«.n(vwi.inA TlMl£S TRUTH UNIIH^Eir UT^ PMHUARY Si tN9 White Sypref!!9cy; Cauie Of Anti-Atnericanism Discriinination Continues On Lai»r Front Soovcr or later the A.F.L.-C.I.O. is ffoiitK to have to (ace up to the question involvinp the employment of Negro workers in this cmintry. Ae«irHlnir,t) an article appearing in Fortune magtzinr this week, the piant labor orf^iiMtion hai Hone little more than «nact laws into its constitution anH pass beanlifnlly ■worded resolutions. All over the nation Ne gro workers are continuously iliscriminatod against by various local unions in spile of legislation passed by the A.I‘.I..-(.'.1.0. I'nder the caption, “1-tbor's Race Prob lem.” Fortune had the following to say in part: Hirec year* after the A^.L.-C>I0. maryer, it ia apparent that the federa- tkia'a ambitioaa plana for imprevinf tka lat af Nagro woricers have been a Jamal faihire—and not only in the Sovth. T|m federation’s conatitution atataa that "aD workers, without regard to race, creedi color, national origin, or anceatry," ahall ‘'ahare equally in the full benefit* of union organiattion.” To implement thia policy, tho AJX^l.0. ruled that aU member. nioBa m«*t delete diacriminatory prori- aaoM from tlwir conatitvtions; and it aft ■p a dvil'righta commttee to look into complumte about discrimination. But tha ralinr ' H«en violated by some member oni 'Ve coDomittee has often failed to g '.Vianoe %vith its demands that iwfivi . 1 locala stop discriminatiag against Negroes. Two years ago, in fact, Jamas B. Carey, president of the Inter- national Union of Electrical Worker*, r»> signed aa dteirman of the civil rights • committee^ charging that its activities were futile. The National Association »or the Advancement of Colored People re cently addressed a tart latter to A.F.L.- C.IX). PraaUant Oaorga Meany complain ing abfut tha fadaration’s lack of progress in aiMling discrimination; Meany’s answer was sympathetic bat non-committal. Said the article fiirliicr: South or north, Negro worker* today are largely excluded from the Interna tional Brotherhood of EUectrical Work er*, tha Plumbers, and the Locomotive Firenan. In many other unions there is a mixed pattern: exclusion in some areas, free acceptance in some, and acceptance into segregated locals in other*. Some such mixture characterizes the Bricklay ers, Painters, Plasterers, Operating Engi- neera. Sheet Metal Workers, Railway Clerfcs, Tdegraphers, Maintenance of Way Employes, Railway Carmen, Tobac co Workers, Pulp and Sulphite Workers. It a]>pears to us that such an attitnU> on the part of local labor unions not f)nly de stroys confidence in labor per se but encour ages'Kegroes to become strike breakers, scabs and enemies of labor in general. We tliink labor's greatest strength lies in a united front, including workers of all races, crecds and col ors. As long as there is one human being who is qualified to work anl is prevented from doing so because of his race, creed, or color the future of labor is not safe. Non-discrim ination in fact, rather than on paper, should be the goal of A.1‘M>.-C.1.0. local unions, if the parent organization hoi)es to continue as a factor in protecting the rights of workers in this country. ^bII^ Next Time "Chet Huntley" Sayj "Too Fast," Asit Him To Give Some SPIRITUAL IlYSIGHT By REV. HAROLD ROLAND Always On The Outside Looking In f ENCOUIiAGING GOOD IN OTHEeS The time has come when efTorts to secure employment as highway patrolmen and mem bership in the North Carolina National Guard should be sought by Negroes in this state. In nearly every city of any size in North Caro lina Negroes are serving with efficiency as policemen. In the U. S. Army, Navy and Air Force, members of the race are drafted or enter as volunteers as a matter of routine. We, therefore, can fintl no reason why they have to be barred frotn holding similar posi tions within their own state. While we are on tlie subject of employ ment of Negroes in state agencies, we may as well call the attention of our readers who are so loyal to the IJemocratic Party in North Carolina to the fact that in J957 there were 63 governmental board* in thi.s state, l>oth re- rr^u^erative and non-remunerative, employing the services^f over 600 persons. On all these boards and agencies Negroes held only four positions, those of members of the State Board of Education, the State Board of High