rAQI TWO TOT cabolina macs satubdat, sbpt. The Veneer Of American Civilization Just exactly how thin the gone to Khool for two dayi to declare themselves dpmly of that thin* we wme- >!rtthout event White 8, ItM cause America cannot con- and unborn generations of i ■■ itinue to flaunt its hTOocrisy your own races, but for your labout donocracy in the &ce white brethren, roaiw o f of all the darker races of the whom in this hour of destiny world without ultimately suf- are frustrated and blinded by fering the consequences. We| prejudices that have been ^ call you from the farms, fac- stilled into them over w tories, your homes or where- years. Without boasting, talk- ever you are to let nothing ing or bragging we call upon stand in your way Saturday you to go to the polte on Sat- to keep you from voting. urday and ^litely cast your Remember, you are not on- ballots against the uimoly ly voting to obtain human dig- scheme of the Pearsall Plan, nity for,your own children FACING THE ISSUE By DB. A. H. GORDON THE TWO PARTY PLATFORMS y to as American dents, the teachers and the law and order While they have rii^zation or culture was Negro students within that a chance to speak. Likewise week when one short time had already begun sensible Negro citizens must ^son from to forget about the diiference meet such JeUow white cit- KEon D^ went to in the color ol their akin, izens half way il not over half runton. Tennessee.’normally Democracy was becoming a way in an honest effort to up- JSuni “S^ceful ai^ reality. Christianity wlTW ^Id respect for law and or- law abiding citizens, and “»g enthroned. der. tunied it into a hell hole of So here is the saga of white The pretepe of fear of raving maniacs. Negro citizens supremacy at its best, or southern white folks that ev- of the little town who had should we say at its worst. For ery Negro student who sits in previously boasted of the fine Clintcm, Tennessee has prov- a classroom with a white stu- race relations and the inter- ed beyond any doubt that dent is a potential candidate racial love and respect that there is only the thinnest for an interracial marriage is existed in their community veneer between white supre- stupid, asinine and without saw decency, Christianity and macy and white degeneracy, foundation. The percentage ol every shi^ of morality Thus we must understand interracial marriages in states thrown to the winds in a week that sometimes the so-called where integrate schools are of senseless and fiendish at- culture we see existing among »*nd have been in process for tacks, tlireats and near attacks magnolias and over mint ® long number of years is of against any and every Negro juleps in the South is not yet small consequence in com- who hapened to come in sight far enough removed from the parison with the number of of the so-called superior race, jailbirds and harlots who clandestine interracial love _ I.- L 1 came over on the Mayflower affairs that are so prevalent This newspaper which last withstand the presence of and of common knowledge in week had^ written ^an editor- Negroes in a class- the South, i^ pramng the citizens of rooin_ What is needed in most C^ton for the maan^ m ^ . southern communities is more which they dispatched the Are we to further under- interracial fellowship where members of the White Cit- stand that in every city, town members of both races will izens Council by jailing him and hamlet the gasoline is that all for attempting to incite a race fhere only awaiting to ejrolode humanity is but grass and riot in the town saw its words once the match of hatred, in- *hat denial nf thp henofits of of praise go down the drain as tolerance, indecency and dis- demSr^y from ^e heU raged in Clinton. The respect for law and order is vidual endangers that enjoy- town was now hurling not on- fPPUed as it wm in C^ton? ^ b tj,e remainder. Some- ly threats against every Ne- We do not think so. We be- ^ow we must find a moment gro who came in view but lieve there are enough up- {firing our rush to a against the U. S. Supreme right white atizens in the 'to make some decent Court, the law 'enforcement average southern community, and women in the South agency, school officials or any whose forefathers d^ not ^ teach both races the person or persons who dared come over on the Mayflower, laundered so force- raise their voice in support of to seek and find a sensible fully in the “Sermon on the law and order. solution to the problems that Mount.” We must not let our Whatever essence pf moral- now confront us here in the communities be taken over by ity, decency and Christianity South over segregation. , hoodlums and other irrespon- that ever existed in Clinton These citizens are there but sibles, less the Christianity tcwk a walk when the White they must not become too and democracy we .to Citizens Council came in. complacent, too early. They possess become more a mock- Prior to its arrival in town must speak out for law and ery in the eyes of the world the 12 Negro students