Sample Version Vol. VII No. 2 for Grand Board Consideration

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KAPPA ALPHA PSI JOURNAL

(Continued from page Gerocany, 1909. Is the author of several psychologies, namely. General Psychology, Experimental Psychology, which are used as text-books in Harvard, Yale, Jena, and Ox- ford. He is the only Negro holding Ph.D. from Jena, Germany. Brother George F. David, Professor of History and Economics. B. S. Wilberforce University, 1912; Ph.B. University of Chicago, 1915. Grand Polemarch of Kappa. Brother Amos J. White, Professor of Modern Languages. A. B. Harvard Univer- sity 1906; Student, New England College of Language, 1907. Was Professor of Greek Language and Literature at Wiley University, Marshall, Texas, for four years. Brother Bruce Henry Green, Professor of Chemistry and Physics. Ph.B. Brown Uni- versity 1902; M. S. Wilberforce University 1909; Graduate Student University of Chicago. Brother Brown won honors as a track man while attending Brown. Brother Francis C. Sumner, Professor of Psychology. A. B. Lincoln University 1915; A. B. Clark (Mass.) 1916; Instructor in Ger - man and Psychology Lincoln University 1916- 17; A. M. Lincoln University 1917; Fellow in Psychology Clark University 1919-20; Ph.D. ibid., 1920. Brother E. Champ Warrick, Pro essor of Education. B .S.W ilberfoice University 1908; A. B. University of Wisconsin 1916; Instructor in University of New Orleans. Professor of Education, Wilberforce since 1920.

L. BAILEY.

WIN LEGAL VICTORY Attorney R. L. Bailey, Keeper of Ex- chequer of the Indianapolis Alumni Chapter, last month secured a decision in the Superior Court in that city, which represented a not- able victory. Dr. Lucian Meriwether, who is Vice-Pole- march of the Indianapolis Alumni Chapter, purchased a home on Capitol Avenue, one of the fashionable residential districts of Indian- apolis. Notwithstanding the fact that Dr. Meriwether had served in the recent war and is a quiet, unobtrusive, well-educated young man, some of the neighbors voiced their dis- approval of a Negro moving into the section by building a ten-foot "spite" fence on each side of the ProPei'tY. The case attracted considerable attention last summer when the dluestion of preventing colored people from moving onto Capitol Avenue "invading the white residential sec- tion" was discussed, and the Capitol Avenue Protective Association is said to have con- spired to hack the proposition of building "spite" fences and in other ways seek to dis- courage colored people from moving into that section of the city. Brother Bailey secured a permanent in- junction from Judge T. J. Moll enjoining the defendants from erecting any fence between their property and Dr. Meriwether's over six feet in height. Brother Meriwether was also awarded damages in the sum of five hundred dollars and the defendants were fined for con- tempt of a court order. The woman who sold the property to Bro. Meriwether was born in a Georgia city but her heart, according to her story, "was ab- solved from all race prejudice when on the very day her husband took leave of her to go to the Front in the late World War, she wit- nessed a parade of black boys on the way to the sante railway station and saw them taking leave of those near and (lear to them for a common purpose."

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