“PRIZE-WINNING BOOTHS”
— The most popular exhibits
seen at recent sessions of the
National Baptist Convention,
USA, Inc., Chicago, and the
Grand Lodge Convention of the
Improved Benevolent Protective
Order Elks of the World, De
troit, were the above booths
placed in these conventions by
The Coca-Cola Company, At
lanta, Ga. During the 82nd an
Keyna Minister.
(Continued From Page One)
ranee, illness, and poverty. We
will turn to any country that
will help us work out these
problems, as long as there are
no strings attached to the
help.”
Mr. Ngala said that for the
present he did not see how
this Kenyan policy could apply
to the Soviet Union, since he
said it was evident that the
Soviets always attached the
sort of strings that c^uld be
very dangerous to Kenya’s in
pendence.
As far as including Com
munists,’’ he said, “we in my
party fthe Kenya African
Democratic Union] are very
much against communism and
feel that infiltration from com
munism must be resisted. This
applies to all of East Africa.
Communism must be resisted
now. Not only can infiltration
from communism affect our
orderly transition to inde
pendence. but it can affect our
economic future.
“I personally feel that if my
party were elected and formed
the first Kenyan government,
that we would take very strong
measures against the infiltra
tion of communism in Kenya
and East Africa.
“My own experience is that
the chaos taking place in Africa
has stemmed from this Com
munist infiltration.”
Mr. Ngala said he felt it was
very important that neocoloni
alism not come about in Kenya
or other of the emerging na
tions in Africa. “Our first in
tention,” he said, “is to get rid
of the colonial regime, whether
it is British, French, or Arab—
I nual convention of the Baptists
I in the Windy City and the Mot
or City 63rd annual session of
the Elks, the internationally fa
mous soft drink firm conducted
door-prize contests and gave
away dozens of coolers for Coca
Cola each day. At left, Coca
Cola’s Moss H. Kendrix, Wash
ington, D. C., PRfirm head,
stands in, at Chicago, with Bap
tist Hotel-Bath House secretary
so that we can create our own
nation.
“Now the danger is that we
then will have to depend on
these same nations almost com
pletely for our economic sta
{ bility. This is neocolonialism.
To avoid this, we must take
quick steps to bring about eco
nomic independence.”
He said that Kenya and other
newly independent nations
must take care that they not
be used by the bigger nations
in the United Nations.
Mr. Ngala detailed several
! aspects of the decentralized
government that Kenya would
: be moving to under its new
constitution. He said that the
1 many tribes in Kenya made it
necessary for these groups to
havo loral autonomy.
I “We decentralize,” he said,
: “so that in matters that are
close to a region, that region
will have final authority over
this matter—depending on the
Constitution for this authority
and not begging for consent
: from a centralized govern
ment.”
He said that it was very
important for a constitution to
be determined even before in
dependence is granted: “L feel
the chaos that has come to the
' Congo would not have hap
i pened if a constitution had
been drawn up first.
“The UN knows that if time
had been taken to draw up a
i constitution in the Congo—a
| constitution that would be
feasible—that the trouble
i could have been averted.”
* IT’S NICE TO BE
IMPORTANT
BUT IT’S MORE
IMPORTANT
TO BE NICE
MONUMENT STREET HOTEL
AND ROOMING HOUSE
CLEAN COMFORTABLE ROOMS
CORDIAL SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES
142 West Monument Street
Phone 3-5658 and 355-9222
and public relations director,
Dr. T. J. Collier, Hot Springs,
Ark., 2nd from left, Pat
Chaney and Juanita Meyers,
hostesses at booth display names
of cooler-winners in one of sev
eral drawings made during con
vention. Insert, from left, are
Dr. Collier, a friend, and Jim
Brown, Coca-Cola of Chicago,
and, at Detroit, Mr. Kendrix,
Taylor Cox, Coca-Cola of De
Civil Rights
Violations In
U.S. Underlined !
Omaha, Neb.
The Washington representa
tive of the Anti-Defamation
League of B’nai B’rith has de
clared that “civil-rights viola
tions remain America’s most I
stubborn nationwide domestic
problem.”