had order. It is their bounden duty than it already is. Pearsall Plan Shows How Much We Are Lacking North Carolina’s scheme to his summation that, stripped what they felt were the pre preserve segregation in its of legal jargon and technicali- vailing “emotions, customs, schools, otherwise known as ties, the only question which traditions and mores” on in- the Pearsall Plan, appears to was before the Court was ^®8ration. But the work of • j- f - , I. iu -X .11- i most men reflect m some us another mdication of how whether it was wilhng to say ^ay their own feelings and wc^fuUy short man falls of to America and the rest of the thoughts. Though the framers being prepared to accept the world that 15 million Ameri- of the-Plan claim they were exactmg responsibilities of cans were unfit to associate constructing something to the cr^tmg an atmosphere in with the remaining 135 mil- liking of the majority of which a luting peace among lion. The Court has given its whites in North Carolina, they ^tions ofthe world c^ be answer to that question. But were really fabricating some- fmt^ed. Ine basic premise of the South and North Carolina, thing to their own liking. It is the Pearsall Plan, as everyone spuming that answer, have because they themselves are conversant with issues wthin come up with an answer of not willing to forego the tlM state well knows, is that answer of their own. North luxury of racial hatred that the majority race will not Carolina would say, through they have devised such tolerate the admission of Ne- its'Pearsall Plan, that the N^ scheme. And, once one com^ gro pupib to schools which groes who live within its to this realization, to llie ^ve in the past been reserved borders are not fit to attend knowledge that the leaders of for whites only. It would be school with the white pupils official thought in the state naive Md downright dishon- of the state. The Peani^ have capitulated to such retro- Mt to believe that desegrega- Plan would give the official grade views of one segment tion^ a popu^ ^ng among sanction of the state to raek^ rf htmian nature, any faotpeUbt wuthem whiles. North Caro- intolerance. Behind intoler- lasting peace in the world is a linians included. But, after ance of any kind lies hatred, tenuous one indeed. For na- why neither party could offer mak^ that point, the Pear- And the Pearsall Plan says to tions, like states, are made up ’ any for a substantial re- s^ Plw proceeu to s^en- the citizens of the state, go in the final analysis of human auction of taxes, especially the der to the same kind of base ahead, indulge your hatred flit beings, motives which have wreaked the state’s behest. The Plan „ ^ j u , so much carnage and suffer- would put a premium on ha- , hatred has always been a mg in our time. It capitulates tred. It would pay ($135 per men. The rec to intolerance, to hatred and puoil) for racialhatred “ every great mind, from proceedstohammeroutaway ^ ' the Holy Scriptures down through which intolerance ^ the essence of the through the modems, testifies can be nourished. Pearsall Plan. And it gives an eloquently and profoundly on interesting, though altogether this question. If Americans ^^en the question of segre- suspected, insight into the cannot tolerate each other; gation in public education was character of the leaders of the how can they hope for this first arj^ed before the Su- state. The framers Of the Plan country to lead a world of Thurgood Mar- and their backers say they divided peoples to peace a- shall reminded the court in were acting in accord with mong themselves? Vote Against The Pearsall Plan Saturday, September 8, the not believe it will carry with ing their* vote against • the voters of North Carolina will it as great a majority as was plan. This coupled with an an te call^ on to vote on the first believed. ticipated large Negro vote a- Pearsall Plan which is in re- In the first place the ele- gainst it foreshadows tough aiity a plan concocted by its ment of fairminded white peo- though probably successful wthor and Mcked by the pie is increasing in North Car- going for the Pearsall Plan, uovemor of this state for one oHna and although for the „„ , „ expressed purpose, and that is present its members are some- Whatever happens we call defiance of the U. S. Supreme what silent, when it comes to on Negro voters to vote as Court’s ^^g on segregation, speaking out in the press, ra- never before, not because AXtnough it w our candid o- die and television we believe they have anything to gain by pimon mat the Pearsall bill; they will speak out at the bal- integrated schools other than will probably be passed we do lot box this Saturday by cast- academic equality but be- The shouting and th» tumult have died away in Chicago and San Francisco, our two major political parties have nominated their proposed candidates for the liigh offices ol President and Vice—President of the United States. Each party has announ ced its jplatform. Both of the parties dodged the main issues which should confront the vo- ten in the November elections. 