Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / April 6, 1940, edition 1 / Page 4
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Iv rftoc Editoriais W Coroiia Comments PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY THE CAROUNA TIMES PUBUSHiNG CO. MAIN OFFICE 117 E. PEABODY ST. ... DURHAM. N. C. PHONES N7121. J-7S71 L. E. AUSTIN, PUBLISHER WILUAM A. TUCK. EAtmr HERBERT R. TILLERY, ButiB«»« M«o«y*r CHARLOTTE OFFICE 420 1-a EAST SECOND STREET • SUBSCRIPTION RATES |2.0©—Year, fl.as—6 7Bc—3 Months. Kntcred u second-claaa Butter at the post olfic* mt Durham, N. O,, under the Act «f Marck «rd 187»." SATURDAY, APRIL 6, l»40 Yet nerve they spirit to the proof, And blanch not at they chosen lot; The timid g>ood many i^nd aloof, The Mtig« may frown, y«t faint thcDr not. Nor hted the shaft too surely eaat Tba foul and hissing bolt of Morji; For with thy side shall dwell |^t last The victory of endurance bom. FEDERAL DISCRIMINATION The federal governta«nt ought to louk iwto the charges that Ne gro soldiers of the Ninth Cavalry, stationed n^aj* Junction City. Kansas, are forced to shine buots, scrirf) floors, polish braaa and do other menial jottM on government time. If the charges are true steps sliouid be made to end this dastardly discrimination and punishment should be meted out to those responsible for it. Discrimination in civilian life, because of ijJice or color, is bad •Dough, but when it gets into the United States army, we think it is time to sit up and take jiotice. The same ^pplies to any other l>ranch of the naitonal defense or any other department of the fed«MJ government. [ The fact that Negroes we barred from the marines,''and are vic tims of rank discrimiqaition in the navy and many other depart ments of the national def ense is generally known. The information that white officers of a Negro unit of the Omiy have found a means of heaping humiliation on Negro soldiers, as is ^oing on in the case of the ninth Ca^ry, is something new and should Ibe stopped. Hiis system of forever trying to crush the manhood in Negroes produces a psychology of inferiority in them that may endure for a while, but it cannot be pern^il*iently established in the hearts of a people who have withstood the inhuman institution of sl,*very, the beastly fieriod of reconstruction^nd finally the present era of mis- treatnsent. In fact all of its has only served to make the ' Negro stronger in his determineltion to overcome and more resourceful in Abe midst of stuggle. During these times of world unrest, European and Asiatic wars, it does seem that the United States ftrmy would be the last place where discrimination in military training, or any other form, would be found. To so esIjjUblish the gods of race Hatred as to make them above ,eyen our national defense is downright dumb ness. Perhaps our white folks aren’t so sn^t after all. BETWEEN THE LINES ^ BY DEAN CORDON B. HANCOCK PAYING THE PRICE Being a m^ is one of the most expensive human ambi tions, We all clamor to be men, but too few of us clamor for the sacrifices and sufferings tt^ fullfledged manlwod entails. We have come up in times when mucii is being said about the m«nhood of the e, and we too often go to foolish ends and uiter foolish things to make It appear that we are men. Man hood needs no her^llds, 'but like the light mentioned on holy writ, it shines if we noly “let" it. A few decades gao we, ack nowledged tt>e' dilldhood ot orrr edTication also makes the Negro^ BUS ACCOMMODATIONS |FOR NEGROES i The brutal mistreatment experienced by Misses Pauli Murraly and Adelene McBean on a Greyhound bus, ^id at the hands of the police department of Petersburg, Virginia is not the mistreatment of two irresponsibles, reds, pinks or r^uiicals as some of the spine less of the race would have believe. It is an affront, an att^ek, a brutal mistr^tment and disrespect for Negro womanhood in its entirety. It is the same slimy stuff that makes some of our white men replace their hats on an ele^^tor when they dicover that the remaining woman on that elevator is a Negro. The Greyhound ibus incident presents f* challenge to every self- respecting Negro and white person in America. Womanhood is womanhood wether'it be clothed in a white skin or a dark skin, and ^y man or company that is too loathsome to regard it as . such should be made to understand that both have overstepped th« bounds of toleration. The accommodation for Negro passengers in busses^ akid bus stations in the South are for the most part almost. unibeai|Blftle. What happened to