I ‘1 1 VOL. 5, NO. 47 Lincoln 3. Nebraska Official and Legal Newspaper Thursday. September 13, 1951 Presit. * J(Ier Praises Ministei /or 3 Years Work At the fourth and final quar terly meeting at Quinn Chapel A.M.E. church recently, Rev. J. B. Brooks, pastor of the church, was highly praised by Presiding Elder John Adams for the very success ful program he has carried out in the past three years. Rev. Brooks and family came to Lincoln in 1948 after spend ing seven years as pastor of Allen Chapel A.M.E. church in Omaha. Upon arriving Rev. Brooks found the church and parsonage in very poor condition. He im mediately launched an improve ment program beginning with re decoration the interior and ex-1 terior of the church. The first year he had the floor carpeted from wall to wall. The second year brought the remodel ing of the church basement and remodeling and furnishing the parsonage. The third year saw the purchasing of the dining room ' tables, new heating plant, new roof and a new Wurlitzer Organ. Not only did Rev. Brooks re decorate the church and parson age but it vas under his super vision that the senior choir was organized and equiped with new' robes. The only Negro member of the Ministerial Association Rev. Brooks was secretary for a one year term. He is a member of the Lincoln’s Citizens Improve ment Committee and is vice president of the Lincoln Board of Christian Education. A member of the Nebraska Conference for 16 years he has served on the financial committee ' for 10 years and has been dele gate to the General Conference twicte in succession. To bolster this wonderful Christian leader is his wife andj four children. Mrs. Golden Brooks is a member of the choir, miss-’ ionary and always ready to assist in any endeavor of the church, or community. —-■ Countries In San Francisco For Peace Treaty By Jock Williams SAN FRANCISCO. (ANP)^ Haiti, Ethiopia, and Liberia are among the 52 nations of the world represented here over the past weekend for the signing of a peace treaty with Japan, thus officially ending the eastern phase of World War II. War between the Allies and Germany, however, has not been officially concluded. Papers were signed Saturday, Sept. 8 at 12 noon thus ending a war with Japan which started Dec. 7, 1941 when the Japanese pulled a sqeak attack on United States forces at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. In a statement on the peace negotiations, Jacques Leger, min ister of foreign affairs for Haiti, declared: “The treaty is a victory of char arity over hatred, over vengeance. It shows a great and decided prog ress in our political relationships.” >>; Delegates from Haiti lived at the St. Francis hotel; those from Ethiopia at the St. Francis, and from Liberia, the Mark Hopkins. Significant points in this treaty are that Japan once again will re sume her position among the fam . ily of nations in the world and Dies After Illness MRS. BREVY MILLER Mrs. Brevy Miller, 52, of 309 South 20th, died Sunday Septem ber 9th in St. Louis, Missouri, where he had gone several months ago to be with her sister, Dr. X. A. Hill Fox. She was a member of Newman Methodist church in Lincoln and Editor of The Voice Household Hints column. Sur vivors are, husband, John; daugh ter, Mrs. Leona Brown, Detroit, Mich.; sister, Dr. X. A. Hill Fox, St. Louis; two brothers, Pahio M. E. and Henry Hill, both of New York City. Three Win Ph.D.’s And 15 Masters At Ohio State COLUMBUS, O. (ANP).—At its summer Quarter Convention last week, Ohio State university awarded a total of 969 degrees in cluding 471 on the graduate level of which 104 were doctor of phil osophy. Among those receiving Ph.D.’s were Joseph Carl Dacons, chemis try, Cleveland; Raymond Wilbur Hopson, physical education, Hamp ton, Va., and Samella Sanders Lewis, fine arts, Columbus. Among those receiving master’s degrees were James K. Anthony, geography, Cleveland; Frank Page Bolden, physical education, Ta koma, Md.; Mildred Carlton Col lier, home economics, Dayton, O.; John James Cook, history, Griffin, Ga.; Harold Preston Cooper, edu cation, Gary, W. Va. Irma Dorothea Foster, educa tion, White Plains, N. Y.; Francis Leonidas Grandison, psychology, Houston, Tex.; Edith Greenlee Hodge, education, Dayton; Arthur Chester Madry, education, Jack sonville, Fla.; Sidney Roscoe Wat ers, fine arts, Knoxville, Tex.; James Edward Williams, educa tion, Youngstown, O. Elizabeth Leona Barnett, social administration, London, W. Va.; Doyle Shackleford, jr., social ad ministration, Cincinnati; Charles Augustus Clark, zoology, Bel haven, N. C., and Clarence Bur gess Owens, agronomy, Smithville, Tex. • One student, Gerald Edsel Star key, of Bedford, O., was awarded three degrees; Master of Science, Bachelor of Mechanical Engineer ing, and Bachelor of Metallurgical Engineering. that at present Japan will not be fully militarized. Natl Urban League Holds 41st Annual Convention —- - _ Enters Medical School at Va. By Carter Jewel RICHMOND — (ANP) — A 19 year-old Negro and a South Ko rean woman were among the freshmen who enrolled Sept. 4 for the beginning of the fall term at the Medical College of Virginia. Miss Jean L. Harris, of Rich mond, became the first member of her race to enter the Medical College of Virginia. Two other Negro students, Henderson An drew Johnson III, who studied at Fisk university, and Miss Marjorie Louise Vaughan, Spelman college, arrived Friday to be the first Ne groes to be accepted in the School of Physical Medicine. It was announced last January that Miss Harris would be ac