1^3 _ Lincoln 3, Nebraska, % ^egal Newspaper September 18, 1952 Miss Majors, Va. Girl, Wins Babe Ruth Award By ALICE A. DUNNIGAN WASHINGTON (ANP)—M i s s Jacqueline Majors of Floyd, Va., was one of two outstanding high school graduates who was recently honored by the National Babe Ruth Sportsmanship Awards com mittee, it was announced this week by the National Education Association. Miss Majors, who graduated from the Harris Hart high school in 1950, received her award for being an all-round, wholesome in dividual, stated Walker E. Camp bell, her high school principal. Referring to Miss Majors as a “true sport,” the high school prin cipal said: “She should be especially com mended for attending school for 11 years under many hardships without being absent a single day. She cherishes her award more than anything she has ever re ceived and wears Babe Ruth me dallion around her neck at all times as a reminder of her strug gle for an education—all of whi.*h she realizes did not come from textbooks." In compiling a perfect attend ance record, this young lady had to walk more than two miles to the school bus stop, fording a river in three places through the worst kind of weather. Many times this trek through the woods meant wading snow up to her knees. In spite of this, the principal said she could always be depended upon to help at school activities or to join and boost school or ganizations. Later, when her brothers and sisters were old enough, she bundled them up and took them with her to school. Miss Majors along with Ralph Thomas, white graduate of Sis tersville high school of Sistersvilie, W. Va., were selected by a com mittee of 42 of the nation’s lead ing sports writers. Award winners are chosen on the basis of leadership ability, personality, enthusiasm, athletic ability, ability to overcome han Miss Anderson Featured In New RCA Victor Album PHILADELPHIA, Sept. ’52 — Contralto Marian Anderson ts featured this month in a new RCA Victor classic album on a coupling with famed cellist Gregor Piati gorsky and her accompanist Franz Rupp. Following a historic pattern set by such memorable recording teams as Enrico Caruso and Mischa Elman, John McCormack and Fritz Kreisler, RCA Victor has issued an album of “Great Com binations," featuring the finest of modern-day vocal and instru mental artists, whose combined performances are in every way worthy of this great tradition. Miss Anderson sings two tradi tional American favorites from her extensive repertoire of folk music; “Carry Me Back to Old Virginny” and Stephen Foster’s “My Old Kentucky Home.” The accompaniment b y Piatigorsky and pianist Franz Rupp is sympa thetic and adds charm to these well known songs. All the artists in the current album are among the most famous in their respective fields and pre sent a collection of songs im mensely popular with the public and not usually found in the repertoire of concert stars, characteristics are considered, MRS. PLUMMER Earns Doctorate in Physical Ed. Mrs. Tomi Carolyn Plummer of Knoxville, Tenn., recently earned her Ph.d in physical education at the University of Iowa during commencement exercises. Mrs. Plummer, who became the fourth colored woman to achieve that distinction in this country, will teach at Maryland State college, Princess Anne, Md. She is a mem-| ber of Delta Sigma Theta so rority.—(ANP). dicaps, and scholarship. Other such as grooming, honesty, fair play, co-operation, citizenship, school spirit, dependability, con duct, loyalty, courtesy, and the ability to get along with others, j N.B.C. Officers All Reelected By Acclamation CHICAGO — (ANP) — By the motion of the body that rules be suspended and all officers be re elected which was passed, the en tire group of officers of the Na tional Baptist Convention, U.S.A. Inc., was re-elected. They are as follows: Dr. D. V. Jemison, Selma, Ala., pres.; Rev. E. W. Perry, Oklahoma City, vice pres, at large; Revs. W. D. Carter, Pasadena, T. S. Har ten, Brooklyn, and J. H. Jackson, Chicago, regional vice presidents; Rev. U. J. Robinson, Mobile, sec’y-J Revs. W. P. Whitfield, Jackson, Miss., G. W. Lucas, Dayton, T. Moore King, Joliet and M. K. Curry, Wichita Falls, Tex., ass’t. sec’ys; Rev. W. P. Offutt, Jr., New York City, sec’y. of Pub.; Rev. Roland