Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Nov. 14, 1953, edition 1 / Page 12
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PAGE TWELVE THE CAROLINIAN (Published by the Carolinian Pub! -hing Company, 518 E. Martin Street, Raleigh, North Carolina Telephone: 4-5558) a* Second Class Matter, April 6, 194» at the Post Office at Raleigh. North Carolina, under the Act of March, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Six Months $2.75 One Year $4.5« PAVABLK IN ADVANCE ADDRESS ALL COM MI’NICATIONS AND MAKE ALL CHECKS AND MONEY ORDERS PAYABLE TO THE CAROLINIAN. Interstate United Newspapers, Via. 542 Fifth Avenue N. Y. 17 N. Y, National Advertising Representa tive. Tbe; newspaper is not responsible for the return of a nsoiiclted news, pictures, or advertising copy un less. necessary postage accompanies the copy. Opinions expressed in bp-limed columns published n this newspaper are not necessarily those of the publication. PAUL R. JERVAY, Publisher tSJfojf/Atr^ VlltW •*© l w T Wanted Something Better Than Flit The graml old Tarheel Sta t e has y e t anothei claim to fame and distinc tion. Reading the famous de partment of the Now Y'.orker magazine, ‘ ‘ T h e Talk of the Town” (Octo ber 24 number), we came across the account of a \bit by the peripatetic conductor of that depart ment to the Nati o n a ! Hardware Show in Grand Central Pa 1 ace, Xew Y *.-1 k. the scene dur i n g the cour s e of a year to all kinds of commercial ex hibits and fairs, primari ly for the benefit of .. ai ers* representatives an d buyers. Chronic 1 !!'? his expe riences at the hardware sho w , the New Yorker writer observes; “A man came b> and stuck a copy of Hardware Age under our arm, and we made our way to the New York Wire Com Talmadge And Brynes Not Supported The Conference <>f‘ Sou thern Governors failed to adopt a it y resolution on the subject of school seg regation, or to make any formal representation t > Vhe U. S. Supreme Court, which has the matter of the comtitutiom \ 1 ity » f segregated public schools before it. The leadership and the philosophy of Gov ernor Herman Talmadge P. R. R. Hires A Brakeman A news item of move significance th a n many announced recently t h a l Pennsylvania Railroad has employed a Negro brake man. This is a very impor tant milestone in the movement toward more an cl better occupational (opportunities for Negroes, and fair employment prac tices. For many years Negro employment b v railways in the North has been re stricted to low-paying cat egories. Promotion to bet ter jobs has been similarly limited, and more often than not, the vast majority of Negroe railway employ es have been in the un skilled and low paid jobs •reserved for Negroes more or less exclusively. Origin ally this was true much more so in the North than What Happens To Prices? The average consumer will welcome the investi gation promised by Secre tary of Agriculture Ben son into the matter of the spread between prices re ceived by the cattle grow er for his animals and the price of beef in the retail store, We have read of calves being sold for less than two dollars a head. The price of beef, and es pecially of veal, is down in the meat markets, but no such reductions have been passed on to the con sumer as would be indica ted by what the grower gets for his product. Much the same situation exists as to many other pany's booth, which was full of screens. ‘Out con tention a tab, pleasant gentleman in a blue suit said, ‘that you can store fifty-eight of our screens, which roll un, in the space where you store fc ur or dinary screens. They keep ■out everything but gna's, which are the most ver satile of in seeds, and the North Carolina mosquito. The North Carolina mos quito. which is the braini est mosquito, ca n ' t get thro u g h 'h e screen, but it has 501 v e d Ihe screen problem by laying eggs on the inside, so when, they hatch after fiv «• h '.'llrs —fche ynuogsttvs co in a fine position to mis ' havoc. It used to baffle us fiii a professor ad Duke discovered it. For North. Carolinians we adv i s c Flit.’ ” Anyone who has been in the !o w country of North Caro-ina mosquito, en d of a summer w ill and Governor James F. Byrnes were thus played down in the conference, H s h o u i d be remembered (hat the Georgia governor was chairman of the con Terence. He was succeed ed by the governor of Ok lahoma. The news serv ices re por ed further that the sou thern governor* who sup ported Republican candi dates in the national c:>m in the South, for southern railways for years manned their low motives with Ne gro firemen an d brake men, and there remain still an appreciable number of 'Negroes in such positions, despite a lon g s anding campaign by the railway unions to get rid of them. The unions, or the rail way systems, or both in collaboration, did not have |-o get rid of Negroes in -ueh jobs in the North, for they had been consistently kepi out of them over the years. Railway employes i n the upper brackets have lung been tire art.istocracy of labor. They are right at the top in pay, in security, in benefits and in favora ble hours of work. They have for many years en joyed special protection of commodities. The price of the food basket is at a high point in the history of the country, while the farmers complain loudly, and no doubt justly, about the low prices they are re ceiving for what they trai-se. We don’t know the un derlying causes, but we do know that the consumer is getting a good going over these days every time he visits the food store. The average consumer is pret ty reasonable. A t bear' he does not want to profit by the hard luck of the farmer; but he is peeved, to put it mildly, when he is paying sky high prices agree that, the gnat is “the most versatile of in sects,” and also the most intimate a n d infuriating. A good ma n y varieties have the one and only laudable trait that they seem to suspend activities among humans at night. Not so the “brainy” North Carolina mosquito, or any < thc-r species, to our know ledge. That is when the bide so-a.nd-so.-i really go work. We hope some hardware inventor wi 11 tike up fhere the Duke piolVssor left off, and find '-■me wav to make that .die-devil 1 a y h e r eggs Aonie where ,*ther than in si tic tile screen. Or better, may si me great scientist find som way to sterilize the eggs. Even bet f e r , could some benefactor of mankind rise up with a wa y to exterminate the .and while at it, the low country gnat? paign last year, and gave aid and comfort to the re volt within the Democra tic. party a- last summer’s convention, were rather in abeyance, and that some of :h<-m are on the mourn er* bench with a view t ' I'eadmiscdou to full fellow ship. Things are not working out exactly as some of these brethren expected. the federal government because of its interstate commerce powers. But ox er a lar g e part of the country N e gr o workers have been rigidly exclud ed fr o m these benefits, and increasingly restrict ed from them in o ther parts cf the country, by •employment practices dic tated at least in pari by ‘he railway brotherhoods. So the employment by ere of the country’s great northern railways of Ne gro bvakemnn is a real milestone in the march to wa r d economic occupa tional progress, it may be more significant t ha n a federal fa i r employment practices law. At least it ha s been accomplished, and there is no indication /that federal FKPC is any nearer enactment than it ever was. while the farmer claims lie is being ruined by the low prices the farmer is receiving for the same commodities. Congress was called on last year to investigate the general spread between, prices paid farmers and prices the final consumer has to pay, and Congress cavalierly refused to in vestigate. No w at least a o m e senators, including the chairman of the Sen ate agriculture committee, are a!! for an investiga tion, and it will probably be started soon after Con gress reconvenes in Janu ary. Certainly an investi gation is in order. THE CAROLINIAN “Will The Supreme Co urt Decision Be To Breach This Gap” 2.' i v - . ■, . ■ .