these two young women in Virginia is only ^ part of the illtreatment which Negroes receive while traveling on buises in other southern states, especially in North C^olina. In Raleigh, Charlotte and Greensboro and other cities of the stat ethe waiting rcoms provided for Negroes tjre not only filthy 1>ut dangerousiy unsanitary. Insult is usually added to injury when Ne groes are forced to sit on the back seat and over the weels of the bu» where all of t}ie Jolts and noise serve to prevent comforta'ble transportation. This case of Miss Murray ,tind Miss McBean is more than an in dividual affair. It is a case where the rights of every Negro man «»td woman is concerned, and it should be regarded as such. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the churches. Urban League ^Ind every onganization ^ould be called up on to throw support to these young women who had the courage to taka a jiefinite stand tor their rights. Wa have often said in this column that Negro leaders are the only leaders of an oppressed group,anywhere in the world who never go to jail. Perhaps Miss Murray and Miss McBean are ths beginning of new type of leadership for th* race—a leadership that will not cringe and crawl on its .belly merely because it hs,p- pen# to be faced with prison bars in its fight for the right. BETTER iHOMES CONTEST race; for we sought the sym pathy and philanthropy in which wore laid our present found^ tions. Then we “apake ais a child, understood as a child and ihtught as H child*’ but now we claim to have put away childish tli.ngs. lliis li good if it is really true! If the Negro can paddle his own (^atioe it speaks volumes both for his moral prococity and for his ability and the world will crown him with many crowns.. It is, however, a danger ous thing to serve notice on the world that “we c^ali make it” if we are not really ready to pay the price such pretention involv' e?. Xhas is the claim for men and net cry habies. If we s^y in one breath that we can stand on our own feet, and in the very next bewail the withdraw^ of t h white inan’s interest and philadn- hropy we are miserable crea- t-i^es. We t^ve come upon a time when we clamor for the complete control of the instatutions which white philanthropy touilt for us. This is the cry of men but it in volves the question whether or not w« are willing to support these institutions financially. The two things go together the complete control and the com pute support. If Negroes are pining to control and let tihe white man support, he miscalcul ates mdserably. If the Ne^ro vaunts hia manhood ^d wants to send the bill to the white man he lacks the finer sense of dis cernment that the emergency rr.c«, but we must ^so paj the piper. This great clamor and drive to take over our whole educa- tioiyU system lays upon us ths responsibility of supporting thase irftitutions. In other words, we are ever ready to proclaim to the worldi our manhood; are we quite as willing to the pries iwvolved therein? The indiffer- et’t support that Negroes give to thtt NAACP makea ona won der if the Negro actually knows what is involved in hi.s procl^a of manhood. The rather desul tory support Negroes give to Thousands To Pay Honor Toj Booker T. Washington As Stamps Go On Sale ptofession of n^ihood question able. ' The measure of the Ne gro’s manhood' is not his clama- tion or his profession, but ths number of double duty dollars he spends; the fSnunt of sup port he gives to Negro education and the intelligent votes he casts for better government. Some way must be founS to translate our loud-mouthed procl^| nation into sacrificial deeds of support for tlrose things that make us men! If the Negro thinks he can dress finely, drive big cars, v^jnt is manhood and equality, ride iJVer this country to divers conventions conventions, air his views, however illusory, in tJie press, speak up to and back at tke white man, find send the bills for his education to the whitetnan, he is seriously mis taken. Negro leadership may (kfs well gurd the race for service and sacrifice ,.dnd suffering. This is the price that manhood de mands. Whether we are willing to pay it determines our ‘equ^ lity” with the whie man,t more man, more than some anthrologi cal or biologic;cO speculation. The Ntgro’s biological equality means little or nothing when the must depend on the white man for bread or die hungry. We ake fas passing out of the “big talk phase” of our development. We need vision and pl,itn and action. ' Whenever I think of paying the price of manhood, my mind always turns to the AME church. I was thrilled the other d|lly to note that Morris Broiwn college “A” colt- TUS9iKiGGE£ Ala.