er Education, the State Recreation Comniis- sion and the State Meiiical Care Commission. In spite of the fast that Negro voters in North Carolina have overwhelmingly a|^ain and again voted the Democratic ticket in state and county elections they are most alWay.s left on the outside lookings in when it comes to appointments by the governor or other- wise. ' Here are wmc of(the ^t^te (fev^rninentai' Board! and Commissions on v\hich Negroes^ have never had any representation, altholigh most of the positions are filled by guberna torial appointment: Advisory Budget Commission, Agricul tural Hall of rtime, Board of Agriculture, Board of .Alcoholic Control, l)ei)artment of .Archives atid History, Art Commission, .State Art Society, Board of Assessment, Hanking Commission, State Bar Council, Coniniission for the Blind, Board of Boiler Hules, Huild- and ^rounds, Turnpike .Authority, (jovernor ing Code Council, Board of I'ublic Buildings Richarr Caswell Memorial Commission, Civil ian Air Patrol, Council of Civil Defense, Board of Conservation and Development, Board of Correction and Training, Board of Mlections, Employment .Security Commission, liugenics Board, Gasoline and Oil Inspection Board, General .Statutes Commission. Board of Health, Highway Commission, State Hospital Advisory Council, Hospital Board of Control, Industrial Commission, Insurance Advisory Board, Judicial Council, Board of Commis sioners of the l.aw Enforcement (tfiicers’ Benefit and Retirement Fund, 1-lbrary Htjard, Local Government Conmnission, Local "Barnabas went to Tarsus to look for Saul . . —Acts 11:25 Barnabas had the gift of en couraging the goodness in oth ers. He .saw the great powers of Paul and harnessed them for the Church at Antioch. This quality is essential for all great leadership. It* should, be found in mothers, teachers and preach ers. It is also an essential qual ity in business execullves. Many great souls would have been lost in obscurity without the magic touch of some rare soul with this quality. Even Paul’s religious genius might have been wasted without the encourage ment of a Barnabas . . Barna bas went to Tarsus to look for Paul . . It is a blessed tliins to find and bring out the rich treasures of good in others.. This calls for a big-hearted spirit and keen in sight. All loo often we are tempted to overlook the good in others. Many limes this spirit is rooted in fear and envy. Thus, those who see and give en couragement to the good in oth ers are noble souls. We need more people with the spirit of Barnabas. Many rich treasures of human talent are lost for no one speaks that word of encouragement. O, the tragedy of lost gifts. Many with great gifts “arc born to waste their fragrance on the desert air . . .” Do you see and en courage the good in others? Let us take every opportuni ty to encourage the good in oth ers. Your word of encourage ment can mean so much. Help someone with a word of en couragement to make the most of that gift from God. An article appeared recently in a magazine and the tragedy of it was that a woman did not giw tha proper e.ncouraeement Government Employe.s Retirement System. Merit-.System Cotmcil, Milk Commission, Mu nicipal Board of Control, Board of I’arolcs, Board of Pensions, State I’ersonnel Council, State Ports Authority, Prison Advisory Coun cil, State Prison Commission, .State Probation WATCH ON THE POTOMAC Commission, .State Board of Public Welfare, '■ Division of Purchase and Contracts, Roanoke Island Historical Commission, Rural Electri fication Authority, State .Stream Sanitation Xj^mittee, N. C. Symphony .Society, Teach- ahd Stat^ Employees’ Retirement Systeui, Xextbook Commission, Turnpike Authority, Utilities (iMmmission, Veterans Commission, Board of Water Commisson an(J Wildlife Re sources Commission. to her husband who had great gifts. All he needed was that word of encouragement. A lit tle child stopped by the other day to show me her report card. We gave her a word of encour agement and she went joyously on her way. That word of en couragement could mean the difference between success and failure. Barnabas brought Saul from Tarsus and gave him a chance to use his great gifts in the Church at Antioch. There is great joy in awaken ing the good in others. Here we have one of the joys of the ministry. Inspirational teachers do a great job at this point, too. Motherhood, loo,, is