RICIjARDSOS
E. IIARGET7
ATOMB BOMB NEW WAR HND
RIISSU ions AlUES m war on japan
ATOMIC BOMB
RESULT OF
LONG RESEARCH
T^c scirncr of oloclronics m .
bf lo Im* 'hp source of tht
atomic bomb. Many scientist:
confribnlcd to the ma.ss of know
ledRc which made it possible to
sfarch out this secret of nature
Out own Thomas A. Edison pnh-
ablv made the first dlscovi-rv ot
the .series without knowinc th«
nature of the thing causing what
was Donularlv .ailed the Edison
effect. .? .1, Thompson later iden
tified a How of electrons from
a healed metal to an clectrodf
with a positive charge a.s tht
cause of the ‘'Edison effeet’’ cur
rents. Edison’s acridental intn
duction of a third electrode inte
an evacuated light hulh gave th
world the first vaeuum tube n'
thf t\T>f ii.sed In build our .scicnc'-
of electronics.
Roentgen, Recquerei. and Ma
dame Curie, in order, experiment-
eJ with X-Rav.s and the radia
tion from radioaetive elements
Three tvpe.s of radiation were re
cognized bv experimenters, all
capable of being accelerated or
deflected hv a magnetic field ot
an plertric field. Oppositely charg
ed pfates of a condenser nr op
posite pole.s of a magnet would
accelerate the radiation in oppos
ite dirertion.s. Using this know-
ledge, experimenters in atom
smashing could .speed up their
oartieles of radiation or “atomie
bullets" at will by u.sing hid
voltagc.s and strong m.agnet'e
fields. Alpha ravs have been iden
titled as helium nuclei, beta ray-
a^ electrons, and gamma ravs a-
one of the results of charges in
the nucleus of an atom. Other
oarticle.s of radiation have beer,
discovered but we shall consider
only the neutron.
Tt was found that uranium
Cbuld be bombarded with neutron.s
•nd the nucleus split rclca.sing an
tnorrnous amount of energy. Huge
me.chine.s called cyclotrons were
wed to bombard uranium and the
f atomic energy could
be released in this manner w.as
proved conclusively. A *Qen-ian
tConttniied on back page)
Indii.strial Teachers To
Meet At A. and T.
Collge August 14-17
The Carolinian
VOLl'ME XXVI. NO. 9
kAI.EKIU. NOKTM CAKOLINA W'V.KK ENDING. SATUKDAY, ATGCST 11. UM.u
I’UICE FIVE CENTS
Rcjccii()n of pripo.sal lo be- boro. An eighty per ctni incrca.se
in membership wa.s reported dur
ing the .“cssinns. Above is a group
of officers of the body while in
se.ssion. They arc left to right,
sr.-itcd- Prc.siflcnt H. Council
Trcnholrn. Alabama State Tcach-
comc a department of the Na
tional Ed>iea(ii>n A.ssocialion high-
hahtrd the forty-.second annual
Cinvention of the American
Tcarhers .-Association held .-I'cent-
ly at Bennett College. Greens-
er.s College. secrtiiiry-lrca.«uror;
W. N. Ridley. Virginia State Col-
Icae. pre.sident: .Miss Lucie E.
Campbell, Memphis. Tenn.. Ur.
Hiward Lons. Washinaion. D. C..
trca.surcr; and Dr. Miles W Con
nor. Baltirrorc. Md.
23rd Marine Depot Co.