11 we are to judge them by their platlonns both parties are not only conservative but reaction ary. Iiet us consider the things which neither party platform deals with constructively. First in.-importance, in the opinion ol this writer, is the lailure ol both party piatlorms to oUer a substitute for lorce, which ultimately means war, as a basis lor our foreign policy. Nowhere does either party plat- lorm mention the lact that since lorce, or war, is obselete in the modem world it is no longer ol any use whatsoever as an instrument ol national t>oUcy in the area ol international re lations or diplomacy. In spite ol the lact that all intelligent people know that John Foster Dulles is a miserable lailure as a diplomat, the Republican speaker at the Convention up raised him as “a great Secretary ol State.” The Democrats de clared that we must maintain our military power as a deter rent to war. Neither platlorm suggests that we should lorsake war and depend upon the United Nations and peacelul ne gotiations to solve our inter national problems on a basis ol justice and lalr-play lor all na tions, large and small. Nowhere in either platlorm is it indi cated that we would be much wiser to take a chance on Peace rather than on war. Secondly, neither party ol- lered any relief to the over- burdened tax^^payers this country. Ol course the reason Cite Ciai^0 MAIN OFFICE — 436 EAST PETTIGREW STREET Phones 5-0671 and 2-2913 ~ Durham, North Carolina Published At Durham, North Carolina Every Saturday By THE UNITED PUBLISHERS, Inc. WINSTON-SALEM OFFICE — 304 N. CHURCH ST. — PHONE 5-086B MRS. VELMA HOPKINS, Manager Ent^ed os second clan matter at the Post Office at Durham, North Carolina un der the Act of March 3,1879. L. E. AUSTIN, Publisher CLATHAN ROSS. Editor M. W. A. HENNESSEE, Business Mgr. JESSE GRAY, Adi}ertising Mgr. JOHNSON, Controller SUmCRlFTlON BATES — One Year — Six Months Ten Cents Stngl* Copy $4.00 — Forei^ Countries. National Advertising Representatives ^ interstate UNITED REPRESENTATIVES, Inc. 949 Fifth Avxirui York 17, New York Pnom MUasAY HIll - 2-5452 morally criminal wd' economi cally unwise income tax sche dule, is that they approved de pending upon military "pre paredness” as a loundation at our loreign policy. This in volves keeping up the present system ol universal military training hypocrltally called the “Selective Service” draft. ^ long as we have militarism we must have these high, unjust taxes to support the useless and vicious “top brass" in the army, navy and air lorces with their inordinate appetite lor power and glory which they do nothing to deserve. Thirdly, both party piatlorms are h}rpocritical about the mat ter, ol Civil Rights. The Deiaao- crats oUer a weak Civil Rights plank, which in spite ol its weakness is too strong for 'the rebels ol the South and will not be implemented by the party on account ol the influence ol the Dixiecrats. The Republican plank is a shade stronger than the Democrat plank but we know by his past record that Eisenhower, 11 he should unlor- tunately be re-elected, does not have the inclination nor the courage to implement it as he has olten said. II Eisenhower should resign or die, either ol which is possible 11 not {iroba- ble, Richard Nixon will do no more than Eisenhower has to lorce the reactionaries ol the South to obey the laws ol the land which run counter to their “white supremacy” policies. This leaves the liberals and progressive voters ol the coun try without a party, without any platlorm to supj^rt. This ap plies to whites, blacks, brown and yellows or any other colors who may be progressive. What shall we do? Perhaps we might as well go lishlng on election day. We suggest, however, that we vote lor Stevenson and his colleague since EisenhowCT and Nixon have already been tfled and lound wanting. We might as weU give a new team a trial. They can’t be worse. A. H. Gordon VINOBA BHAVk A JNSaPlE OF GANDHI BY MARY MILLS Vinoba had not wanted to.go to Hyderabad;, it had been tbrusted upon him. Hyderabad was reported to be the seat ol communistic activities. He bad been the chosen one of Gandhi’s loUowers lor this mission — unless he under took it the loUowers felt that the cause for which Gandhi i^ve his life was lost. He had walked into the area to find out, first handi what condi tions were like and U there was anything he could do. HiIb little group started out on foot each carrying a bundle of clothes and a spinning wheel. They would depend upon villagers along the way to feed and house them. Vinoba car ried a storm lantern which would serve as a light along the way until the sun arose. Hyderabad has a Hindu Majority but in the hands of Moslem rulers. It represented one of the 500 princely states- and was the only one to resist the Indian Union Merger in 1948. The Nizem still lives in a stuco palace with a grant from the state to help take care of 300 wives. Vinoba refused a body giiud ol policemen