—With plans for the nationwide observance of the Booker T. W^lihington Stamp celebration rapidly near- ir.g Completion, Ur. F. D. Patter- son, president, Tuskegee Insti- ti>tc, today paid tribute to the nation’s press. The celebr^4tion closes on April 7 when Postmaster General Jam- ei A. Farley will sell the first Negro stamp at the Tuskegee In stitute Post Office and later will deliver the Founder’s Djy ad- diess in the Institute Chapel dur- lifg a forty five minute national rvdio broadcast on which the Tuskegee Institute Choir, Paul Robeson, RokAnd Hayes and other artist wiU sing their tribute to the Negro educator. Concur rently a series of public meet^ iiigs in cities from coast to coast are baing organized to which other state ^nd national personalities are being invited. “Booker T. Washington himself said he gained the greatest part of Ws educa tion from newspapers,” Dr. Patterson explained, “although he was the most famous gr^uate of Hamp ton Institute, Virginia. “He owed much of his success (o the sympathy and interest of the press. North and South, showed in the work he was try-^ irg to do. Largely because f this hc wJb able to reach the public. And by this means he made Tuskegee Institute not merely a private philanthropy but in the truest sense of the word a public instiuion tsupport- ed by the public amd conducted in the interest of the wholft Country.” — — • • Tuflkegee’s third president quoted its founder as spying; ‘Through the medium of the medium of the newspapers I have been able to get in touch with many hundreds and thou- saiids of persons that 1 would never h^e beefi' able to .reach with my voice. All this has multi plied my powers for service a hundredfold. President Pattprson pointed cut that Tuskegee Institute was fuunded in an old Negro church where Booker T. Washingtofi taught his first thirty pupils. “Since then more th^n 40,000 Ntgro youths have passed out through its portals equipped with a useful trade as well as acade mic training. Today Tuskegae's towers rise above 2,300 iiltres f park farmla'nd. The disused church has grown into 132 modern buildings. The educa tional philosophy which our founder developed h^ sspread to four continents. “The nation’s press has played a vital role in this remarkable growth. Literally hundreds of editors ^nd publishers have visit ed the college. Theid editorial in- terpretations of our educational policies have aided immeasurably in ^kousing public interest in program and in the aided res- pofisibilities wthich have come to u3 down through the years,” he said. Dr. Patterson recalled t1^ it was Clark Howell, editor of the Atlanta Constitution wbo over night made Booker T. Washing ton tl national figure. Following the educator’s famous address at the Cotton States Exposition at Atlanta on Sept. 18, iSM, editor Howell telegiftpihed a New York paper: “I do not exaggerate when I say that Professor Book er T. Washington’s addreaa yes terday \y,fls one of the moat not able speeches both as to charac- tiir «nd AS to the warmth of its reception, ever deHvered before ai Southern audience. The ad dress was a revelation. The whole speech was a platform on which blacks and whites qun stand in full justice to eaoh OlHOT.’ ... With a stroke of his pen, Mr. Howell set the fornrter slave on hif way to internatioi^ fame,” Dr. Patterson said. “He told James Creelman, correapndent of the New York World that the speech was the beginning of moral revolution. “Col. Henry'-{Vaiterson of the Lbuisville Courier Journal was another great Journalist who held oJt his helping hfoid to our founder during his early strugg- . les to create an institution whW^ v-ould meet the urgent needs ^f the masses of his people. In fact Tusekgee’s entire his^ry is punctuated by many instances ▼'htre their person^ interest has dramatically aided us render in creasingly useful service to the S)>uth and to the nation. Other distinguished Journalists reciJlled by Dr. Patterson include Ctl. W. W. Screws, publisher, Montgomery, Alabama Advertid- ev, Adolph Ochs, publisher, the New York Times, and many others. 200 Georgia Youths Hold NY A Conference ' demands. Nobody c^ blame the ^ in Atlanta is° a clas^ Negro for wanting to be a man ^ ege. A Negro . college, Negro ncit^r can anybody bl/ime him founded ^Ind Negro supported fo vaunting his manhood before and Negro controlled, and it is the face of the world. But unless j easily the best pattern of the he is willing to pay the price ^ Negro’s future. Morris Brown for his gre(ittest of all privileges ^ represents the highest and best he is « poor creature. There is Negro leadership this nation has nothing wrong about our want-j known. Negro ilethodism is will ing to. “call the.tunes” for our.ing to pay the price! Plane Talk BY JAMES L. H. PECK (Autkor of Arm!