■ ■ ' - - -C. t>, Halli’ urton’s # V SECOND THOUGHTS Jj§ % ST". According i.o Drew Pearson, Governor .tauies F : •.• n: South Carolina was booed rs he cross: U tee field dm itig tlit- i ..if in the annual football game be tween the University of So.:ih Carolina and I'i .ir. • u Co.. . in C-V.unit’a recently. The tunno bet, veon the sf*.>--V two top in stitution'; of learning (*>r v.'bit«s only, of course) is tra ditional annua! feature of rs state fair is- Sout-h -Curub.'.a, and rs attended by th roups from all over the state. The columnist did not indi cate the extent or volume of Tin.- be-os, but that the bom or, Jimmy Byrnes in South, Cr •- - • lina should be of sufficient vol ume to bo audible on any public occasion is -big news It is an index of the waning of his pop ularity, and until recently Mr. Byrnes has been tmnentiou v popular with the while people of the state ha sjpvx ms. What has bremcncd that th pi eat slat; snian and champion of sesroe.nuoii seems to have lost some popularity in fas home slate, where ba s ha it things his way to an amazing degree? Weil, in the first place he bolted the DewiKtyriic party end openh supported andhvOiK ed for the Republican candidate —STRAIGHT AHEAD— Olive Adams NEW, YORK, i GLOBAL) --- Chit: of the biggest objections the white man has always raised in any discussion on discrimina tion m employment, -.musing and schooling, has but a that "you can't fore - people to love each other". "These things take time," they say This, of coin. is a delaying urliot. and. to the naked eye of the ra-.ua! oh serve•. i< rimy ;i'cm a harljrlos.-. moiiy i viewpoint. litii (ins is o much heg'vwsh, and those v ho preach ii, know it is, .vei.i! e actually the- only way tu end discrimination is to end it not talk about ending it end it. it can be done by anyone in authority who sin i > ‘ i.v ill 1 U) CM ft We have had this demonstrat ed lo u« very graphically in the past few month, fc'or some yean now, the Democrats have used civil rights as a political foot ball and everybody knows it. They have talked, preached, dis cussed, accu.-.ed, prurni ed - and done nothini; at all When legis lation failed to make t to grade, ,( was ail blamed on a ‘ condi tion" of Republicans and south ern Democrats We know this is hog wash, too. As a matter of fact, all that ever was need » -Hl V *!.■» »'* « -,i a_/. ‘ veil or Harry S. Truman, those two "sincere, honest, champions of the underdog” to issue an order. A young newspaper man who took his army training down in Georgia, went back to his old in thi: last pru.-idcntiul election. He succeeded in leading ;■ in ■ n, vote for Fisenhower. 1-Vr va h <li. !iuetl and ntUir;i#it'd hv a But there is link- doubt that t • - Dr muriatic v andklate would 1m c c}> i I'ii.d iin- ut;iw by a w-uv margin it Byrnes : id i in ihv Democra'le fold. As it v, .-.levenson did can’, the suite, out only t>.\ a nan ov rt'entoi. Governor Bvi >;tv Kw ••.. :; '-aid that it tv;,.a tr.c S o vot-■, : till rfclat A Mv stnaH in South faiolioa, which kin>t Spilth Or coliuu ’c. t lie Denioci ntic cdu.i.u. iP.aridir.x of paradoxes, that Nog t should he the deciding fa«. car jii a Democratic virtu: v iu South Carolina, vv lu-r>- polka fcv. years ago a Ne ro could not tv-lung to tilt: party unit; . he vV.,s one v.-ho had voted for W ■'tie Hampton i'u governor back in the ’7os!) Anyhow, the state remained in the Democratic fold in that * it, ft ion. Byrnes failed to deh\ or. The. . were enough tradilion.il true Democrats, and Ne io hand the defender of Democracy in Europe hi fii st stomping ground to have look •irotifid ja.it a few weeks ,k;o ii>. hardly knew the place. He found Negroes and whites using tat tana- resfam aits on Ib ■ post, sharing barrack':, enjoy ing movie-: ami roereatjop t . s-iiu :. He n-tked the officer in c hal’i’t* when: oil the signs a. ere tint! ii.