Herman Edelsberg addressed
the annual meeting of the
plains states advisory board of
the league. About 200 Jewish
community leaders from Kan
sas, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa,
and South Dakota attended.
The regional board also com
mended the Des Moines Reg
ister for its distinctive human
relations reporting. Accepting
the certificate of merit in be
half of the newspaper was
Kenneth MacDonald, editor
and vice-president of the Reg
ister and Tribune.
A
Kennedy Marks.
(Continued From Page One)
N.Y., in 1864 where it was
raffled off at a bazaar for
wounded Union soldiers. The
State of New York purchased
it and has possessed it since.
Mr. Kennedy said Lincoln’s
proclamation, which freed
3,000,000 Negro slaves in 10
southern states, launched a
century which “since has
seen the struggle to convert
freedom from rhetoric to re
ality. It has been in many
respects a somber story.”
The President said that
during much of the period,
Negroes were divided by
segregation, denied the vote,
subjected to terror, and re
fused equal opportunity for
education and employment.
He added:
“It can be said, I believe,
that Abraham Lincoln eman
cipated the slaves, but that
in this century since our Ne
gro citizens have emanci
pated themselves.”
-u
Negro...
(Continued From Page One)
Federal Judge Smett Choate
said it was Worthy who had
played cat and mouse with the
government instead of the oth
er way around, as Worthy’s at
torney had contended.
SIGN OF ONE - STOP
SHOPPING SERVICE
Complete Shopping Needs
Abundant Parking
Easy To Reach
Prompt, Courteous
Service
Meadowbrook Mart
Meadowbrook Road at North State
“For Your Shopping: Pleasure And Convenience”
troit, and Elks’ Grand Director
of Public Relations Charles P.
McClane. In upper panel, far
right, are the charming young
ladies — Edith Meyers and Jan
ett Royal — who were hostesses
for Coca-Cola at Elks conven
tion in Detroit. The Baptist and
Elks are the largest Negro re
ligious and fraternal organiza
| tions in the United States.
Rural And...
(Continued From Page One)
ing family farms, (4) stimulat
ing economic growth, and (5)
preserving social values of rur
al life.
Dean L. A. Potts of Tuske
gee, special assistant to Sec
retary Freeman, attended the
_ i
Ghana Bank...
(Continued From Page One)
Life Insurance Company;
David Rice, public relations
manager for the Illinois Fed
eral Savings and Loan Associa
tion; and Judge H. Parker,
president of Parker House
Sausage Company.
He also had a discussion pe
riod at the Co-operative League
and viewed the Midwest Grain
Exchange before having a final
luncheon meeting with Dr.
Melville Herskovits at the
Northwestern University Pro
gram of African Studies.
Before arriving in Phoenix,
Mr. Amoako-Atta was given an
opportunity to view both the
Grand Canyon and the Hoover
Dam. near Las Vegas, Nev. Of
the dam, he said: “It is one of
your greatest projects. I was
most impressed.”
Earlier, in Los Angeles, he
had discussion periods with of
ficials at the Safety Savings &
Loan Company and the Golden
Gate Mutual Insurance Com
pany.
He said all of the officials he
has met with have shown a
keen interest in arranging fel
lowships for bank personnel
from Ghana to study in the
United States.
On a side trip from Los An •
geles, Mr. Amoako-Atta took a
tour of the Kaiser Steel Mill at
Fontana, Calif.
“I was most interested in
seeing this,” he said, “since
Kaiser has an aluminum
smelter project in my coun
Xfter a trip *o Disneyland
in Los Angeles (in which he
took what he termed a “very
exciting’ tram ride through the
mountains), Mr. Amoako-Atta
embarked for Phoenix. There,
besides his visit to the bank,
he inspected a large irrigation
project where cotton was being
raised.
Of the usefulness of the trip,
he said: “I have collected spec
imens of forms of banking op
erations which will be most
helpful when I get home.
“Also I am most interested
in your surplus food products.
I will be seeing one of your
surplus storage tepots when
J get to Boston.
“If we could get about $30,
000,000 in surplus foods from
the United States, it would help
us greatly in balancing our
payments deficiency and our
budget. At the moment we are
spending about $70,000,000 a
-u
Uganda Plans...