** Witk Wings) Winaome Willa Brown, ^our First Lady of the sky and secre tary of the^ National Airmen’s association, who was recently ap pointed ’ Instructress for the Civil Aeronautics authority fly ing training program out Chic ago way, is going to have trouble a> plenty on her skilled, lovely hands comes April l5. He n- mediate duty is teach aspiring fledglings; whose ambitions are, in moat }idbes, to “solo” to ‘take it away’ by themselves. In this, case, however, we for see a surprising lack of said .ahn- bition. Who wants to be all alone in the V^t, though inspiring sky land when the company of Won- dei Girl Willa is to be had to point out me pretty clouds and such? ' We wish we had W|SJted about 10 year* to leam about things aeronautM^. And for 40 bucks, ioo in addition to Willa. In W and '31, we spent almost $3000, war in Q 'ego ahd no Willa. The Intenyltional Harvester company is offering a fl,000 truck to the group or organisation which has made the greatest recent contribution to the welfare of its residents. At the same time tl)^ the “nation’s leading community” con test ia going on, cities throughout the nation ara praparing to celebrate National Negro Health Week and Clean-Up and Paint-Up' ^,«,nt through jjj war in sunny. Week. Buch observances are good. Out of them will come definiU bloody Spain a couple of years effort to brighten the corner where We are, aiid to make the' .Ad nn Willa n.ytord.Uk.,1... I . for the aake of a wreath of leaves, the Greeks of old used to go |pst, but this is nSt to be taken all lengths to win jMt the Olympic games. We have the Spingam literally. She attended high medal and the Harmon award for achievement. Why not pother »chool at Terras Haute, |nd. typ« of a«Vird whkh, being given for homes and neigU>orhoods, ’ VD«}d encourage everybody to make a try. Even the tenant in a . reatad faouaa could. A iittle paint, some godss aiid flowers, a iidawalk and street demonetrated in any one spot in a ttWmnnitjr would be ft.#jching beeausa people are alike in wantiiig to kaap up with the proceasion.' Well kept homes would take the Haea ^ ^taglacted oaes. A new reputation would coma to the gMiif, mUiii them Referred as neighbors.—“The Call” AHHl taUSE STIUL MORE WOMEN THAN MEN?? tafcan hi 4M kut 100 year* baa 4iacIoaed • an M tii Ktjp*P popnlation of tin* country. 1, wfll gJum whather where her righteously proud par- ei.ts, Eric ^d Hallie Brown, still reside; then worked her way through Ind'iana State Teachers college, receiving her A. -B. de gree in commerce with French minor. Immediately upon grfldvM tion, she was appointed head ccrataarcial teacher ^t Roose velt Hi Gary, Ind., and did such a grand lob during her five y^- iccuobancy that she became one of Gary’s higbest paid tehees. Rvcaived matters' degree in Business Administration at Northwestern. How well Willa ciiln administer is evidence by tne long list of luminaries * f both races for whom she h as acted in the cap^ity of secre tary, and her service with the U. S. Immiigration ^d Post Office departments. - Aviation t)r«inang commenced at ^eronutical university, where she qualified for a master mecAi- anic’s certific^lte in addition to successful completion of the aviaition ground cours«. Many women fly; few indee4 know how to diagnose the ills of a sick motor. Miss Brown now boasts 31 limited commercial pi lots ticket and nearly 400 hours aoh flying time. For above mentioned reasons, peo ple like to fly with Willa; she’a carried almost 60,0 paasenagers from Harlem ah-port, Chicago. For these feats and otber, such helping organize the now potent N^‘l Airmen’s Assn’t and being named one of the 11 local Ne groes who have contributed moat tu American civilization, Willa Beatrice Brown’s “pfist” waa laid bsrre in TIME magazine late last ye^—^Which is only due re- crgnition. __. .. Ail director instructress for the local CAA program, whi^ is sponsored jointly by that govern ment agency, the Chicago Board of E^uqAtion, Chicago School of Aeronautics, and the Nat'l Airmen’s Assn’s, she is ne of the Windy .City’s busiest exe cutives.