richly re warding in nurturing and bring ing out the good in children. Even the business executive can do great wonders in discover ing and utilizing the good in others. Why would you miss the great joy that comes from see ing and encouraging the good to be found in others? Let us always be alert and gracious enough to see and en courage the good in those around us. There is a rare joy in know ing you have helped .someone along life’s way. By CMAS. P. HOWARD, SR. (HNS) UN C*ff**pondtnt UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. — The General Awambly of the United Nations resumeel its 13tli Session here at UN Headquarter* Friday, February 20 to consider the question of the imlependence of the trust territories of the Cameroons. The Session having recessed Dec. IS, 1M8. Since 1914, when s Dritish and French invasion team conquered them , the Csmeroons have been divided into the French Csme- and the Britigh Cameroon*. That division is going to be important in this session of the UN. french camiroon INDIRRnURNCK iXPKCTRO There seems little doubt that the independence of the French Cameroons on January I. 1900 will be agreed to by the General Assembly. Frsnce has foraierly placed before the grant indepen dence to the French Cameroons January 1 I960. On Friday, Louis Jackquinot, Minister of State for France asked for a unanimous vote granting in dependence to the French t-’ame- roons. Actually little opposition to this independence is expected. The Trusteeship Council on Tuesday last, recommended it by a vote of 12 to I (The Soviet Un ion) . With the United Arab Re- pblic abstaining. abit-of-thisand-that The first time a "Chet Huntley” tells you, that ‘you, the NAACP, the Urban League, The Mont gomery Improvement Association, The Tuskegee Civic Association, The Negro Ministers are pushing too hard, too fast’ — Ask him to write down what rights guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States, he is willing to give up for himself, his wife and his chil dren, tell him don’t tell you about it just write it down ... It is in teresting to watch the Negro who’s always talking about “we’re not ready” Ask him to list the people who are ready, and be sure and find out what he means by “we.” It’s Interesting how uften the Guy putting out that noi.sc hopes it will get back to the w'hite folks he’s trying to impress .... WaUh out fur the ‘segregationists’ to try to make capital oMt “f the ‘tech nique of 'white children’ staying away frcm integrated schools. Thai’s just a facet of ‘no public schools.’ Thai’s their problem there.. Thai’s their slumblin" block .... Senator Lyndon (f.ying- down). Johnson’s Integrity ,'is go ing lo rise or fall on wiiether or not his ‘filibuster legislation,’ pushed thru the Scrtale at the openini of the Senate ‘was gen uine’ or just a slick politicians trick.’ , I keep reminding you, the Guy is running for President like mad. We don’t want a ‘slicker’ tor the l.«ader of this Great Nation .... So I^ui.siana is trying to tighten up her election laws so .she can erase more than 100,000 Ne groes front voler registration rolls. Says Sen. Hainach, Chairman of the Ix!gislative “Watch Dog” Committee on segregation — “A lai’ge numlier of Negroes just can’t pass the tests for registra tion. The tests are based on in telligence, not education, and in telligence is something bred into people through long generations.” Senator, you really don’t want ta sUnd on that one do you? An awful lot of Negroes in Louisiana can qualify under your ‘breeding test’ and a lot of the others will meet you coming back under your other rules. All we ask is that you make ycur rules apply to every body and enforce them fairly, we’ll go for ourselves from there . . . When an indigenous people are in the midst of the effort to throw out their Colonial Over lords, they often find their great est roadblock to be members of their own group, who arc the re cipients of ‘special favors’ from the colonial powers. We wish it weren’t so but that is why there is so much fighting within the African Family in Africa at this time. We repeat, “we wish it weren’t so.” It seems to be a wholely unnecessary part of the price for freedom. So long as selfishness is a part of man’s makeup we will probably have this problem, no matter what the “system.” A Half Century Of Achievement By ROBERT SPIVACK ANOTHER TEAPOT Another