DoingTheirPortInPacific
GREENSBORO
Aiiniiat .gtate
HASTIE GETS OK
FROM CIO KEAD.^
!F0R jUDGJSHIP
WASHINGTON, D C.—President
[Phtihp Murray of the Congre.ss -f
The 23rd .Marine Depot Company
left Camp Lejeimc April of 1944
and .since that lim> it has been ;
playing a grand part in winning the '
war in the Pacific zone. The 23rd
that left Camp Lejeune is now a
.'•casoned body of men, that his
work hard and won acclairration j
from all of their superiors. This out
fit is capable of carrying nut any
atrsignment thrust upon them
The 23rd is under the very capa-1
ble leadership of First Lieutenant '
Mtlps Oiiintin R.tmcev tr;Mm '
FEPC FIGHT IN
NEED OF FACTS
AND PRESSURE
NEW YORK CITY WUL* — |
•Need fur pressure tu net signatures i
IMPEACH BILBO
SArS NATIONAL
MABITI^ UNION
NEW YORK — PuUiiWim' uiiiuu-
. iiujus uppiuvjl >f j resuluiion by .i
’ Natioiiul Martime mt-mbership nieet-
'ing here. NMC port Agent Joseph
: Slack wrjte today to Senator Rob-
i ert F. Wagiu-r iiiging him to sl ut
\ iinpeachmeni pi>iceedings initiied
[ lately agaiiust Senator Theodore G.
: Bilbo of Mis.'^issjppi.
TIic resoluiioii charged Senutor
, Bilb-j with carryiiiji on -one of the
; •Host vile .ind vicious attacks on
all racial minorities in the United
States in the history of this coun
try." It added that the Senator used
his ‘prolific ability fm- letter writ
ing" to slander the Negro and Jew
ish people and to “oiH'iily advwate
the banishmi-m from this country
of all minorities *r their liquida
tion."
Natoinal Sccrelury Ferdinand C
Smith has forwarded tu the Union's
A.I branch hall- copio:- iyf the re.tolu-
tiuii adopted in Nt-w York ami ot
Mr. Stack's letter to Senator Wagnci'
Together with this material Mr.
Smith has sent instructions for all
-he poru t take similar action and
to contact their repr»*senialive Sen
ators.
In his letter to Sen.itur Wagner.
Mr. SUtek declared:
"Senator Bilbo's continued pr--
sence in the United States Senator
la a blot on that high body and an
. ^Continued .sn back paget
Wai-.s Freed; N.A.AtP
To 1‘iisli Aetioii Again.sl
Kenliiekv Police
l.Ol’I.SViLLr, ;;y. — Folluw-
iiig ae(|uiiul uf the three .\e-
exu Wacs ;>«'vuM-d uf viulalinz
(hr tijid .\r(i(-lr uf war for iJt-
ihing un Ihr •whilr ' side uf a
bus waitiiie itiun m Kllzabrth-
town, Ky., ihr LwuKville N. .\.
.4. i'. I*, jiinouni-rd the pusst-
bility uf laklng apenfic acllun
agaiiuil the civlliiiit poUcetnan
whu brutally brat Ffr. Helen
Smith and Pfe. Georgia Bosun.
I’rivale .Smith was l-eatrn over
Ihr head with a blackjack and
(IraKgrd acros.s t'«r bus station
floor when Ihr woman object-
Oil to bring called "nigger
wruchrs.’’
J. H. .AIcKiiinry. iirisideiit uf
ihc Louisville branch .NA.4CP.
}ia.s secured an 'aflldavlt from
i Ffc. .'smith which may form the
basis for action against the po
liceman.
DECLARATION
OF RUSSIA 3 DAYS
AFTER NEW BOMB
The iii-il tuneretv Iruil of the
Fctsdani Conference explodtu in
the lace of Japan with terrific
force only three days after the
atcinic bomb delivered its terriitr
Jolt. Our powerful ally Rissia
came up ' ith what we had hop
t-d lor and what Japan had dread
t'd .md Sought to avoid. Russia
hto dec!art*d war on Jap.'-n.
As We go tu press news jf ac
tion on the Siberian-Manchurian
Hunt IS .still meager. But there
v il] be action. Kusgi's Siberian
At my of possibly a million men
ha> for many months been Ewised.
Well armed and well equipped,
on the borders *f the areas on the
A.siatic mainland now controled
by Japan. In addition bases for
An.i-rican plani's will be avail
able from which bombers can
• Continued on back page)
“Stay Out Of Harlem After
Dark” Lie—Commissioner
l)H C. f SPAULDING
THOUGHTFUL ON
71ST BIRTHDAY
; Durham -- In observance ot h's
iVisi birthday on Wednesday. Aug-
iu.5l 1. Dr C. C. Spaulding, presi-
ovnt of th.- North Carolina Mutu
al Lift- Insurance Company and
tin Mechanics and Farmers Bank,
both of Durham, laid much stress
Of. the necessity of good health
,foi doing a goml job every day.