(Continued From Page One)
eminent to provide funds to
help send budding producers,
directors, cameramen and
actors abroad to learn the
technical skills of filming,
Already well-known to lis
teners of Uganda radio plays,
the six say they .want to
bring drama and color to the
masses in their own lan
guages.
Kagimu Mukasa says: ■
“Our interests are not mere-'
ly confined to radio plays.
We are thinking about the
future of African drama and
music. We hope we’ll be able
to write a play for the screen
.and produce it one day.”
I--- I
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We Arrange Loans For
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Harry Loflin
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Dial FL 5-4552
jSLRB Eases
Bargaining
Unit Curbs
The National Labor Relations
Board, splitting 3-2 on four cases
involving appropriate bargaining
units for insurance agents, has ap
proved petitions of the Insurance
Workers for separate elections in
district offices of three major in
surance companies.
The companies in each case
asked for units covering either the
entire country, one region or one
state.
NLRB Chairman Frank W.
McCulloch and Members John
H. Fanning and Gerald A. Brown
■greed that smaller units were
appropriate. Members Philip
Ray Rodgers and Boyd Leedoia
dissented, as they had earlier this
year in the Quaker City Life
Insurance Co. case when the ma
jority voted to abandon an 18
year policy of approving no units
smaller than statewide.'
The majority ordered elections
within 30 days among debit agents
at diRrict offices of the Western A
Southern Life in McKeesport and
Wilkinsburg, Pa.; at nine Metropol
itan Life district offices in metro
politan Cleveland, O., and two in
Wilmington, Del.; and at three
Cleveland and Lorain, O., offices
of Equitable Life.
Union Bodies
Aid Students
At Antioch
Yellow Springs, O.—Three trade
union bodies are giving assistance
to four students at Antioch Col
lege, liberal arts institution known
for its experiments in education.
Benjamin Burkert, San Fran
cisco, received a scholarship for
part of his freshman year from the
California AFL-CIO. Mrs. Judy
Bass Winter, Plainview, N. Y., a
fourth-year philosophy and religion
major, is attending Antioch on a
full Joseph N. Curran scholarship
awarded her by the National Mari
time Union.
The NMU in addition is a co
operative employer la Antioch’s
program of combining classroom
training with Job experience and
has given a Job as an administra
tive assistant In its pension and
welfare work in New York City
to Dan Halas, Cleveland, senior
majoring in literature.
year for food imports.”
He continued: “I am also
impressed with the excellent
y?h that is being done in your
country to insure deposits. I
am wondering whether we
shouldn’t have a law in Ghana
to protect savings in banks and
building societies [savings and
loan associations].”
St. Louis conference, September
17-18, and took part in the dis
cussion on developing family
farms.
NON-RESIDENT
SUMMONS
THE STATE OP MISSISSIPPI j
County of Hinds. . .
To Willie Mae Crawford, whose I
post office address and street ad- 1
dress is unknown
you are summoned to appear be- j
fore the Chancery Court of the
First Judicial District. County of
Hinds, in said state, on the fourth
Monday of October. A. D., 1962 to
defend the suit No. 61,957 in said
Court of Edward Crawford Com
plainant, wherein you are a de
fendant.
This 12th day of September, A. D..
1962.
FRANK T. SCOTT, Chancery Clerk
By Charles A. Scott, D. C.
(SEAL)
Sidney R. Tharpe
Solicitors.
Sept. 13-20-27—1962
Efforts To
Silence AFL-CIO
Program Fail
The agreement of radio sta
tion WYDE to broadcast the
Edward P. Morgan news pro
gram fulfills the AFLrCIO’s
pledge to prevent the commen
tator from being silenced in
Birmingham, Barney Weeks,
president of the Alabama Labor
Council, AFL-CIO, said today.
The Morgan program is being
carried Monday through Fri
day at 10 p. m. It was dropped
by station WBRC last June, re
sulting in a controversy involv
ing Mayor Arthur J. Hanes and
the AFL-CIO, with the nation^
al AFL-CIO charging political
censorship and demanding a
probe by the Federal Communi
cations Commission. Until Sept.