-- cl to be jpost'-'d to kevp (lie races front mixing. T’k- ofiicr-r answered sim; i.v, “\Vi • had orders* to take tin .-n -io'.'.'ti.” It \'.as simple as (bat. Pis ident E'st-nho v' r i. - sued an order. Ever f-.ince most of us can rgitieinber, we have secthccl o. - i>• Ihr- discrimination that ha < d in the nation's capital whit-:, of ail place:; about;] be a tpoo.ei (or democratic living. 1 .if- city was everrun >•- iI h i initharflijl'; . l.i- >• -aid and they >• euld.-'t* rip.nd so; the mixing of the races. But. in ie.-s than SENTENCE SERMONS liV ttF.V. I'"RANK t'LAKENCE I/MVJ&V ! OR AM’ SEVi.w t I* 1. Many odd names and terms are bt-in,.; us«d to stimulate trade. Sv that speejp v.-ur*.\- for sale can tntvr the popultui ty parade. 2. The inscription above is Commonly seen on. a certain reverse in his inane side. - aye white „South CMi- I■>I : r I i;.}! c:eb 1 11 y ft-h qua!;,. , ovt :• vomit; U,a ((e. public;- i, anti U< ;ula>- organ* • iron L'lvnucrntu: l-’adc: oi -i•" u' huv a i:' - it 1 s.ot.il.!to }> it•s of conscience on the bweoiiiage these mi livings and !m i o! tlio.-.e w ini .Jr. ted the ioii.i of their fathers 'l \ t a :;h C irmna, ... i.viv.'- O imiligiy an agricultural slide, and one .n which thine has beers iu recent year:, meat development, of !rn- beef cuttle i: -diistvy. The slump in farm, prices, and especially the cot -hipse of beef prices, have not promoted luiud feeling toward the p*.-sent national adminis lc>'iion wiMi which Mi Byrnes strides in South Carolina in re is ,~o chummy. lndi.u>u ialization ha.*. ii.ade great at tides in South Caroiica U'. i .••eei't y. .bm prosperity io; i.ue ;,I ;l • - as a whole is still closely tied to Ihe twice level u{ farm producA. Secretary Benson is probably not remember* 1 favorably in tin- prayers of most South Caro linians there- dm,:-;. Governor Byrnes is inevita bly associated in the minds of the people of the state with the present national administra tion. Hence the boor. < j yt-cr, the sc-no in Washing ton D. ihad < hanged, Negroes v ere eating in restaurants, at tMi'jiu.l thciiHi-os and .nobody iu:.:' heard of any acts of vio ii in' that took place because of it. Os com".- , it .oiild haiu been better if Mr. Eii'.enhower had 1 : .'led ir. .-> hat lory of photogra ph- 1 . signed a proclamation K'Ui .1 parade, and with great km hue called attention to lini -'-Jj if.ir ui.icu; Negroes what they bold j have had all along, and had taken away from them and kept i« ay from them by tlic Oemocral , for lo those many war:- hut he quietly did what ic p’"‘nihed to do. Ha exercised . ver*. I if. of r ,t) orit lie had n c-rad'cai io.; the.'-'.- evil... May be s”in.i.where down the line, til. N ::ru il! eoiue to appj-e --c!*:<»" t!«is ki id ‘of performance. soft drink appearing on bill ho;>.rd and screen S Blit tin; name bears a great* r significance than i» above set foi At; if embraces* sinis and possibilities ot far greater girth, 4. In the life of a child thi? first seven years are most im portant; the second seven acid WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1 I. 1953 IN THIS OUR DAY f^j ■TOOK YE I v. 'hi M ANY lAt t ' In the magazine ‘ i.uol. ' for Nov. it, lin'd intne is t,i nucli de undt V (be title Pity tec Poor Teaci'.e. wnUc.i by G vai A t'!- Lock SI".U \ titer. The articl ~; (jut ;• i .; k s cut ill •! ;• ■ . t IS nut ;■. ready well know. ■ : u w ... j ..... r ..111 t It., e. . ..... . ■ ■ tH! i'. ; - sly j"' ' 1 - 11 ;. i each the ridi« ioui ly low muxi'uii.-n -rJ-i-y. I: further points out t. mo t i.y what arc ks.oe n as industrial workers ... it ■■ i in -:e tv :.! bertcr e. f.y.ji a I.C.tClH'l'. Ai of Ci"r t , tiioy. why have i T.-'U trail.:mt for such as in c.e ii.ai, e-e.rnmoreiai prntvs si- ar.! ~y ti'.'iiC- : . leave the twic e.'. l ' “a mih ev dird ’ n< niat terr ~-. 1. 1 ; uni ; tt.,.iy. \vttn rele.yni v lo h.ai s of mark per V.Y week ja 'a; ijt. ; . .a a US the uasr- ioon> teacihog, i.-ropa ratio:■ 1c; the ic warn . ydan •..V. pup rs. ateraaa. 