TT tut CAMi%1l4 VtUCS nHt tRUM MMMOktr •» 4WUARY 17. 119 n0m A Nin^ M Of Character It shoiiW l>c. cnib»rra!sinp if nut humil- ating ti> niftnibcrs of riio EinwopM Chtirrli ill Xripth CnivtHna to know O’at arc connectcd with a C'lirislain ortranization th»t cun t«l«*rati sn«h n man :i> the Kcv. Jan»f'> Parker I^jos of StutcsTillc as the rcc- tor of one of its churches. Tn a statement ac- kni\vlp«lffi»t|f hif cloctJion ns president the Kcv. Mr. H>r»s had the f^)ll^)winJ^ to say: ‘^Oar oi^itniiatian a*Mi«l« for nuny thing* mrnom flnoi- Wwng «| p- eMnra- tion of our nation’s htteTrity and sover* cipnitu, ■•voMaaMl. •ccarding to the CtmMMmm, iwitd ataliM. rifltts, indhMMi and priyt* propertjr. 'We are tfotieem«4 prHMMAf. n*w with tba #r«tAnwtion df naeirf mg' regatKNi in «ur i^nUic acbvdb.” It a])])Mrs to us that this so-called minifi- t;r oi ilic ii*. -ooncernetl with aboin cvcrvlhin" except acUanciti^ the tttachinpfs of JesHs Christ or the savin" of smils. When he as'a mtnisttr jllaces the preservation f»f >e;|re"ation in the pul>Iic schools nliove tlwit (>f M)\il .s,Tvin{( we liclieve he is performintf out of character and nt^eds to read afjain anI a'^iun rhe sermtni on the mount and the pro nouncement of the .\postle I'anl when he de clared m the question of race that “I per- ccii’c that God is no respecter of person and thnt out of one blnod Ood created all people for to ilwrtH upon the face cH tJie «3ir#h." The Rev. ^fir, f9ees went on funthar to say fhat "we are now passing through the most critical time in the history of the human race, when the destruction of the white race through racial amalgamation is heing careful ly planned,” etc. So, instead of emhat4cing on a program to save souls Dees has set out to save the white tnce from destwuclion. .Vt the most there ar$ about 17 milTioti >*e- groes In the I’nited States, snrrounded on every hand by l.^.*! milkfeu or more whites of various strains, strata and what nr^jt. H the li?.i niilHan,whites are so weiiK a«.t«.!ie. over come l)y 17 mitHon Xegroes then we say the former arenU worth saving. We thriik the Rev. Mr. Qees' fdir >tems from the usual inferiority complex that ue- sets the-nverage ignorartt soiithern’er. We do not Ivilreve that he or anyone else can pro duce sulMitnntial evidence that there is any er/janif!«l eiffort on the part of any persons •r 'groifj) of persons to destroy any r'ace by amalgamation or amy other ntethod. instead Mr. Dees is m’ereome with a dose of—race hatred and preJufFtce for whidli tllertt i,s no remedy save the lo*-c of Hhn who 2)090 years ago taught all mankihd that only through the Fatherhood of (»od and the litotherhood of man can peace obtnin in the worl*!. F«^S8vin| Avewes 01 fseape fof ?N Sotilk Ttie -aftpafftnt search of southern governor* for a fiu-'d'Mving avcntte of escape from the st.ind a majority' of them have taken in defy ing fedrrai ootift rulings on the qhcsrtion of integration is one of those efforts that shows a lack of coiirege, nobility and statesman ship. It takfs. a noble and ooniageoiis. person, not a coward, to confess his sins when he is- wroiig. The matter of face-saving only arfsei> when one attempts to dPfV' right come hell anI high water, ft doe* not matter when one is truly repeiitent. TDie only thing that d»)es matter is to clear one’s cimscience and to see that right triumphs over wrong. Those of us who are accjunintcd with the average southern ]X)litician are satisfied that thtrre is not enough nobility anl courajfie in a single gover»or.(r«m yicjfidia^o^IigsLssip- pi tl) confefts ijiibficiy iHofi'tljt 9fitp of flfffice he took to ti]rhold the Constitution of the United States included that portioit- of it which guarantees-10 moH lU ail colors^-races and creeilft, tHiiiaKty, befere^tlt* !a^y. Jilen jof *nch nijliilitn^ aiwl rpittmge -irS seldom ricrted to pnblit office in t+te South. If by chance they get there by appointmerft they are soon cm down by hate moryfers am! crooked poli ticians. A case in point is that of Dr. Frank I’orter Graham who was appointed to the United States Senate by the late fjovernor W. Kerr Scott only to l»e defeated the very first time he came tij»-for