The business extLUtiv'e’a anni-
N'trsary found him at his desi as
u.cuul. and feeling better than did
11 years ago when he "got hu? se-
• ennd wind" for living. He di-
inf unfed the over-drinking and
night life indulgence.s of Ameri-
,c:‘n.s. ob.serving that It is impas-
;sille for them lo keep on their
with such carrying.s-on. Ho
a ttributes his good health to regu-
NEW YORK - -N.I order have
bei-n i.'.sufd ‘>r will be issued while
I am Police Commj.Hsioni.T relativ
to whom shall he pruhibited fmr»
• iiLilng .my part of the city of
NV-v York.' said Lewis J. Vab'u-
tine in answer In the NAACP’s In-
•lUtry regarding the truth of .*»
dlrccliie warning whiles m .-Uiy
ooi of Harlem after o.ark. In com
menting further on the statement
In Danton Walker's column • Dai
ly News. July 23f' New York
Police .ire worning all whites that
they enter Harlem after dark at
their own risk." *he L'ommissioner
said
"There was lOMilttely no founda
tion or Justiflcnlion for any such
jtatement. It is unfortunate that
many of our r.ewspaper writers
(Continued on back page)
STALEY GETS
IMPORTANT FARM
LABOR POST
Reversal of Dishonor
able Diseliar«e Won
For Negro Offii-ers
W.\SIII\(iTON'. It. C. — The
.v.\.\LP Hoii rrversal itf dU-
honitrable discharges today io
WASHINGTON — F Marcellii*
i Staky, former director of tn*
school of agriculture at Georgia
State College, who helped to mobl-
* lize sufficient w'lrkers last year to
>ave a .W.OOO acre peanut crop, has
I been appointed as an assistant m
^ the Farm Labor Program of Exten-
■ «lon Sor\‘lce. Director M. L. WlUon
nas announced.
In his new position, Mr Staley
, w-iii .issist with the recruitment and
' placement of colored farm workers
In ALibama, Florida, Georgia. North
and South Carolina, and Virginia.
He will have his headquarters at
Americius. Ga.
Educated at Morehouse. Ohio
Slate Coilege. and Cornell, holding
■4 Master of S. ience degree in ag-
raechines called cyclotrnos were
used to bombard uranium and the
theory that atomic energy could
' be released in thi.s muiner was
proved conclusfveljr A-eOennan
(Continued on bark page)
Indii.sirial Tcarhers To
Meet At A. and T.
Collge Aiigii.st 14-17
GREEN.*>BORO — Annual Stale
ev'nfeiencc for .Negro Trade and
Industrial teachers and coordina
tors of Diversified occupations will
ba held in the Graham building at
A- Snd T. College Tuesday, Wednes
day. Thursday and Friday. August
14. lA, 16, and 17. it uas announced
necentlv by S. C Smith, assistant
etale .supervisor. Trad* and Indus
trial educatioo.
SpeaJiers for Tuesday will include
President F. D. Blufnrd. Dean J M
Marteena of the school of Mechanic
Arts and Professor F. A. Mavfield
alt of A, and T. College. Dr. H. I-.
Trigg, prc.sident, F.Iizahcth City
Slate Teachers College. Elizabeth
City; Gcorac W. Hoggings, stale sup
ervisor. Trade and Industrial cdi.-
cation. Dr. Clyde A. Erwin, sta*c
supemtenden* of education, T. E.
Browne, state director of vocational
education all of Raleigh.
On Wednesday. "The sclccaion
and purchasing of shop equipment."
"Arrangement and installation of
shop equipment and utility -tf $h p
space." and related suhiecis will be
dlfccus.sed
A* Thursday's session. "Iniirue-
tlonal management.' "Shop clas« or
ganization." "Teacher supervision
and check-up of students’ project.^."