'Pi-renk Teaei Cl Ari'OCMllaC i of oilier exU‘:» c.e vie at v.d.i --\ i>i • . ihe teacher pat:, in more bed... It; r any ibac. iti y .tirud' typ ; v. e. kvr Os i'e ; ,a io fcaill thi". V‘..ir I aba y, t ’■ teacher nnk-i and. ago a iorc ond expensive period of train in ben tidy he nn » tnko "• <’* g'nfd's cwwr'.a Giyivt Ad ri.vi.cl 11 ' lira nckd income is concCfßccl Do. yito bur loreftoin-*. how GORDON HANCOCK’S BETWEEN the LINES ONE JIINDitANt i l't> IN'TEGK 1 i ION Tue problem of me fie: ■.■■r.e. i, one of comrmmicntion. With the IncnlticN of sound and vi sion immured the deaf-mute can ncith r receive conrmHuneaitor. from bis cry :1r' r : ■■ w u'a r; ■'V ’u ran Iu: effectively c>nimuni cate with them. Mo*t social pi-oblemt; - it indeed not all of them - stem from a luck of j. frelive commurueaiion. rhe ehi>. i riu b • tu tr hetvreen wild amnuiis cud tan it Ltiur hinges about the self same roal - , ter of communication. Tame ani mals and their tamers have certain means of commuPiea tion un!;no\vu to wild animals : nd "wild" men who would de >j;vty t lein, Ttn- etuior tt’Olll.le of by present world where co lor (u>)i ri. u i .'it', o uftiitd- t.ne l ay' l s row of men is one of ( ororouniontion. Tin: current sy.. It-ru of sop re potion is wie'-t effec f ive dviitroy:; or neutiah/.er. the cur rent nui.t’Ti of (••'mpr'-'niontiot' between the segTefratecl an d those who MWegato them. The dre-'irlful affliction of race pre judice is in the last analysis a problem of communication, for interracial and inter-group un dv . sPiiidin.: definitely (ollows m• pro\ "(i means of comini'fiiea tion. Thp popit herein i i-i.l civ related to this matter of commimicatiori. f.aiiav the one word above all oiliers vr hsoli is being pa;,Ned along is “Integra > lion." The forthcoming de i ision et tile Supreme court is being imoatienth. anuU' d by both whites and Negroes, the whites with fear and tile Negro with hope. But it is safe to sav that whites are planning, in ways not announced, for the project ed derisions. Just as Herman Talnriadno and .fimmv Byrnes have thought of "bawdy" wavy tiuiwrt an al l ls- ropreuatior Ist d e c i ; ion. there arc other plans in the offing. White' do not lay all their raids on the table, face up. No 'rot s are more inclined to set the work! on notice what they arc about. Strong football teams use ptuv/or ploys v.-hile weaker team:; employ strategy, strategy should therefore in a faep.r ill tl sli uggle of minority groups, wilii its element oi surprise. There is always the danger iliat .Negroes will tall; too much for the good of their cause It. ic largely a untie- of lotting enthusiasm run away v ilh -•-<>- tier judgment and mature plan ning. If thorn are any Negron : willi foi.rtii'e plans for in <<•ftr.aU.on. this column has not heard of them. W< mu: jest go in;» .1 lon ■ hopefully and trust fully, liopim; for a favorable de cision. .ilist what e are goimf to do if Hi.' decision is tuv oinbie we b«ve*no wav of fr>re casting, ailhouuh we know that deg: res of "yen greater enli:;ht sneni. 5. Each successive "Ver, years through earnest thought hod earn -have aided nianv a si t. •- i'll;)" foul to accomplish deeds, most unique arid rare. (1. Neuman found health, life and prosperity in seven, when up fj ora .Towfem .seven tirrfes Isis losumnnw leprovy left his iaody in all of its dreadful confines. ’!. Significant indeed is > nCtm b-.w seven, for in the book i i pf-.nie! 8: I, are stated the fol lowing wtads of power ''And when lie had opened tiie ‘sev enth seal’ lucre was silence in heaven about the- space of half ..\y , 1 tor on •, tti> not city t.ie ■ . t 1 co not that the rank and Jilt of teach e:;. pity tiicinscive.-. Nor do th’V- 1 1 ;. i, 1 any cie: ire to ti ■ piiitC t*th« r groups. A man fuctru■. i , lor example. rcjoic-A ar ho Wvlches hi; fu n. turn out finished prod ets tr o iri lo i.th and ci u'.e h ati'. ialr. .takes pri it■ in i .' -ij...t jty ot hi' - . as w*:tl r..- in .1 fi-elir'e; ihm >,.