Smith, Atlanta, statisti cian; Rev. T. S. Boone, Detroit, historiographer; Rev. J. Pius Bar bour, Chester, Pa., “Voice” editor; Rev. B. J. Perkins, Cleveland, O., treas.; Col. A. T. Walden, Atlanta, convention attorney. Woman Wins Honor In Insurance Exam CLEVELAND, O. — (ANP)—A Cleveland Negro woman placed third in competition with several thousand insurance workers, dur ing the nation-wide examination held by the Life Office Manage ment Association in New York, it was announced last week. She is Mrs. Emma Stewart, as sistant to the president of Dunbar Life Insurace Co., of Cleveland. She is the frist of her race and one of the few women to rank among the top three in the peri odic contests. ■^NC Law Graduates 4ss State Bar Exam Nebr. Merit System Exam To Be Oct. 11 The Nebraska Merit System an lounces October 11, 1952, as the examination date for a number of State clerical positions. These jobs ire for stenographers, typists, :lerks, and machine operators in the State offices of the Depart ments of Assistance and Child Welfare, Health, and Employment Security, as well as in the county and local offices of those agencies. The examinations will be given in a number of towns throughout the State as close as possible to the homes of the candidates, depend ing upon the availability of ex amination monitors and rooms. Application blanks and more' detailed information may be se cured from any county assistance office, State employment office, or local health office; or from the Merit System Office, 1306 State Capitol, Lincoln, Nebraska. Ap plications should be mailed to the Merit System Office my Septem ber 27, in order that the necessary arrangements can be made fox giving the examinations. Milwaukee Gets First Negro Public Accountant MILWAUKEE, Wis.— (ANP)— Mrs. Elvera W. Taylor who bore the distinction of being one of only two colored women to hold a certified public accountant's li cense in Chicago has located in Milwaukee. She opened a branch of the Theodore A. Jones & Co., Chicago accounting firm, with of fices at 623 North 2nd Street. Mrs. Taylor, a long time asso ciate or the Theadore A. Jones Co., has been elected to partner ship in the firm. She became a resident of Mil waukee recently when her hus band, Corneff Taylor, was ap pointed executive director of the Milwaukee Commission on Human Relations. Rebecca Wyatt New Teacher At Wis. School CASSVILLE, Wis.—(ANP—The opening of school produced sev eral surprises for teachers and pupils of a small Wisconsin town. . When school opened in Cass- 1 ville, pupils found that their new commercial teacher is Mrs. Re becca Wyatt, 21, of Paris, Tenn. Mrs. Wyatt also surprised the board of education which hired her through a teachers agency. However, this small village of some 956 persons responded to the situation in a democratic man ner, and threw out the welcome mat for her. A dentist took her into his home as a roomer and the sophomore class elected her its advisor. The new commercial teacher is a graduate of Tennessee State university. Her husband is with an Army engineer unit in Korea. It was this last which endeared ’ her to many of the residents ’ here. r . “When we found out her hus band was in Korea, she was in,’ one high school boy said. 1953 Convention of N.B.C. Coes to Miami CHICAGO—(ANP) — The 195J Convention of the National Bap tist Convention will go to Miami, Fla. The peninsula city won over Brooklyn and St. Louis. The vote of delegates was St. Louis, 103; Brooklyn, 1,677; Miami, 1,803. The Rev. J. A. F. Finlayson, pas tor of Macedona Baptist church of Miami and President of the Florida State Convention, who will be host pastor to the conven tion, promised extensive and thorough preparations for the 73d annual session. He stated that the Dinerkee Auditorium which seats 18,000 persons has already been engaged, and the Floridan hotel with 500 rooms committed to care for delegates. Nurse in Panama Wins UN Scholarship COLON, R. P. — (ANP) — A Colon Health Department nurse, Mrs. Elma-Stewart de Dennis, has been awarded a World Health Or ganization scholarship for ad vanced studies in Public Health nursing, making at least two members from the Negro Pana manian group to receive the word this year. The other was Miss Ethel Springer of Panama City. Mrs. Emma Stewart de