elertitm. Morally speaking only t4»e very lowest Xegro citizens of Xorth CarolifJa will not l>c surprised that a Sttperior Qjurt jwdR-t re- fuseI to releane lb« Httle d{ Monroe who are now bemf'Ww w- a rtatit refotwa- tory becauoe a Mtth? girl phkymiite kissed ot»e or both of them, \eithtr are they stirprised at the fact that the judgi Ie- l»lores the “storm .of pul>licity from ci»rl rights advocates ami neAvi«paper« suiw«*mid- ing the case." The reaction (»f the ]>i^si(ftng juIgc is exactly AviuU. ii%Ut be e.'cj>ected tn any case of siittilar circumstances. It is ical tf the South and rnns trne to form 90 far as North CiroHirt fe (^mctnied. In order to justify the persecution of these two Negro cfirjdreu all soijts of. lies, half lies and innuendoes have been- concoct ed to make thetn ai»])ear. as adult cn'niinals instead of towo undfcra^e ymttiis. In the face >{ the series of delim|nencies, involv ing larceny and breaking and entering, with which they «re lunv accused, it itp^oarg strange .to. us tlwt Jndge J. Mani^rtoA Price made flo.«Mry ih hfe jtavwtile rccqrdji ttntll ' ' II- Pubuike^ •Wfl|LAitu**w, et Ottrham. ft. C. ti/ tnved F*ibJuh«r»t Trne, IMadgaiqgfli I fl 4^6B. Pettigrew St. mt) llMftlw; MOOT Hh* Aik ^ UU9* .mmft; *4m pm mjnk mmp, MftDEn youNG FELLOW f ■-W •• Ji i THEY ScBMTOBE V' Vi*'-' ' ® I MW1N6 BF^ICUUY*- jiH' ' * KRH«Slt> BETTER NOT USE THE ftHC* 5 t' " Have Said TteDmeClassc WATCH ON THE POTOMAC ■y iCOKnf SPIVACK A few weeks ago the Dixie Basketball Classic was plaj-od in Raleigh. Several out‘Of**t(rte teams participated, and we watched with intcresi the Bear cats from the Universit.v of Cin cinnati and the Michigan State University team—bolli of which had Negro players. When Oscar Robertson, Cin cinnati’s Negro ace, came to the tournament he was the nation’s number one scorer with an av erage of almost 4n points per game. Michigan Stale brought two Negro players, on? of tlicm being Jumping Johnny Green, a high scorer ind the nation's lop rebounding champion. North Carolina State in Inc .second round of play met the Cincinnati five and defeated the I^arctits 60 to 61, holding Oscar Robertson to 29 points. For the championship. North Carolina Stale Colelge overpowered the Michigan State Colelge club .by a sizeable score. State won by playing a possession type of ball, attempting to score only when there was an excellent chance. Stale Collerte wa.'; able to ac complish thi.! feat by playing two or three men on the visit ing teams’ ace players. Their plan of attack hemmed in Oscur Robertson and Johnny Green. While every team is out to wm, we feci that this plan of “put- tihg forth spccial effort to sl*p Oscar Robert.son and Johnny Green” was in a sense nnnports- man like. The only sportsman ship that deserves admiralion is a man-to-man type of play, ii.seil , almost unanimously over the nation. To concentrate on stopping one man in baskellwll is some what similar to “unnecessary roughness and slugging’ in foot ball, hitting below the Ijcit” in boxing, and "spiking the base runner” in baseball. In order that State C0II030 will not placc itself in a position to be criticized, we hope in the future it will concentrotc in Winning the chamDiunship by playing a man-to-maii type of basketball. —TME (Raleigh) CAROLINIAN, January 10. element of sotrtherner is represented in both hfiiises of Coi>gnes«. .Snoh rtien value the pow er of ]7tthlfc office ttbofe rijifht or princrjde. Their philosophy is “win at any cost," and they therefore will stoop to the very lowest nrethods to achieve that tnd. That- is why soiit^rn politicians will (continue to ai4>ea| to the -rgnoranti voter of the South by his defi ance of federal court orders* on the qwestSon of integr«ti(m. Governor .Mfnond of Virginia, Governor Faubus of ArTjansas and other southern governors know thfcy are fighting a losing battle against the federal -courts and th«?y wwitid be hajjpV, if in some way they could' fimi a face-sarfng avenue of escape from thoir plight. J:f the stiraws .sliow the way the w-ind js blowing we think anotlrtr decade will man- ♦f^^s^ a great' change in th» tyfrt of oanididate the majority of voters wiir *(upport