* ’This isn’t all. She is boss of the airport restaurant on the side, which, we h^ir, does bmiattt apleit^. Fliers are a hungry breed. Willa knowf this ATLANTA, — Approximately 200 Negro youths assembled at Booker T. fvashington High school Frid^ and Saturday to participate in the first statewide Negro youth conference . n “Problems of Negro Youth in Georgia” called by the NYA for Georgia cooperation with 11 yo^th serving organii^lions and agencies of the state. According to William H. Shell, Georgia NYA assistant on Ne gro aff^rs, the conference was called in order to give the Negro youth of Georgia an opportun ity to disucc their problems and register their opinions regard ing the steps To be taken in solv ing these problems. The specific factors discussed by the body were edu^lti6n, employment, health and recreation. Various persons of the state who are engaged in those respective fields served sa confemce con- sulUlnts and aided the youths in the compilation of their re commendations and resolutions. Among the educators a n ti civic leaders to appear before the sessions of the conference Dr. Hor^ke Mann Bond, presi dent, Fort Valley, Ga.; J. C. Mc- Morrles, executive secretary. At- laiia Utitian league; B. R. Bras- eflH, dean of men, Morehouae college, Atlanta; and A. A. Mc- Pheeters, acti^ dean, Clark university., Atlanta. The conference wfit keynoted who, speaking from the subject, “How Can Youth Fit Into the Wcrld of Today,” emphasized the importance of Negro yo«ths learning to confront tbeir pro blems which face it even in the greatest denwcracy of the world. Yodth was challenged to strive to lead the race into al ‘fuller lif^” Friday evening, the conference moved to the historic Friendship Baptist Church where more than 600 persons assembled to hear President Bond In the principal i4Jdress of the two day, meeting. Basing his clfecourage on the seven persistent problems strpsa- ed under the new curricula set up in Georgia, Dr. Bond lold his yeung hearers that the probelms of youth were as old as civiHzfi^ ticn itself. The seven persistent problems as oiniined were health, Industry, communication, recrea tion, education, citizenship, and “spiritujil esthetic Impulses.” “These problems” he continu ed 'ure the same for all young people’ .In admitted, Negro ycutha being memibers of a min- i)tity group .will of necessity, lind the going “a bit tougRcf” than do youths of th otheer group. “Hard life nu&es for a hard people and un7er the presant situation, Negroes must be tough. It’s great to be young and a Ne gro,”, Dr. Bond concluded. CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION ANNOUNCED WASHINGTON, ANP — Examinations for C0|S1 price analysts and investi gators animal gepotieists were «Aanounced> by the United States Civil Service commission this week. T^ie examinations, to be given in the near future, require fflTng of applica tions not later than April a6,^ln some s^te April 22. Applications and list of requirements may be had by writing the comm ission here or from local postoffices. well as we do. What we don’t krow, however, is how she Hafe managed to escape Cupid thus far. Brains and beauty in the j|tlme girl is' NEWS, people! Happy landings, hrSy lady- birdl • ■ I.'V' t -* 1 GOOO-WILL NATIONAL BAPTIST CONVENTION TO SPONSOII good will tqur UNWRITTEN COLOR LAW SAID TO BE RULE THROUGHOUT BRITISH EMPIRE E.ONDO1N, (ANP) —An un written color bar is the rule throughout the British Empire except in New Zealand, (kcord- ing'to Dr. Harold Moody, Afri can physician, who reports in a letter to American friends, re buffs received by a brill^it colored medicSi studenta w h p sought postgraduate ~«xper{ence as a house surgeon in English hospitals. “He was turned down on every hjnd,’’ declared Or. Moody, “and such treatment as this is excused by the English man’s saying ‘No Negro is entit led to such a chance until the race proves itself fit by produc ing some world filnoua surgeons. SElATTliE, WASiJ., (ANP)— Representatives of the National Baptist Convention, lead by Kev. L, K. Williams, Chieieigo, president of the convention, will visit here April 13 to li on tb^ second stop of their Goodwill Tvur of the West and North west. The group of 60, conven- t'on officers and leiiders of the denomination making the tour, ^ill have headqi^ifrters at Mt. Z:on Baptist church of which the Rev. Fountain W. FoonUin W . Peniek is pastor. Mrs. S. W. Layten, PhiladelphW preaident of the Woman’a Auxiliary Con vention, is heading the woman’a section of fhe group. To Pfeseol Inler-Clmrcti Prograi San. DURHAM —- The Interdeno minational Ministerial Alliance of Durham idlnd vicinity will pre sent a city wide