Challenge For The DCNA The city election to be held here oh Satur- Uy, May 16 will present the greatest chal lenge to the Durham Committee on Negro Affairs it has faced since itq beginning. Be cause of the splitting tip of the Pearson »nd Hillside School precincts, an entirely new registration has been called for by the Dur ham Comity Board of Elections. Thus, the Conitnittee is faced with the task of grouting enotigh interest in the forthcoming election the number of registered voters up to w%«re it was prior to the changes. NeeUfS5 to say, an intense registration c«m^ign must be conducted from th? opeti for registration until they arc closed. Every church, club, fraternity, busl- M. 1. JOHN^. Coninlyr MAimS: $4M ntt JW4M sonal responsibility to register himself and ness and school should see to it that all of their members and employes register during the three weeks or more the books will be open. Every individual should feel it his per- get every other person around him to reg ister. We urge the officers of the Committee on Negro Affairs to begin organizing their forces now so that when the books are opened they will be ready to begin work and continue to do so until they are closed. The nutnber of registered Negro voters must be brought up to where it was prior to the precinct changes but cannot be done by merely talking about the matter. It is going to take hard work and careful planning. It would be a fine tiling if some of the stu dents in political science at N. C. College would volunteer to aid in i}iaking a door to dflor survey of homes in the three precincts where the new registration will have to be made. Students in government in our high schools could also help in boosting the regis- trftion. Whatever it takes the Committee should t»p tt> -dnJm# Negre^ltleem-to portance qf entering their names on the reg istration books. Another Teapot Dema? Every professional politician is likely to agree wii.h a remark attributed to President Harding’s Secretary of the Navy, Edwin Denby, that “You cannot touch oil without getting dirty.” There is something faboul the black gold—I suppose.,, jj.’s the easy money—that makes men do things they wouldn’t do under ordinary circumstances. Ameri can history and world history, too, are full of the tales of men and governments falling apart because of oil politics. There is not much doubt any longer that il was the realization that Alas ka is a potential source of great oil wealth that helped pave the way for her becoming the 4flth state. Where petroleum is concerned men tend to become compulsive and sometimes they seem unable to account for their own behav ior. The vigor.':^ith which re sponsible politicians put them selves on the chopping block in order to pass the Natural Gas bill, with its bonanza for the oil interests, is testimony to this pat tern of behavior. * * ♦ Now once again, while public attention is focused on the ill- 'TWSS’flr^ei'reiary'oyStSie 'C (11168 and diverted from other matters, the oilmen are busy at work. They are trying to get their hands on the huge Naval oil re serves on the West Coast. There are three of these re serves: No, 1 is at Hk Hills, Kern County, Calif, and consists of 38,969 acres of land; No. 2 at Buena Vista Hills, Calif, consists of 29,341 acres;.and No. 3 is at Teapot Dome, Natrona County, Wyoming and consists of 9,481 acres. No one is exactly sure how much oil there is undergrond. Hut the most conservative esti mates indicate that Reserve No. 1 is worth at least one billion dollars worth. This is the prize that Standard Oil of California is now eyeing. »» U O HUMPHREY VS. KENNEDY— The Democratic battle lines for 1960 are beginning to take form, although it is far too early to make predictions about how they will finally turn out. Sev eral of the Democratic hopefuls are beginning to move into the open with obvious political ap peals but they are all advanc ing warily. Vice President Nixon apprais ed the possible Democratic can didates the ether das^ in a speech at Los Angeles. He was singular lyfaet, Trvm* out of his way to ssy nice things about several men who might become possible rivals. In Nixon’s opinion Sen. John Kennedy of Massachusetts is by far the front-runner. With this appraisal there is not much dis agreement among Washington correspondents. Some of Ken nedy’s Democratic rivals arc de lighted that he seems to be