• is making sutuct h tug wi.lo.ut wen'll civilisation ina., not •. x ist ar.d twit tlicreloie, society need:;. In lik ■ manner, the teach. too rejoice: in lu. fin ish' d ; roduct. Ihi we,ill ■ ' e all finished products, namely, wonuunood and niuehood, Ihe tea-l.er rejoices tiia; he. too, is a mtitinfaclurer of a product that iv.iii. ition needs and some thit-g without which it. could not exist. Tire learner rejoin •wat he is to civilization v. nut rail to meat, the preser-.M of if And, even thcenta t-u: teachet's salary rnuy be email and ins hours of work may be tong, he ran rejoice and wiy wtth ’he Apostle Haul; "Poor, vet iraking many rich. As i' : v io., nothing and yot posecissing all things.“ No. 'he teacher w no; s i "r --ys” to h pit .. : He is a meiii ■ „ a p; ofession that no doub- is tiv harpi .-st group of vo. ice to be found anywhere. R. r - do w • hear .T a "teach ..trike'. - even a t.-reoten st'ko on the part of tcacn ,■ : 1 I :,.'i w io our t•.•mit er. tr.v .ait oi .ivilizafion. tort lin amn’i'd! id !>i' )>n: •* ' ’ „. '1 ... ! ~ ~ I ■ . ■" I ■ *'• ■ M•■ . ro masses ready tor integra ii.itin i-- on Ihe N-. 10 iritelli gynt 'B. Aside from hopin'; that wo «•>( a favorable decision in tvno(l»r what are our •■■•'.■houls doing tu prepare |. 11 • , ,|| 11 i■ wt.at \ ere uir pul'.’i - .:. offering in the it. . [: ei.,,. atnio-t childi -i to • roume mat Hu eh'.-nge from e.jr. :at.i.on to inti ; ation van he i-lM chvl v.-itlnuit a n imnvum ' ation !' U l-1 nil t:U‘ part <T v. •’dt'.' - and N’C'.'S'UC':;. One of tiie great liin I r.inn , tn full integi •("'’> is the 1 i ill! n- of inivite'Ced Ncgruis to assume respon sih'lity for the undorprivi - 1,• • ; of Hu- riee, although • thi latter group is .1 serious hindnniee So the processes of intri ruttoii. O wretched man lb.it I ;in> who .“halt de liver me from the body ot thi-. death" may well be come the watchword of tili lib ged Negroes for things are so ordered iu our (sir r-u't society that the lowly Negro is o* l lined to b> more fortunate brother, and they ivlist stay down or rise together. Wh"i't,T the Supreme cour: deeirUm is for or against segre gation. there will be no lessen iru of this indissoluble relation -between the upper and lower sti ."to of Negroes, From time to lime this office receives communications from deeply concerned souls; reiat -1 jie, lo the Negro’s crime and murdc rousness in our largo Ur -I,an centers. Ml manner of frime i • being reported with a coiTesnondiiv; increase of pre indico and segregation innorth ivn and eastern urban centers, where hitherto Negroes -nave t■; iuviid n fraotional privilege tu.known in the south. Tl: 1 mint is. the upper-class Negro :. entirely lon far from i-'s under privileged brother" We are too prone to betake ourselves to our fine homes and expensive cars and publicized degrees mtl leave the lowly Ne gro to do the best lie can. The burden of formulating a program to facilitate integra tion j on the Noero with high dee,n es. and prestige and privi lego The lack of effective com munication between tiro upper and .lower strata of Negroes not only explain: much of the de linauency and naivete of the lowly Negroes, but it is a hind rance to i'h‘ much desired inte £ rat ion. Relieve it or not, the privileged Negro is his brother's keeper The Jew through much suf feiinu lias loomed this ali-im portant lesson, How much more sufieiing must we endure be foie we too shall learn it? an hour,” 8. Those vital "Seven East Words of Christ" will forever stir the earth, and enrich the c-'id.- of all mankind, through His iihiriaculste and matchless birth. b. “Seven times lie > spoke, seven words of love, and all night long his silence cried, for mercy or. the souls of men Jesus our Lord was crucified.” ill. Thus every man, through bis precious blood of heav en, can not only be tho roughly convicted, arid his sins forgiven, but wilHii!> to forgive his brother “Seven ty times Seven.”
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 14, 1953, edition 1
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