Diversified occupations program
after the war." and "Organizing
and conducting local surveys." will
he viewed and reviewed.
Consideration of shop discipline
•nd school ?hop maintance will be
featured at the closing conference
on Friday,
HASTIE GETS OK
FROM CIO HEADS
FOR JUDGESHIP
WASHINGTON. D C—Pirident
Phillip Mtirray of the Congress -f
Industrial Organizations lodav.
0 letter to President Harry S Tru
man, recnmrrended the dp|to|nimont
of -Iiidge Willi.am H Hastie to fill
one of ihf vacancies on the United
States Con I of Appeak for the Di>--
trin of Columbia.
Mr .Murray's letter to President
Truman follows;
"The Congress of Industrial Or-
gani?..atinns wishe.s I > recommend
Judge William Hastie for appoint
ment to fill one of th.' vacancic.s on
the United States Court of Appeals
for the Dis'iict of Colurrhia.
"Judge Ha.stir i* eminently quail
find to j-erve on the United States
CniiM of Appeals for the District of
Columbia. He was fnims.ly Judge
of the United .States District Court
for fhr Vnain Islands and Is now
Dean nf the Howard University Law
School,
.ludce Ha.slie is a Negro and one
of the outstanding Je.aders nf hia
people in the United Slates. His
learni'.g. experience and broad
sympathies combine amply to equip
him for a jiidgc«fup.
"I believe he would make an in
valuable contiihution as a memb-r
of the United Slates C-iurt of .Ap
peals for Ihc Di-lrlcl of Cnhimbi.i.
I therefore respectfully urge you
give fa\‘orahle consideration his
candid.icy."
The J3rd Marine Depot Company
left Camp Lejeune April of 1944
and since that lime It has been
playing a grand part 'n winning the
war in the Pacific zone. The 23rd
ti>at left Camp Lejeune is now a
.M-ason('d body of men. that h-is
work hard and won acciaiirution
frorr all of their .superiors. This out
fit is capable of carrying out .'tny
a.ssignment thrust upon them.
The 23rd is under the very capa
ble leadership of First Lieutenant
Miles Quinitn Ramsey. USMCR.
His office staff is composed of First
Sgt. Fri-d L Calhoun. Sgt. Samuel
J Graham, who has replaced Sgt.
Wilbert Morris S:inderr of Raleigh.
Sanders was attached to the office
personnel prior to getting a dis
charge some time aao and Cpl. E
A Sirith. First Lt. Ramsey says
I that he is very jilease with the way
th emen discharge their vari(jus
duties. He goes furlhci to say that
the vari>'ly and the responsibility
of tnc jobs arc constantly increa.s-
ing. that is very gratifying.
The company is att-iched to the
Engineer .section nf the .Sth Field
Depot. The c-rmpany is now com-
' posed of only two officers. Ll
' Romney and Lt. M.vcrs, before be-
' ing transferred, was Ll. Smith, who
IS now in charg«' of the 26th Depot
Company, Commander Romney sn' •
that he has the highest respect .
his men and think that they are a--
tine .IS the best. He expressed the
feeling that the men had missed the
• Continued on back page)
FEPC FIGHT IN
NEED OF FACTS
AND PRESSURE
NEW YORK CITY -WDL) ~
Need for pres.sure to cel signatures
on the discharge petition for a per
manent FEPC is equaled only by
th onted for more information on
teh history am. problems of fair
employment as reflected in the let
ters from congre.ssmcn forwarded
to Workers Defense League. These
lotk-r-s are replied received by peo
ple who wrote their congressmen
asking their support of HR 2232 and
S 101.
Less than two-thirds of the re
quired signatures have been obtain
ed to bring the bill to the floor of
the House for a vote. Concerted ac
tion by citizens in eacn congression
al district whose representative has
! not yet signed is urgent to the cause
,of fair employmant.
