On July 7, 1948, at 3:45 p.m.,
Edna Griffin, her infant daughter Phyllis, John Bibbs, and Leonard Hudson entered the Katz Drug Store in Des Moines, Iowa, and ordered
ice cream at the
lunch counter. The manager refused to serve them, saying, "It is the policy of our store that we don't serve colored." Outraged members of the community responded with
sit-ins and
picketing directed at Katz and other local lunch counters that refused to serve people because of race. The
Polk County Attorney's Office prosecuted the Katz manager under Iowa's only civil rights law, a criminal
statute prohibiting
discrimination in public accommodations. The manager was found guilty by an all-white jury and fined $50. The Iowa Supreme Court upheld the conviction on December 13, 1949. On December 2, 1949, civil rights attorneys Charles P. Howard and Henry T. McKnight, who was head of the local
NAACP Legal Redress Committee, negotiated an agreement, which successfully ended Katz's discriminatory practices. ==Iowa Civil Rights Act==