as he entered entered communUt Hydera bad; he invited policeman to travel with him in plain cloth es stating that he was there to deal with human beings and not with a jungle of tigers- where their employment might be useful. He reasoned with the communists. He went to the city jail to visit those wlio were held prisoners and re quested ol them to give up their violence “and help me to find a peaceful way out of our problems." The prisoners held on to their visitor for two hours before they would let liim go. ^ It was in Pochempelli where the Bhoodan Mission began in April 1951. Ram Chandra Reddi, a landlord, had made the liist initial gift. This man called himself and his lamlly rebels but declared that they disagreed with communists methods — “the communists introduce an era of love and justice by terror and bloody idocy and lies. I never believe tliat.” Ram said’ tliat when Vinoba saw the condition of their village and the fear that was in it, “he cried. Real wet tears.” Vinoba lound a resting place in the moslem prayer com pound, at first none of the villagers invited him to tarry in their homes. Perhaps this was a blessing now he belong ed to the village and all costes were free to visit with him. The people who had become communists reported to him, they sat at his feet, that they liad done so because of the promise_of land. > Ram Chandra Reddi and his family were of the sudra caste but they had actually been able to push the Brahmins out ol their village; they were wealthy landlords and he be came a leader of the great land he became a leader of the great land gift mission. Three months after Vinoba left the area word came to liim that the communists had pled ged to abondon violence in that area; and that these w1m> were in jail would be released to take place in the aptnoach- ing election. (CONnNUM) NEXT WEEK) “BURSTING THEIR CHAINS” ^OMIC LHTERS TO THE EDnOR Editor I. E. Austin Carolina Times Dear Sir: Talleyrand, and officer of Napoleon said “words were made to hide the truth.” No man is intelligent who does not look into both sides of any question. Harry Hoxsey has an honorarium of $100,000 to give to any man who can prove his cancer treatment worth less. No one to date has taken him up on the ofler. Who Imows but that much of the processed fopds plus their preservatives, certain drugs, powerful sprays on Iruits and vegetables may all combine to bring on cancer, in the first place. For forty years I have kept an open mind on maintaining health. I read the allopaths and the naturopathhs. I leam from both. Certain foods wliich are popular with the populace rarerly go into my stomach. I am afraid of certain chemicals which are us^ in some of them, lliese chemicals could be the cidprits which cause many disharmonies, leading to DEATH eventually. U cancer got hold on me> I would fly to Harry Hoxey in Dallas, Texas or Or. Max Ger- son. New York City. This does not mean I liave no truck with the allopaths. Sure tliey are alright up to a certain point. But they are not the whole show. Some years ago I had a gland condition. One of the doctors *61 the city “fixed me up.” Hence, you can see X keep the open mind. Much reading maketii a fuU man. Health should Isecome the hobby ol every man; then, would much sullering and sor row be held in abeyance. Your xnfly, CHAS. HARRIS We, a group ol Christians in North Carolina, mlndlul ol the alarming state of affairs exis ting in our State, send you this message lor the purpose ol ex pressing our deep concern for the education ol the children ol our State. We call upon you lor united action in an ellort to turn the tide ol present trends into a direction ol wisdom and progress. For the first time in the his tory ol our State Christians are called upon to go to the polls on September 8 and give sanction to a course ol action, the sole purpose ol Vhich is to strengthen the hands ol mis guided men who are deter mined to shackle lorever upon the minds and spirits ol our children conditions which are detrimental to their personali ties. We North Carolina Christians must repent that our present quality ol witness lor the brotherhood ol all men has been so inellectual that olficials ol our society boldly c^ upon us to perlorm acts wliich would lorever deny Christian brother hood and turn the hands ol the clock ol progress back in the direction of the dark ages.' Because ol the lact that al most every church body in America—^North or Soutti—has regarded segregation based up on race to be contrary to the will ol God and the teachings -ol Christ; and because deep down in the heart ol hearts ol every Christian in North Caro lina he knows that segregation solely on the ground ol race is abhorrent in the sight ol God; we call upon you. North Caro lina Christians, to act - in a manner consistent with your responsibility as Christians and not in conlormity with popular custom or tradition. Christians in North Carolina cannot consistently work and pray lor the coming” ol the Kingdom ol God in the