' Pertinent fact.s relalvri to the im-
jiortant of fair employment are l«jld
■ I "Jobs Wit ii« Creed or Color,”
i.y Winifred Rausheu». b. a pamph
let i.ssucd by Workers Defense Lea
gue, 112 East 19 Street. New York
3. N Y Suggestions for action are
• also included.
j [vir. aiacK aeciarea: tbt Meenanics ana t armors oanx.j
j "Senator Bilbo’s contlnu*-d pr- both of Durham, laid much stress I
1 sence in the UoUed States Senator loti the neceasity of good health |
Is a blot on that high body and an jfoi doing a gocxl job every day.
staiemenr. ii >a uniorrunaic inai
many of our newspaper writers
(Continued on back page)
. ^Continued .-‘•n back page)
Ship-Owners Accused Of
Trying A Doublecross
Dr. Norris Assumes Duties
In High Agricultural Post
WASHINGTON — Dr. Ernc.M M.
Norrl.s. newly app-iinied assistant
to the personnel director of the U-
8, Department of Agriculture, as
sumed his dutic.s here in ths Wash
ington office on August 1. Secre
tary of Agriculture Clinton P And
erson announced this week
Dr. Norris, who is succeeding the
late Thomas N. Roberts, was dlree-
tor of graduate studlis in .ngrlcut*
lure at Prairie View Stale College.
F^rairle View, Texas, at the time
his appointment to the position in |
I the Department of Agricultur*.
In hi.s new post. Dr. Norris will
represent Personnel Director T
Roy Reid in .specific problems vua-
cerned with racial factors and ir
formulating and putting into effect
plan.s and programs for extending
and increasing knowledge and un
derstanding of racial gioups to per
sonnel policies and dcp.artment ob-
jcctlve.s and to work closely with
colored .agriculttiral colleger in help
ing tia-in develop plans for prcp.'ir-'
ing .•‘tudents to tak' •dvanfage of
c pJoyinenl opportunitlc.s In agri-
CllltlUC
Dr N'lrris, who was born in Ncr-
mangee, Texa.s. Si ptembor 3. 1003.
received his training .1 Tuskegee,
Prairie View, -and Cornell Univer
sity. receiving his doctorate in Hg-
ricultural ec-‘>nomic5 and rural edn-
ru'|cjn from lh« latter in 1934 He
IS thoroughly acquainted with rural
problem.-;, having been vocation.>1
auriculltire tcachei at .. rural schu I
m Alabama, md piinclpil of o
rural srhoii] in Ti xas.
Fr m 1927-29 Dr Norris was in
structor of horticulture it Prairie
View; from 1929-37 be wa.s s'oea-
fional agriculture lencher.'-tniincr
for the State of Kinlurky. and ,-ince
19.37 he ha# been director of gnid-
inti* studie# in agriculture, an*
Ic.irher in 'he re'ident ti-acher-
trainer program of vocational agri-
eiilliirc It Prron. Vuw State Col
lect-.
NEW YORK — Josph Curran.
Presl 'ent of the National .waritimr
Union, charged t.idny that the at
tempt by shipoweners lo have sub-
sistance included as part of sea
men’s earnings is ‘a cleaver device
t'l doubli'cro## the seamen by forc
ing upon them a double wage rut '
Th m.mltime leader made this
dr'‘lar:*t:on in connection with the
se.amrn's wage case note before the
W.sr Labor Board in which seami'o
•re requesting a minimum rate of
Sjr an hour and overtime after 4f
hjurs per week.
Meantime, airangements were
completed for a dcmonslrntion
agaln-t wage cuts to he held at 29th
Street between Seventh and Eighth
Avenues under the .‘•juinsorship nf
th* Joint Seamen's Action Commit
tee tn the Port of New York and
endcr.'cd by the Greater New York
Industrial Union Council. The Joint
Committee is c imposed of four
maritime unions which have
branches here. They are the Na
tional -Maritime Union, CIO; Amoi •
le.an Communications Association,
CIO; Marine Co >ks and Stewards.