for pub lic office in many sotlthffn states. The ver)' foot that several daily j;ewspa,pers 01 Virginia have bt^nn ito waver in tineir stand agannst iHtegrit>i*iii -while-g4^>»ps aM l>«ing organised to keep ^e schools open even if a token de gree of ititegrdtion mttsi be accepted nia'ke strong evicleiice that flie fftce - saving ^a venue of escajK may hot bi too far away {for the governor of Vir^finia if nit several other southern states. Onct Vit^ihi* bows to the will of the fedar-al courts Jgov^ernor* in other southern stat-frs are sin*fr*tt) selfce the fact as an avenue of escape. ' | The Way H Appears As We Enter ^ The Gentle Art 1959 In Little Rock..... 01 Johnson they were involved in kissing or heing kiss ed by the>vhit« girls. The attempt to Svhitev(ish this most re cent bravesty of Xorth Ci»r»Iin(i .courts mnst not be nJlowciil to go ntV^h^teitgiid. The-fftct remains that them twi>,sm*ijlt bi^s were nev er jsiiltd, thteaft*nwl xi^th ,' bemg jafied or taken to; a reformatijrt^ Wt;il thffv brol« the unwritten law ■'of White supreitlacy.-It was then and only then that tiiey were arrested, .slummed in jail ami held there f«jr six lays withont being allowed to see tiieir parents or friends. We are compelled to look with sfispicion on Price’s statememt’ that the reason he niarttj tK> pneviotts erftwtw 4n his wcordfi is because he wanted to help thrtm. U takes no sage to determine how mtiih help a juve nile judge would be to tw'O little Negro boys to Whom ho neferrefl- io twice in Ins testi mony as “n^gers.” When he slammed' them in jHfl -«mi held them ther« for six. days he was trivirjg th«n «KactIy 6h* khid help he felt they should have. We fWink ftie Xational A,ssoci%tion for the AdvAncetnent of Gotared f*eoplt sNoirftl per fect the i|f||ie«I ftjr w,hid« it gnye rto^e at the f{r»t 1^4 ooly real, h^in^g 4jie .two litUt boys hiivje had. The case should have the •Mpport of twry AtiMrictHi who helievw. tkm HbotM- Hefore «!)« hrw as equsH vithout ttijguM for their race, creed or eolor. Senate Democratic .I^eader Lyndon Johnson made a rejnark- able speech to his fellow^em- oerats on the occasion , dt the opening of the 86th Congress. What made it remarkable was Johnson’s ability to say so little in so many words and make them sound so full of impor tance. Example: “Our strength rji% ( what we are—and what we prove ourselves to be.” Further example: (‘We need new ideas in many fields. We need to forge new tools of gov ernment.” And: “Our first responsibili ty is responsibility itself.” Any critic could run through the text and come up with half dozen more Johnson sayinjs that~ will never make Bartlett’s Book of familiar Quotations. Yfet a historian who reads this undoubtedly ghost - written speech and thought it gave a true measure of the man would be making a serious mistake. Any- appraisal of Johnson must recognize the fact that he is a horse-trading politician, who thinks in the following terms in just about this ordcn: (1) Will it help re-elect Lyndon John son? (2) What will Texas busi nessmen think about it? (3) How does it affect the rest ol tlie nation? Even if Johnson did not \me the speech and even if hi.) po litical homilies read as it tiiey were meant for the village idiot, there was an underlying philo- soirtiy in the Johnson text. The heart of the speech, as 1 road it, was in the following sen tences: “What we (meaning Johnson himself—RGS) can do now is subject to certain limits. “We have been given great strength, but not overriding strength. The Executive arm of national government remains under control of another party. “We have—by our majority ' here—an obligation to lead. We do not have aitthority to com mand. We have powe« to ail- vise and consent. We do not have powers to implement and accomplish.” It sounds sweet and reason able. But what does it mean in a pplHician’s language? This was. In Shprt, not an ex hortation to the troops to go forth into battle to fight for the liberal ideals which were so appealing to the voters last November. It was, insteadi «n oxhortation to “Go forth tnd make deals with the boys down Pennsylvania Ave. We can’t Jbln them, but we won’t fight them. We’ll