cepted as a medical student. The daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Vernon J. Harris, of 1105 N. 29th street, she is a graduate of Armstrong iHigh school in the class of 1948. [She graduated from Virginia Union university in three years,' making practically straight “A” grades. Negroes have been attending the Medical College of Virginia in the St. Philip hospital training department since 1920, but the ' three students who entered MCV last week are the first Negroes to be accepted in their respective schools. The admittance of the Negro students at the Medical college of Virginia is in line with a new policy in colleges and universites almost all of the southern states to admit Negro applicants for|i WHITE HOUSE VISITORS * (A.N.P.) Among those persons to visit the White House and President Truman recently were Bishop R. R. Wright Jr., 73; his son, R. R. Wright III; and two grandsons, R. R., IV, 10; and Philip G., 8. The visit, "purely a social calT, Was a present from the bishop to his grandsons, and gave the youngsters a chance to see a picture of their late great-grandfather, Major R. R. Wri^it Sr., which hangs on a wall in the White House reception room. Seated and standing beneath the pictures of President Truman, and the first president of the U. S.. George Washington, are, left to right: Phillip: Bishop Wrigh, holding picture of his father, the late Major B. R. Wright Sr.; R. R. Wright III; and R. R. Wright, IV. ST. PAUL, Minn.—America must make the wisest and most efficient use of its total manpower to meet the pres ent wofld crisis. And “total manpower” includes the intelligence, skills and strength of the American Negro. These statements were made by Tester B. Granger of New York, executive director of the National Urban League, at the opening session, September 4, of the na tional interracial service organization’s 1951 annual con ference in Hotel Lowry, St. Paul, Minnesota September 3-7. Non-Partisans Organize Club I A group of ladies met at the! home of Mrs. Birdie Artist and recently organized what is known! as the Lincoln Ladies Non- j Partisan Club. The purpose of the organization is to stimulate in terest in voting, housing and is isueS of general interest to mi nority groups. Mrs. Edwards Qualls will serve (the group as president, Mrs. Kath (ryn Huston, vice president and Mrs. Estelle Davis as secretary. The next meeting will be held September 14th with Mrs. Birdie Artis at 1965 Vine Street. Free Public Grammar Schools in Gold Coast ACCRA, Gold Coast, W. A — (ANP)—Beginning Jan. 1, 1952, there will be free compulsory ed ucation for children in the pri mary school up to grade seven j Presently there is no free com /pulsory educafiaa in i*mrt at British West Africa. The Republic of Liberia last 'year was able to start free com pulsory education, and is so far the only West African country en joying this amenity. courses not available to them in the Negro institutions of their native states. ' ihe whole Urban League movement” said Governor Sid McMath of Arkansas, addressing the closing banquet of the 41st annual conference of the National Urban League, “is agreed upon one objection and that is to elim inate inequalities and handicaps that interfere with the achieve ment of equality of opportunity.” Governor Luther W. Youngdahl of Minnesota, introduced Gover nor McMath. More than six hundred trained social workers, lay leaders, specialists and industrial rela jtions, vocational guidance, and community problems came to gether to exchange work experi ences, to report on the progress i of racial integration in the multi tudmous urban situations in the United States, to consider the i most pressing problems still to I be solved, and to reaffirm their mutual aims and goals. “This conference was the largest in League history,” reported R. . Maurice Moss, conference chair l man. j The Si. Paul Urban League, of which Rev. Francis J. Gilligan is Board Chairman and S. Vincent Owens, Executive Secretary, was host to the conference. Mrs. iLeona Winner was chairman of the local conference committee. On Tuesday afternoon Louis BL Seltzer, editor Cleveland (Ohio) ; press and P. L. Prattis, executive editor Pittsburgh Courier, (Pa.) ;lead the discussion on the "Role of the Press in Promoting Race Relations.” Herbert Lewis, editor St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dis patch, presided over the meeting, while Mayor Edward K. Delaney of St. Paul, welcomed the dele gates. LABOR LUNCHEON James B. Carey, National CIO Secretary and George W. Snow den, Vice President, Louisiana Federation of Labor (AFL), spoke on “The Role of Organized Labor in Promoting Better Race Rela tions.” Both speakers commended the co-operative and constructive work of the League with Organ ized Labor. Cecil E. Newman, publisher and editor of the Min neapolis Spokesman, presided over this meeting In the afternoon session Deputy Administrator, James J. Wadsworth, U. S. Civil Defense Administration, spoke on Civil Defense. President Truman sent a letter to the league headquarters at the Hotel Lowry praising the league for choosing as its theme, “Match ing Manpower to National Needs." Featuring the Thursday evening dinner meeting was the presenta tion of the 1951 annual report of the St. Paul Urban League by Rev. Gilligan, League president. More than 700 members attended. Federal aid for public elemen tary and secondary schools of the nation was urged Friday in a reso lution adopted at the closing ses sions. Other resolutions proposed (Continued on Page 3)