CIO; and the Maiine Firemen. Oil
er, WatiTtenders and Wipers, Ind*--
pendeut
Sp'-akers at :he d'-monstration
tncludr Benjamin J, Davis. Jr. can
didate for re-election to the City
Council; Hal Simon, Now York Re
conversion Dircetjr of the United
Electrical. Radio and Machine
Workers CIO; Ernest Rudeloff, of
Uiv Iiiti*riiatlnnaJ Union ,if Marine
The busineiv executive's enni-
versary found him at his dost as
usual, and feeling bt'tter than did!
11 year.s ago when he "got his se-
rnnd wind" for living. He de
nounced the over-drinking and
night life indulgcnres of Ameri-
onns. observing that it Ls impas
sible for them to keep on their
toes with such carryings-on. He
littributes his good health to regu
lar eating and sleeping habits.
He got into all this when ques
tioned concerning his intention of
retiring, to which he answered:
'We realv need more tired peo-
p](- and few’er ndired oeople. and
{Continued nn bark page)
DEMOCRACY
AT WORK IN
GERMANY
Reversal of Dishonor
able Diseliarwe Won
For Ne ^ro Officers
C
W.ASIIINftTON. I). C. — The
N.AAfp won revers*! of dl»-
honorablr discharges today in
(he cases of Lieutenants Samuel
B. Wallace, Leu .Anunoas and
Joe R. Jaek-son who were ruurt-
martlaled in Camp Polk. I,a.,
for alleged disobedience of
oSiler uf their commanding uf-
licrr and fur being .AWOL.
In (he oral argument present
ed before the .Army Board of
Review, Judge William H. Has
tie and N.A.ACP .\»istant Spee-
lal (.'ouasel Robert L. Carter
held that charges against the
three uffluers had mit been estab
lished.
; seen appoinieo ae an assistant m
i the Farm Labor Program of Exten
sion Service, Director M. L. WlUon
Has announced.
In bU new poaltion, Mr. Staley
; win aasirt with fhe recruitment «r.tf
r placement of colored form workers
In Alabama, Florida. Georgia. North
and South Carolina, and Virginia.
He will have hts headquarters at
, Americius, Ga.
Educated at Morehouse, Ohio
State College, and Cornell holding
a Master of Science degree in ag-
I riciilture from the latter, Mr. Staley
I has held important positions at TUs-
kegee, A. and T College. Bennett
College where he was dean ot lo-
structiun. South Carolina State, and
Georgia State College.
While serving as county agent in
Sumter County. Georgia, la.Ht year.
Mr. Staley assisted in recruiting
enough workers '.o harvest a 59,000
acre peanut crop and an equal
.icreage of cotton. This y*ar, with
his work extending over six states,
Mr. Staley will aid ir the recruit-
. ment and placement of more than
. .lu.uuo Colored farm workers
and Shipbuilding Workers of Amer
ica, CIO; Frederick N. Myers, vice
president. National Mailtimc Union.
CIO. and Alice Barrot. National
nirector. NMU Women’s Auxiliary. [
Mr. Curran asserted that the!
, slash in the .'O-called war risk:
i bonus on July 15 represented a eu» |
! in se:inien’.« eaming# of approxi
mately 50 per cent, according to |
Rpi rclai-y of t.abor Lewis B '
^ Rchweilenbiick. He added that "sub-i
sfstance has never been considered |
part of a aeaman’.s wages" and that i
a merchant seaman "can't support I
his family ashore nn the room and j
board provided on the .•^hips by the
operators." i
-'-V—_ j
Projircss In Flnricia
Fight For F.qiialitv
Ml.AMI. Fla. ;WDL> — &.me
progress in the fight to achieve
rights for Negroes in Florida Is re
flected in two news items regard
ing sehool*; .md voting in that state.
Negro schools in Deerfield. Pom-
oiiio. Hammondville ; nd Oakland
Park, Fla., will return to tha pre
war policy of running concurrent-
Iv with Caucasian schools, opening
Se|itember 10 Four oth«T Negro
schools in the s:itre crea have al
ready begun the f.nll term, so their
student.* will have a longer term
th;iii recently. Th-y have opened
iCoutiiiued on back page)
Dr. Nelson H. Hiiiris, Head of
the Dwpartment of Ldiieatiun at
Shaw University and Director of
the Summer Sehiail. has lecently
returned from the Universi'y o(
k.ichigan where he w.is invited to
become a member ol the Omega
Chapter of the Phi Delta Kappa
Society. Dr. Harris was a gue.st
of the Department of Education.