go forward togetfier, smothering the popular man date.” ' THE OLD COALITrON—What does Johnson construe that r(ian- dale to be? He said further in his remarks that the mandate of the Democrats is “for eonfi- dent and creative and cens^c- tivo leadership.” Somefiow, though, when he got around to listmg the things in whicti the party siiould “lead” he forgot to, mention civU rights, ,^vi] l^berites or re-^ninK pi|bljc 1 schdols. I ^ Now that's quite ad ever- sight, for a man wha' ac«i|fes tlffe opposition of Bejng cated to inorlia and full ef'sla- tid. ■' But when you put down John- soa’^ speech and watch the man in action then it becomes quile apparent that it was all meant for the- birds. What was his first official act, on the first day of Con gress? It was to shut off de bate on a proposal to limit the filibuster. And what his major political operation? To ensnare the new RepuDiican Senate Leader, Everett McKinley Diric- sen, into a deal to back Uic so- filibuster proposed by the Tex as lawmaker. This posed quite a dilemma for Dirksen. He agreed'to be a co-sponsor of the Johnson reso lution. At the same time his aides informed the office of his IlllBois colleague. Sen. Paul 'T)duglas, {fiat W was f6r,''a real curb on endless talk in the Sen ate. But, of course, for Dirksen and for Johnson the “real” problem in the forthcoming Con gress is not civil rights, not the filibuster, and >not reopenmg the scjiools. Those are seco..d- ary matters. What’s real for them is whether it will be pos sible to re-establish the old co alition of Dixie Demociats and ' right wing Ucpublicans which has for so long dominaiec! the Senate. ' For these two estimable gen tlemen the “real” enemies are those" liberals who insist that th'e pled’ges £he politicians pro mised the voters last November must be carriod out. To John son and his associates Senators liko Oouglas, Javits, Humphrey, Case.qf New Jersey, and Morse Of Oregon are dangerous men. Governor Faubus is still bas king in the nation's ^headlines in his infamous ro'.3 Attorney General Bruce Ben nett is still making himself ridi culous, trying to gain the af- fedion of the state’s segrega tionists. Truth In Little Rock is agita tion while democracy is Com munism. A traffic violation is a more serious offense than att&iTipled murder. While the nations of the world are putitng emphasis on knowledge, povernor faubiis is glorifyisft. i|nqra4we and. adv9- caling juvenile detlnquency>. • The crisis that hns disgraced America will remain unsolved until the pcnole of Little Hock I who have something- 'at stake Former governor, Sid Mc- Math’s admitted mistake while he was governor of bringing Or- val E. Faubus to the city''from Groasy Creek vrill always re main a dark spot on nis ad ministration. Arkansas will remain through out the year of 1959 a;» one of Russia’s greatest aides in her elfoct to spread Communism throughout America. This, we’ll admit doei^n’t ap pear too encouraging, bj^'when the use and aulhoyjtV '6| rea- the headlines, hiS olhcp^cture seems possible. —Arkansas Stat* Press.. Jan. 9. The Senate s Rule 22 Most Go SPIRITUAL INSIGHT By ItEV. HAROLD ROT.AND God-Fearing e "An upright) Get-f«arin9 ntan. ..." Acts 10:». O, that his trSb|t may increase among us. We^e in need of more simple, ordinary. God fearing people. The people who go about from day to day try ing to serve God humbly and reverently. We^ haw enough of, the self righteous, complacent and the satisfied. We have in need of more of the ordinary enough of the bigshots. We are peofMe who Inve God and seek to do his win. Yes, we need more of the Cornelius type. . .” “An upright, God-fearing aian.” Stiete am the p«opie, in the final mialysiiB, w^o ape the r«a> burdm beaners. l!hese people carry the major portion of the burdens in the great ihinistr} of the Church. They make the great sacrifices. They are this sharers and the beaeers of the burdens. And wjthout this great mass of honest Chrietians where would the church be? These people vepresent the in ner core of faithfulness. They make possible the ongoing program of the Christain ^min- istryj Jesus''laid the apoetotic fena- dation of the ChMMb on such