so far out front now. That means, they say, that he will be the major target of brick-bats while they can all seek cover, without •seeming to be trying to get out of the line of fire. 1 t ^ Unless Adlai Stevenson should suddenly emerge as a compro mise choice—a not too likely prospect—the liberal Democrats are sure to cluster around Sea Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota. So what Humphrey does and says now becomes quite import ant, both for his own prospects and for the possible direction the party will take. ^ Just to keep the record up to date, here in short form are the two lines of approach now be ing employed by Humphrey and Kennedy: KENNEDY—He is trying to get his name attached to a labor reform bill that seems to end some of the abuses disclosed by out being anti-union. He is also determined to remove the so- Congratulations to the NAACP on its 50th anniversary-! They have been 50 years of real ac complishment. No one—not even its bitterest enemies — can say that the NAACP has been a ‘■paper” organization or one whose greatest achievement is it has existed over a long period of years. The NAACP has been a fight ing, performng organization dur ing all of its 50 years. Carrying on its struggle for full citizenship rights for the Negro through the courts, the NAACP has won more than 30 ca.ses in the United Slate Supreme Court, establish- . ing; Hghit 80?r rigjit fo^ Amer- i ica’s tenl^ citizen. ' Now that the NAACP is 50, it is not yet ready to sit back ^ on its laurels. It is not ready to give up. It plans to fight on and on for first-class ciUaenship until the United Slates is free of all distinctions and discrimina tions based upon race or religion. Appropriately, the NAACP was born on Abraham Lincoln’s birthday in the year 1909. It has always been an interracial or ganization, founded by a group of 53 men and women, white and Negro, who believed in the prin ciples upon which this country was founded and who believed that they should be carried out not only on paper but in every day life. The goal set then is still the goal today. ■ We are pleased that Missouri’s governor, James T. Blair Jr., is sued a proclamation designating February 12 as “NAACP Golden called “Catholic issue” from the campaign by asserting, first, that he opposes federal aid for parochial schools and, seqond, he would not send an American ambassador to the Vatican. HUMPHREY—Right now he is concentrating on the neglect of American education. Only 8% of the national income goes for schools and, this he says, is “foolhardy, indefensible, a na tional disgrace.’’ 0 A man will «o a lofifl way to T» '•nitnari lust sll down at the dretsini table. Anniversary Day.” In his proclamation, Governor Blair recognized the NAACP as an organization dcsignel “lo pro mote equality of rights and lo eradicatiFcaste and race pi'c among the citizens of the Unit ed Stales, to advance the in terest of colored citizens, lo se cure for them impartial suffrage and to increase their opportuni ties for securing justice in the courts, education for their chil dren, employment lo Ihcir abil ity and complete -equality be fore the law.” These words in Gov. Rlalr’s proclamation form as good a statement on the principles and obi.ecliyes y ol; the NAACP as wo have .seen anywhere.* ■ In signing the proclamation and affixing lo it the great seal of the slate of Missouri, Gr»\er- nor Blair was sincere in wish ing the NAACP “many happy returns of the day.” The gov ernor’s family, one of the most distinguished ones in the stale of Missouri, is known for its belief in equality and fairness for all people regardless of race, creed or color. The gov ernor is proud, and justly so, of the record along this line made by mend)crs of his family. The NAACP has wrought well during its first 50 years. May it continue to live and lo pros per until America is really the “land of the free and the home of the brave” and there will bo no further need for any organi zation to protect the rights of any segment of our population. —Kantas City Call The eyes of the Lord are In everr place, beholding the evil and the good. —(Proverbs 15:3.) Ever present and envelop- iufr ua as the air we breathe ia tha Holy Spirit of God. He knows the good and helpful things we do for others, and bJesMd. He also knows 1 Wljr al^esife I we hide, but In Hla mercy will i help ua overcome them.