inter-chunch program at St. Matthew Colored Me'thoddst Episoopfel Church, Ccbb and Mathew Streets, this Sunday afternoon at 3 a’lclock. The object of the meeting is a cl(tter fellowship on the part of the laytnen of"v^oua denomina tioRS. A Unique and un'usual pro gram has been arranged /Record ing to anouncemeni of the com mittee on program. Music will be rendered by three of leading choirs of Durb^ and several Quartette. Addreaees will be ieard by a number of ministers representing the different- d«- ncminations. The main sermon wil' be delivered by the Rev. Z. E McLester, pastor of the Se cond Baptist church. ’The meet ing will be in cl^ge f the Rev. }. H,'Thomas, president of the body and pastor of the Mount Veraott Baptkt Church. A capa city audience is expected to fit- tend th*'aarrlM*. SNY&Plans 4lli Annual - Conferenee NEW ORLEANS —The forces of the Southern Negro Youth Congress are combining in pre paration for the Fourth All- Southern Negro Youth Confer ence tHSt wil Iconvene in New Orleans, April 18-21. The National office, working an collaboration with the Louisiana b^'anch dl New Orleans have secured a list of outstand ing persons who will appear on the four c^y prograai extend ing throughout the entire Con ference! Dr, Jdaje, Yergan__Execu- tivc Director of the Internation al Committee on South African Acairs, Dr. Buford Logan, Prof. of Hia^/ at How^d Univer sity, Dr^Rajni Patel, Head of the Youtn Movement of India, Dr. Alain Locke, Howard Uni versity, Dr. F. D. Patterson, Tuskegee InstHtute fiVid others will be some of the speakera. On thousand young people will assemble, and make efforts to awaken an interest in young people ^ to the importance of ttie ballot and other problems co.ifronting ^r grOup in the South. Dr. J. Max Bond, Dillard Lriversity, Rev. Norman A. Hiuimes, Cent|tal Congregational Church, New Orleans, Jessie 0. Tl omaa, So.utharn Field Kepresen tative. National Urban League, Prof. Dexey WiUcerson, , Vi«e- Preaident American l'ederation Te;iteher8, and Archbibhop J. F. Runimel, Diocese of New Orleans are a few of the sponsors who fully indorse the conference and tle principles of the Congress. Some of the highlights includ ed on the programs are: a four act Di^ma, written especially f^r the Conference by Prof. R. Edmoinds, Dillard UniversUy, “THE LAND OF COTTON” a country wide art exhibit and a mt'sical festival pranged and supervised by Prof. Hall. The Congress has sponsored special tours throughout many Southern StM.es. In this manner. u'uny small towns and villages have been contacted. Teachers, preachers, civic workers, union lej-Uers and other influencial in- di' iduals havr~tleen drafted into the movement. This was dona with the object of interesting young people in the movement and securing new delegates from communities that have no Coun cils set up. After the Conferenipe ti'ese new delegates will be in- t’lested to the extent of return- ii'g to their different communi ties and organizing local 'Youth Councils. Special Interest has bc'en given to the States of Mississippi and Lpuisianat. Through this method of recruit ing 1000 to 1200 delegates will be attendants at th^ Conference. The movement of the SNYC js tVi! most Comprehensive and far-; rei{.)(jhing progressive movement of the South. There are 5i3 affili- ateate membership of 500,OQO persons, 1 Hospital Praised 33T. LOUJ'S, Mo, — Homey 0, pKiUips hospital, largest colored hbSipital in the world, was lauded as an outstanding milestone in the progress of the Negro rULe in a radio -address last week by John T. Tllank, executive secre tary of tJie Urbn Legu, in con nection with Negro Health Week which began Sundeijr. Accomodating 720 patients w>t^h staff of S(M), the hospital provides 46 o? the S>6 Negro in ternes graduated each ye^ in the United Statse, according to t!ie speaker. He further, said: “These institutions,, witii thett all-Negro slji^llfs, mean aegrega- ticn, and while segregation is a doiilbtful expedient, it dou btihg results. It gives t f minority, in this tance the Negro, an opportunity to show its stuff, to win vital experience and de- mon'strfUe that it has sometiiiiig valuable to contribute to tlM cause of communty welfare and prcgress.” ' Negro .Health Week, an axH nuied observance, will depict tha px't'gresa of the Negro in i^ealth methods, and health classes wiU b3 held for the genenl public.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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April 6, 1940, edition 1
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