Dennis, Colon-born obstetrician, left for the United States last week to take a one-year post-graduate course under sponsorship of Unied Nations’ WHO. She will study at Syracuse university in Syracuse, N. Y. This will be Mrs. Dennis’ second post-graduate course in the United States since she received her nurse’s cap in Santo Tomes hos pital School of Nursing in 1945. Shortly after a one-year re quired course in obstetrics in Santo Tomas, Mrs. Dennis en tered the Margaret Hague hos pital, Jersey City, N. J., for work application training over a one year period. Returning to Panama in 1948, Nurse Dennis was appointed head nurse in the Amador Guerrero hospital, a position she held until 1951 when she was assigned to the Public Health Department from which she obtained the scholarship award. Nurse Dennis, wife of Colon Dental Technician Beresford Den nis, received her primary educa tion in English in a private school under E. A. Kerr, and in Spanish at the Pablo Arosemena public school. Majoring in Commerce at Pan ama’s Professional school in the Capital in 1935, she was employed for a time after graduation with the Carlos Prado Customs Brok erage, before entering nursing school. Following one year in Chitre on her first government assignment as nurse, she returned to Santo Tomas for the course in obstetrics, finishing in 1947. CHAPEL HILL, N.C.—(ANP) — The end of a long struggle to prac tice their chosen profession came to an end recently for two Negro graduates of the University of North Carolina when they passed the state bar examinations. Harvey E. Beach, Kinston, N.C., and J. Kenneth Lee, Greens boro, two of five youths who made history when they became the first Negroes to enroll in the Law school at the University of North Carolina, now are full-fledged members of the legal profession. Beech got his degree at the June commencement and Lee com pleted his work in July. Another of the five students, James Rob ert Walker, Statesville, finished the law course too late to take this year’s law examinations. The remaining two did unsatisfactory work and thus, were unable to be graduated. Beech, a 28-year-old graduate of Morehouse college, probably will practice law in Kinston where his father is a prominent business man. Before going to the UNC, Beech studied for two years in the Law school at the North Caro lina college at Durham. His wife is a graduate of the Atlanta School of Social Work and is a case worker in Durham where they have been living recently. , A navy veteran of World War II, Lee said he will practice law in Greensboro or Winston-Salem. He formerly studied at North Carolina A&T college Greensboro, the University of Hawaii, and the Navy’s Pacific university. At that time, his interest centered on ra dio and electrical engineering. . His wife is a graduate of Ben ,1 nett college and is a teacher in the Greensboro public schools. The couple has a six-year-old son. The five colored students en tered UNC last year after a year long test case which was fought to the United States Supreme court. Lee was a plaintiff in the case; Beech and Walker were not. The original suit was filed by Harold T. Epps of Ashville, in 1938. Lee and others intervened after Epps was graduated from the North Carolina college Law school. Newsmen listed the decision to admit the students to the Law school among the 10 top news stories in the state last year. It established a precedent whereby others may now attend. As a mat ter of fact, Dean Henry P. Bran dis Jr. of the university Law school said last week that two or three students may study law at the Chapel Hill institution this year. Nigerian Receives N.Y.U. Scholarship NEW YORK — (ANP) — Dean Joseph H. Park of the New York University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences announced this week that Chukwudebelu Nwor Odeluga of Onitsha, Nigera, has received a scholarship for the academic year of 1952-53. Odeluga, who is 29 years of age, will study for his doctor of phi losophy degree in economics. His intentions are to enter the field of labor economics upon returning to West Africa. The brilliant young African student received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Lincoln univer sity (Pa.) and his Master of Arts degree from New York Univer sity.