people. You remember ^e call ed esdlnaigr, biunUe fi»h«nne», tH)^ ooU«cteM and others of a sknitpr natune. And' the wprld IpowB the stoty of the gfMt ^iervice reniiefod by these /simple and noble souls. And Am may God continue to inspire and bless these noble souls who live in simple Christian dignity and make possible the work of Christ Jesus, the Savior. The dod-fearing • man must continue to be the hope of the cause of Christ. These noble souls seek no special place of honor. These rare jewels of the spirit seek no great headlines but they are the life and leav en of the church. They carry on in the sunshine and in the starmy ^nriods of the Church. They remain loyal when others run away. Yea, these are the people that God and men oan count, oq. May God bless them and may their number increase. Under Senate Rule 22, adopt' ed in 1949, debate on a measure c_anngt be limited without agree ment of at least two-thirds of the full membership. In the past this has meant se curing the votes of 66 Senators f) halt a filibuster. With the dmission of Alaska, this re quirement rises to the impossi ble number of 68. Under this rule, a minority can and has talked indefinitely to kill any bill, chiefly civil rights, that it finds displeasing. Last Januai:y, an effort In get rid of Rule *^2 lost by a vote of 55 to 38, with 28 Hepi'bliuans joining hands with 27 D«mo- crals, princioally Souttierners, to protect the right to filibus ter. SIDES ARK already being chosen for another siiowdov’n battle on this issue when the 86th Congress convenes next Wednesday. Prospects .ire the brightest in history that Rule 22 will be a- mended. This is so because a large number of the reactionary Re publicans who voted with the Dixiecrats have been replaced with liberal Democrats pledged to abolish this m-Kkery of dem ocratic procedure. Southerners, who on other i.ssues have no tender consider ation for the rights of minori ties, have sought to enshrine They contend that unlimited Rule 22 as something inviolate, falk is necessary for the pro tection of a minority against the crushing weight ot the majori ty. * will stop fighting their coijsci- ence apd come face to face with the issue. THEIR ARGUMENT lacks merit. In a democracy the minority has no legitimate right to frus trate the will of the majority. The proposals for revision being offered by Senata liberals are not designed to stifle dis cussion. They permit 19 days or three Senate weeks of debate after a petition for closing de bate has been filed. That should be adequate time to fully and completely discuss both sides of any issue. AfteiL that lhe_. measure und_er discussion would have to be brought to vote. ANY SENATOR who says these proposals are unfair, or tjtjat they jeopardize free de bate, or that they infringe on the rights ot a minority, simp ly does not believe in democra cy. With complete victory so clearly in sight, the liberals must not allow themselves to be sidetrackcci by sordid deals or meaningless compromises of fered by that oily Texan, Lyn- ‘ don Johnson and his southern friends. Ours is a .government by ma jority, not by two-thirds. Thery^is nothing in ihe Con stitute whi:-n permits a back- waro minority ^(13 states) to thwart the desires and will of the other 36. Campy's Return Roy Campanella v/ill be a coach at the Los -\ngcles Hod- gers’ spring traininc; camp and this is news to greet wit It a leap of the heart and a glad mois ture in the eye. In his playing day.s, »i« could take Campy or leave birr.; he was one of the best ot his kind, but professional a'.nletes aren't the rock on which tne nation is founded. Right after he was in jured we fell as sorry as we’d feel for anybody so seriously hurl, but couldn’t feel lhat it was a calamity for the country that he’d no more woi'k behind the plate in major league base ball. Through the days of bis comeback, our respect for him has grown great. Any member of the team who shows himself anything like a quitter after observing Campy will be a rhinocer^ iu-f hide, spirit and mind. —Chapel Hill N«wt Leader, Jan. 6 Lei us all try to become such plDajIs of spiritual and 'moral slrenlgh in community. our church and