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NAACP hands out
awards
• Postmaster also makes special presentation
By ADRIENNE
PHILLIPS
Rust College
Office of Public Relations
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Photo by Adrienne Phillips
Award recipients Eremosele Okhiria, Jada
Okhiria, Irene Walton-Turnage,
Lue Cathey and S.A. Phillips are pictured with Rep. Kelvin Buck (second
from left) and Mozell Kelly
(far right).
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Members,
friends, and the community of the Marshall County Branch of the
National Association of the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
gathered Saturday night, Oct. 29, at Rust College to pay tribute to
three special honorees for their contributions to Marshall County.
“Affirming
America’s Promise” was the theme of this year’s event, featuring the
Rust College Baptist Student Union Gospel Choir and music from Dr.
Nellie J. Smith and former first lady of Holly Springs, Luberta Smith.
Words of greeting and occasion were presented by Marketta Liggins
Steward, chair of the Education Committee, Rust College NAACP President
Cleavon Matthews, and Rev. Leona Harris, who serves on the Life
Membership Committee.
Eloise
McClinton, executive
director of the Institute of Community Services Inc. (ICS) in Holly
Springs, gave an inspiring keynote address. She urged the audience to
“answer the call” to support the purpose and efforts of the NAACP.
“It
was the talent and tenacity of supporters that changed lives and
changed negative aspects of our society,” said McClinton. “We need to
get out of the ‘dead zone’. Go vote, get others to vote… make a change
in the lives of the next generation.”
“Answer
the call for the future of our children,” she said.
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Photo by Adrienne Phillips
Postmaster Brenda
Dupree (pictured below) gave framed replicas of the Barbara Jordan
stamp to (above, from left) David L. Beckley, Leona Harris, Johnnie
Bagley-Johnson and Paul Lampley.
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| Postmaster
Brenda Dupree |
Mozell
Kelly, Freedom Fund Banquet committee chair, along with first vice
president, Rep. Kelvin O. Buck, presented special awards to three
figures of the community for their outstanding work in education,
spiritual leadership and business.
“It
takes
everybody to really make a community grow and move forward,” said Buck,
when presenting the award in education to Dr. Irene Walton-Turnage,
superintendent of the Holly Springs School District. “She came into a
school district that, at the time, was working to find its place. She
is totally dedicated and committed in investing time into the young
people of Holly Springs.”
In
the spiritual
leadership category, the award was presented to Rev. Samuel A.
Phillips, pastor of Pleasant Grove Missionary Baptist Church.
“The
saying goes, longevity has its place,” said Buck. “I don’t think this
statement could be more fitting for this recipient.”
Rev.
Phillips, who announced he was 86 years old, has been a spiritual
leader for more than 50 years, and several members of his congregation
were in attendance to show support.
“NAACP
has
served as a light in many dark places. Please allow me to thank you for
your hard work. We are shaped for service,” Rev. Phillips said.
In
the category of small business, the award was presented to Lue Cathey,
owner of The Basket Island on North Memphis Street in Holly Springs.
Cathey thanked the NAACP and the community for supporting her business,
encouraging them to please continue to patronize her business.
“She
is always working,” Buck said of Cathey. “Any-time, you can find her
outside her business working to make things look a little better.”
Two
special NAACP awards were given to Eremosele C. Okhiria and his sister,
Jada A. Okhiria, for establishing their junior life memberships in the
NAACP. In
a special presentation, Brenda Dupree,
postmaster in Holly Springs and postal employees from Holly Springs,
Red Banks and Mount Pleasant, displayed the new Barbara Jordan Stamp as
the 34th stamp in the U.S. Post Office’s Black Heritage Series. Barbara
Jordan was a lawyer and educator who served as a Texas state
representative from 1972-1978 and was the first woman ever to be
elected to the Texas Senate (1966). Dupree gave framed replicas of the
Barbara Jordan stamp to Dr. Paul Lampley, president of the Marshall
County NAACP, Dr. David L. Beckley, president of Rust College, Johnnie
Bagley-Johnson, vice mayor of Holly Springs, and Rev. Leona Harris,
curator of the Ida B. Wells Museum in Holly Springs.
Founded
February 12, 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest, largest and most
widely recognized grassroots-based civil rights organization. Its more
than half-million members and supporters throughout the United States
and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their
communities, campaigning for equal opportunity and conducting voter
mobilization. The Marshall County Branch of the NAACP was established
January 3, 1966.
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