Phi Delta Kappa is an honorary
.1 ciety for tren comprising iho.se
ui ’he field of Education who
have e«mlribuled richly and crea
tively to the iidvanci.-menl of Gen
eral Education |ii ineir respective
areas.
Dr. Harris received the A. B.
degree from Virginia Union in
Richmond, Va., and ’he A. M- and
Ph. D degrees from the Univer
sity of Michigan. He has .served
Shaw University and the Stait
of North Carolina well in better
ing the conditions for pre-service
and in-service training for the
teachers who have come within
his sphere of influence.
Ineoi'poiuted in the report re
leased last week un the Potsciaiu
meeting by the Big Three appeal - ,
eel u document aiiolishing all ra- :
eiul diseriinmaliun in Gerntuny
foi the durutiun ot uiied euntrul.
Chai'it.v began abruud as wi'-
nessed by the signers uf the nteaa-
ure. which include American-born
Pie.sident Truman. Marshal Jos
eph Stalin of Soviet Rusia, and
Prime Minister Clement Attlee i)f
Great Britain.
Could American Ni-gro troops
in Germany, who are exposed un ;
every hand to diseriniinalory j
practices by the U. S. Army, be i
allowed a glance at the section I
enclosing these words of Iree-
d-m. they woul.l read thus; |
"All Nazi laws which proviJ-,
ed the ba.sis of the Hitler regime
or established discrimination ont
grounds of race, creed, or political 1
opinion shall be abolished. No |
such discriminations, whether i
h’gal. administrative or other-
'Continued on back page)
The North Carolina Negro
W-tr/4 War II
Carolinian Represents
South At NYU Forum
NEW YORK. N Y i Exclusive!-
To .-ay ;hBl the Negro can hold ho
own on ihe Amorican Flducali.'n
Platform wa.s justified last Wednes
day when Garland Crews, principal
of Zobulon High School. 'N. Ci
represented the South at a forum
lead by several prominent educa
tors at New York University The
forum was arranged fni the bene
fit of several hiindrtd educators
representing forty-seven states in
the Union.
The audience appkuidi-d when
Crews, fhe only Negro on Ihe
panil. ro.se to speak. TTic masterly
way in which Crews presented the
ca.se for hi; ^ ction .md Ihe timely
and pointed questioms which he iri-
dlessed tn P.-jul H Burk, Dean of
ho Faculty uf Art> and Sciences of
Harvard University, brought loud I
and continuous applause. '
The conferenee was arranged by
New York University, BepartmenI
of Higher F.ducatlon. f-ir the bene- i
fit of faculty, students, superintend
ents of schools, high .school prin
cipals and college presidents who
de'-hed to learn more about the
much di.'cu.ssed •Harvard Plan >1
Education In □ Free Soeelty,"
For two ye;iry, a .special c.imiml-
tee of educators headed by De.an
Buck has been studying America*.s
slaggcrln gproblem of better pre- j
p.ar.'ition for living of 700.000.000
piipil.s enrolled annually in our
secondary schools. Because of j
Crew's ' rillianf niotd it New ]
York University, he was selected to
.ippi-ar as iino of the sjienkers on
the panel.
Shown above is the replica of
Ihe front cover of a forth-coming
300 paged 9 x 12 book "The North
Carolina Negro In World War
II." which is being published by
tile Negro Information Center ol
Greensboro.
The pictonil publication will
deal both with the military and
civilian contirbutions of Tar Heel
ers in the present world conflict.
Photographs of Carolina sol
diers. marines, seabcea, wacs,
waves, spars. Red Cross and "Y"
workers wherever they may
serving as well as those of veter
ans are being sought for free pub
lication in the brok.