
session, uf the NAAjyP 42nd
mual convention In Atlanta.
a.
la. Jails
Ionian For
)?ath Cake'
WEDOWEE, Ala. (ANS)?A
2 year old woman has been
ound over to the Randolph
tmnl> giaud Jury oh cnarges
f killing a four year old neice
rith poison cake, for insurnce
purposes.
Judge H. M. Britton set bom
$1,500 for the woman, Mis
idrev Holloway, charged witl
(ding poison oake to little Ger
line SheppaTd.
\lso jailed in the case was th?
Vs mother. Mrs. Corinne Shep
rd.
^Iso jailed in the ease wag tn<
l's mother, Mrs. Corier nShep
rd, and Aubrey Holloway, ai
ele,?both claiming they__l_
?n uanble' ti/ hi re a lawyer be
e the prelimv-iary hearing.?
)pnuttf cV*ori f ^ T ^L - *
r?j J..UHU il,. ,i. ^,iiasr, wn(
eptigated the cas?>, said^?Xhi
> held -five insurant#? pottti?'
'he girl.
:^ut. arrest* came yrftt'r A tUVI'
gist reported tracts arstruc
a -jimilar poison, was V-.und
nging Pa'.terson to a ??.-.\irai
il after a iederal judge hac
igcstcd dismissal "is a furthei
"C in the -chain of the pattern
oppression- of the Negro people
the United States."
s See
i Racism?
osts Friendship of Colored
Nations
"oluv -discrimination and segrrtrrn-tsr-rnpting
America the
juUiup and support uf a bilj
and - a-hlaf colored peoples
iiigh.out the world. Mr. \Vultold
delegates add friends at
Jing the session,
f! these people." voun4j WiIIs'sul.
"join' the Soviet side
.in titanic s ruggle for-^orld
lership. wc will find nurse
an i-olated island, n gafii-o
c in a Soviet Comnvunislunatod
world. If they join
s dn. we. :n turn, are placed
a dominant position - a peon
in which we ran nur h
e easilv isolate the Russian-.
Ic lpndor*li?p of the clnrks'.rin
p.nTir^K- nr-c, Mr. Willkio ,o<Pil.
"nblo .well-educated. si;tic;itcd,
nnd frankly cvn.eal
at -America"'- professed 'dMb
niso' oFstfm trr piont of mi'nrljT,
^-V
Fnjov Your Vacation 1
on beautiful ? 1
Atlantic Reach I
?= at the ? /
Hotel Gordon i
leauty Rest Mattresses C
Vicious Food. graciously #
served. j
For r>?#rvallnnf L
Phone 2872, or vvrtte /
i\j llr-ttH., Mjf rv j
HOTEl" GORDON I
Atlantic Reach w\
^ (Wan Prlve^
? 1- 1
' f'
lal Corn
Ditch Your Demag<
White Bids In Chal
ATLANTA ?^ Air appeal to 1
demagogic; political leadership
clom wis voiced hero .today by
retary of the NAACP at the cl
. Lon'rt :12ih1 annual convention.
IV. _ White was Dr. Ralph J. Ij
rtor and Nobel Peace Prize wii
spects of the rm;o problem.
Citing a recent conference. of
the governors of .Georgia, South
Carolina and Mississippi to de- \
l j vise plan* for circumventing
tTTS! Supreme Court decision in-!
validating segregation in public';
education. Mr. White ~ ashed:_-*AYlun
>vjjL the intelligent South
awaken, to the insult to its in- j
tclligon <c such men represent?" j
These governors, he said, "dc-j
clare that they will never permit!
the abolition of segregation; They j
assert that the propic^ 'wilbnever i
Stand for such action.' Do theyj.
- brand the people of their states *
a; being less law-abiding, lessj
democratic than the citizens of,
- twelve other southern states in
^ i
whose colleges and universities
young Negro men <ind women
study today?" %
This governor's confidence, Mr.
White suggested, "constitutes a
conspiracy to overthrow democ-'
racy through defiance of the!
government and threats to de-!
prive all citizens,
as well as Negro, of education,
The Supreme Court's decision
that the eleven Communist lead- j
ers constitute a 'clear and pre- t
sent danger' should call the
n Court's and America's attention
. to another olear and present dan:
e the four year old victim.
The accused stoutly deny the
charges. .
e . :
-j PICNirg 1
- DAY NIGHTl
FREE GROUNDS I
>_ SAVOY CLUB J
5 Ph. 5147 ^ Winii #boro Rd.?
( 9 .Fine Wines, Clarets . I
1 k Cordials, liquors
' I Whiskeys
Liquor Store
2201 Gervais Street
Columbia. S. C.
p > 1
with
ft- t ^ Xyi^r
txyg^y'
?*PACE
BOY
This mosl useful hdir piece blend*
in wirh your oWn liair and kee.pa
<be rou^h rn.l. ?.,..? $8.00 f
fljjjg HT~. i
- the half clamour m
tttcnt M ik <?* W * km4 tmi
gs natmratly 4?wa Um Wck. III fe
tod?a I?g>. ?! *?
t ?. U:% ss^1oiipmi
*#* ?., ? . ^?
HAIR-DO FASHipi
I?ia ?7iSSSia8*wa
I
m
? 1 r-?;
mention j
ogues, Walter _ J
lamre South? J
Uie Smith to ditch its present
and join the forces of free- J
Walter White, executive sec- ?
psing meeting "of the Associa- 1
Sharing the platform with
unche, United Nations modi- 1
nmr, who spoke on the world I
fcei.^<which is longer-lived and
Equally dangerous to democracy. 1
ft is race hatrcxi, a danger which I
J| 4 ^FHM
B||S^v fl^B
WALTER WHITE ? .<
has Been "Both clear and present
since the Civil 'War. The time
Is not far off when American
m&y be forced to act against such 1
conspirators against demo^yacy
and freedom." . "
Negr0 voters in the South, Mr.
White indicated, could be de- '
pcnded upon to give substantial
support to driving out the Dixie
derpagogu-es.- "A million Negro- [ .
e> are qualified to vote in the I 1
South today. By the time of the \
presidential election of 1952 that
number must be doubled," the
NAACP official asserted, v
"Get Mother's dare For
Th* TW-~ T " ?
J.W1I ffOB
n. tT dutaiit 1
ririnff Wl Biiii 1
.FURNACES
Oil or Gas
6 ATTIC 1
I FANS- p
* All Sises s*
5 Free Estimates * 5 ' . '."^1
| 10 *]/i down/?? a
30 nto?. to pay 4
BRANDT'S
' t !
1707 Two Noich Road >
Phone 3-5113
SkYOuTbesT^ I
ft AC. K Of yr.
THE HEAD CLUSTER * ^
This item is made from on*
?f our Clamonf P?p*?Boysi aw4 * yj
y?tt can easily make it yourself
if you care to. \ $7 Of
' THE AIX-ABOUMD KOUV
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