1 the program was taken up by
by the daylight- only station,
WCRT, which could not con
tinue it beyond the date because
of its limited broadcast hours.
“While 10 p. m. may not be as
desirable an hour as Mr. Mor
gan’s regular 7 o’clock period,
it at least assures a hearing
for this outstanding liberal in
an area where liberal expres
sion is needed,” Weeks said. “I
am sure Mr. Morgan’s informa
tive and stimulating broadcasts
will attract a large listening
audience to WYDE.”
The Morgan program is part
of the ABC network radio news
service.
Taylor Sparkles
In Coahoma
Triumph Friday
Speedster Helps
Upend Prentiss,
With 19-7 Victory
Clarksdale — Halfback Jesse
Taylor, talented change-of-pace
runner, scored all three of his
team’s touchdowns in sparking
Coahoma Junior College to a
19-7 victory over Prentiss Ins
titute Friday night at Communi
ty Center Park.
A partisan crowd of Tiger
fans saw the nimble-footed 165
pounder from Jackson scamper
across the goal line twice in the
second period on a 30-yard
sweep and a two-yard smash to
give Coahoma a 13-0 halftime
lead, a P A T having been added
after the first T D on Charles
Boston’s kick from placement.
Taylor’s final six-pointer came
in the fourth frame on a display
of twisting artistry that carried
him for six yards onto pay dirt.
Unable to penetrate Coaho
ma’s strong forward wall, the
Panther took to the air to score
seven points in the third quart
er.
Strong defensive play — ex
cept for aerial defense — con
tributed to Coahoma’s victory.
A blocked punt and an inter
; cepted pass by Robert Steven
| son, 187-pound linebacker, set
j the stage for two of the Coaho- !
' ma’s T D’s. Other defensive !
' players who drew the plaudits
i of the crowd as they broke up
| enemy plays were tackier Cle- ,
, veland Flagg and Lenvi Tennes
see and guard Preston Hogan.
The Tigers travel to Rock
Hill, South Carolina for a game 1
against Friendship Junior Col- ,
lege on September 29.
o j
SAFETY PAYS
It Doesn’t Cost
*
Wilma Rudolph ;
Returns To
Tenn. State
NASHVILLE. Tenn. —
A smiling Wilma Rudplpft ward re
turned here last Frliajt (Sept. 7)
from her latest conquests abroad
happy but visibly and physical^
tired following weeks of track com*
petition in the Scandinavian coun
tries.
* * * *
$he arrived here, after a flight
that started in Swe^gn, determined
to get sqm e jest before re-entering
Tennessee Statg A. and. I. university
for graduate courses this fall. Her
traveling companion was Joann
Terry, who also competed in the
track meets.
' * ! * * *
Mrs. Ward, triple Olympic and
U. S. woman sprint champion, had
cause to be tired. Not only was she
victorious in all of the foreign
track meets, but she constantly be
seiged by fans, who hailed her
throughout the tour.
In fact, the tour, was hailed in
some countries as the “Wilma Ru
dolph Tour,” according to Miss Ter
ry. “They just loved her. They had
posters up with a big picture of
Wilma, then Ralph Boston in small
er letters and then even smaller
was John Thomas,’’ Miss Terry said.
Boston ,ace broad jumper and a
schoolmate with Rudolph at Ten
nessee State, did not return with
the group. He went on to Germany,
where he will remain until Sept.
27 and then is expected to go to
Japan. Wilma said “he’s having a
ball.”
* * * *
Holder of the world record of
11.2 seconds for the 100 meters,
Mrs. Ward was clocked one at 11.4
four times at 11.5, three at 11.6 and
once at 11.7 at the distance, dur
ing the Scandanavian track meets.
Her coach at Tennessee State.
Ed Temple, cMled her overall perr
formance, “Very good.” Tactfully
admitting tjiat she can do much
better, Temple told her: “At least
you were consistent.”
* * * *
♦
Regarding the worship she receiv
ed from fans abroad. Wilma said:
“We played to full houses every
where and I never got so maft\
flowers in all my life.”
She said little children, in par
ticular, were kind to her. some of
them wanting to give her gifts.
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