hearts and lives ol the peoples ol the world and at the same time go out and vote lor or be Indiller-. ent to a Plan for the continueit segregation ol the children in our schools. God has said in his word,”...inasmuch as ye have done it unto the least ol these, my brethren, ye have done it unto me.” There are many people ol our* State who regard this plan in a very unlavorable light. Among them are outstanding constitu tional lawyers ol our State who considered the Pearsall Plan as unrealistic, discriminatory to all children and unconstitution al. The State' Congress ol Pa rents and Teachers opposes the plan as a threat to the continu ation ol our public schools. The North Carolina Council of Chur ches states that, we as law abid ing citizens should begin in good faith, the implementation of ^e Supreme Court’s decision. Many believe the Plan is an ef fort at evading the law of the land, and that the defeat of the Plan would lorce our leaders into a constructive course more in keeping with our Christian principles. It is evident that in every locality where an honest attempt at compliance jdth the ruling ol our Supreme Court has made, a high degree of de sirable results has been achiev ed. In the light of our Christian responsibility as' citizens ol North Carolina and in the light ol the lact that segregation by lorce Is contrary to the la^T'snd an abomination in the sight ol God, we humbly call upon all Christians in North Carolina to go to the polls September 8 and vote “No” to the Pearsall Se-4 gregation Plan. We pray that God will guide' you in doing his will. 'I The Council Ol Presbyterian Men, The Presbyterian (USA) Synod Of Catawba Capital Close Up . Howard’s Reverie Integration Up at Howard University, last week, we were asking Dr. Ro bert Jefferson, Assistant Direc tor ol Admissions, about the progress of “reverse Integra tion” on "the Hill.” Over a number ol years we bad obser ved it, rather closely, on the campus and in our home, and we were remembering the “re verse integration” thoughts ex pressed at Howard, in 1948, by the late Edwin R. Embree, then President ol the Rosenwald Fund (which was just expiring.) We learned, without surprise, that, the number of white stu dents at Howard is steadily in creasing—at the School of So cial Work, in Engineering and Architecture and in bther areas. Then we went over to the Pub lic Relations Office and asked PR Officer Ernest Goodman what liis picture files showed on intergration at Howard.' What Mr. Goodman broaght'^ out did surprise us. In not a single pic ture of those which he spread out for us, had there been any racial selection in the markedly interracial grouping. Each was of a “merif group. 'Hiere were Sdiool of Social Work seniors in cap and gown, in the 1058 Com mencement line, led by a white By CON8TAMOK DAMBL honor student, with other White students in evidence throu^out the line, (discounting "white” Negro students.) Of the tour top Medical Schuol honor students, one from each field—^two, a man and a woman, were Negroes, and two were white. Of four ranking Science freshmen, shown receiving awards, one was a Negro girl from South Carolina, one a Malayan youth, one a Washington girl (Nagro) and one a white youth from nearby Maryland. Says Dr. Jefferson, “Race makes very little difference in the selection of a school by stu dents seeking specific training. They look for the best instruc tion available and accettt it where they find it.^ What Z>r. Embree Said At Howard Commencement, in 1948, Dr. Embree expressed his views on Howard’s place in American education, ur^g that it become “a truly national uni versity.” Recognizing the “spec ial needs and lacks” of Negroes in the country’s educational system, he argued for grrat^ in tegration in reverse, at Howard, saying that “these defects can not be corrected by continuing segregated facilities for special groups. We cannot realize our ideal of full education for all American youth, by patching on a little more lor Negroes, here, for Jews, there, for Nisei and Mexicans and so on in some other place...We must see to it that American institutions are open to all citizens who are competent to benefit from them especially in this city—^the capi tal of the world’s greatest de mocracy.” “1 Imow,” said Dr. Embree, “that Howard was created be cause of special concern for the freedman..J£any of its sponsors were abolitionists or protectors of the freedmen. And through the years Howard has been maintained (both tlirough pri vate ^fts and steadily increas ing C^ongreuional appropria tions) because of special inter est in the colored tenth of the American people...But nothing in Howard’s official organiza tion limits its services to Ne groes or to any special group. . “As a matter of fact,” he pointed out,” all of the first fa culty and all of the first little cluster of students were white. And during the early years, Howard was a refuge for all kinds of people..a new thing in the country—a university where (Continued on Page Ssnrsn)