Tib® V©S(g® PUBLISHED WEEKLY “Dedicated to the promotion of the cultural, social and spiritual life of a great people Rev. Melvin L. Shakespeare Publisher ana Editor • Business Address 2225 S Street Phone 5-649? it No Answer Call 5-7508 Ruble W Shakespeare--—Advertising and Business Manager Charles Goolsby_Associate Editor, Y.M.C.A. Lynwood Parker___Associate Editor, on Leave Mrs. joe Green__,_Circulation Manager Member oi the Associated Negro Press and Nebraska Press Association Entered as becona Class Matter, June 9. 1947 at the Post Othca at LmcohT Nebraska under the Ret ot March 3, 1879. I year subscription_52 00 Single copy .— — , 5c NATIONAL €DITORIAL_ ' iSSOCIATION EDITORIALS The views expressed in these columns are those of the writer and not necessarily a tellection ot the policy of Toe Voice.—Pub. ANTI-DISCRIMINATION GETS RESULTS A Study of New Fair Employ- i ment Laws’ Operation in Four Eastern States: BY KINGS RANSOM. • Mr. Ranxim. a writer for •‘The Moines Register and Tribune" and "The Economist.' 'of London. England, recently passed two weeks in New York, New Jer sey. Connecticut and Massachusetts look ing Into the anti-discrimination laws.) Four eastern states and the cities of Chicago, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, Cincinnati and Philadelphia have adopted laws against racial or religious dis crimination in employment based on the New York Ives commis sion report of 1945. Last year 28 other bills based on the New York law (not counting five toothless ones) were introduced in 18 northern state legislatures. (It normally takes two or three sessions to pass such a law.) New York’s leadership is rec ognized almost blindly out over the country, where such slight deviations from the New York pattern as substituting a single administrator for a commission are taken by zealots as sabotage. Yet zealots in New York, equally blind, regard Governor Dewey as a late and unreliable convert be cause he postponed passage from 1944 to 1945 and strengthened the law in the process. He has since supported it with able ap pointments, substantial funds and full co-operation from other state departments. How are the new laws working after three years’ experience in New York and New Jersey, two years in Massachusetts, one year in Connecticut? Negroes are the chief benefi ciaries but by no means the only ones: Jews, foreign-born and Catholics are often discriminated against, for example. Opponents of the law feared a • deluge of complaints. So far that has not happened. Instead, it is often difficult for state agencies (and even minority pressure groups) to get informants to file formal complaints, and the worst violations of the spirit of the law occur in firms where minority members know the policy and avoid rebuffs by never applying. Enforcements staffs are not the “hordes of bureaucrats” oppo nents predicted. There are fewer than 35 complaint investigators in all four states combined, and 100-odd anti-discrimination em TYPEWRITERS ANY MAKE SOLD RENTED REPAIRED Nebraska Typewriter Co. 130 N* 12th St. PkM« Win Lincoln, Nekr. Gillett Cream Poultry & Eggs 528 No. 9th TeL 2-2801 Plenty of Parking Space 1 ployees of all kinds (roughly 70 of them in New York state), from switchboard operators to commissioners, in investigating, educational and research subdi visions. That is not enough to be a no ticeable burden on taxpayers, nor to turn employment practices *‘f^ir” overnight. But it has been enough to reverse the ominous trend which had been squeezing Negroes out of skilled crafts, denying them entry into many of the newer industries and occupa tions, confining their leaders to serving “colored only.” The wartime labor shortage had reversed the trend momen tarily. Since then, the fair em ployment practice states have been working out new methods for holding wartime gains and winning new ones—slowly and gently, with prospects for more permanence than those won by northern bayonets in the 1860s and ’70s had. New York state's is the largest operation in terms of budget, staff or number of cases handled. New York has the prestige of primacy and the national spot light. But Connecticut has the latest and most sweeping law. It covers employees of non-profit concerns as none of the other state laws do; and the Connecti cut law specifically says that the word “discrimination” shall in clude segregation and separation. The Massachusetts and Connec ticut laws permit the commission itself to initiate a complaint. Connecticut excels in use of psychological research. Small ness, of the state makes it pos sible also for its compact unit to settle a case in one w'eek, where New York’s may take fourteen. In proportion to population, how ever, Massachusetts and New Jersey have the largest staffs and settle the most complaints. All four states do a great deal of social survey and educational work organizing unpaid local councils in New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts to help SMITH BROTHERS Good Coed and Everything to Build with. 2241 Tim. 42 Phone 6-2527 (feel*%-$£**' 10c-25«-45c Lincoln's Favorito Potato Ckip with this and with getting the word around. In Connecticut they prefer not to start new or ganizations. but confine them selves to giving training courses to interested people from key ex isting organizations. ^ New Jersey and Connecticut have single administrators in stead of the clumsy commission form of administration, which New York and Massachusetts took over from the Federal Fair Employment Practices Commis sion. It should be said that in New York the chairman of the commission, on the basis of a single phrase in the law. plus sion into a working department. ; The size of the operation in New i York makes division of labor be tween the staff field investigator (who probes the facts) and the “invest igating commissioner7’ (who negotiates a settlement) a useful administrative device. * Nevertheless, there is a logical inconsistency in having the com missioners simultaneously be representative of the various ra cial and religious strains (as they have been in practice in all four states by appointing at least one Negro, one Jew. one son of the new immigration, etc.) and ad ministrators representing the whole state. The New' Jersey Connecticut system of a part time representative commission giving advice and making studies, and in Connecticut actually ap pointing the administrator and making policy for him. is better political science. Commissions an^ staffs in the four states keep in close touch with one another, learning from one another and from the criti cisms of the public. Social scien- : tists of the universities and the voluntary associations have been following their work w'ith crit ical sympathy and solid research of their own. The campaign against discrimination is being handled as a conscious adventure in social pioneering: modestly, discreetly, yet with soaring hopes. —N, T. HeraM Tribun* Patronize Our Advertisers. IF-" 1 ■-.— - SKYLINE ICE CREAM STORES 1433 South St. Phono 3-4118 1417 N St. Phone 2-40741 All Products Manufactured At Main Plant Skyline Forms So. 14 St. Orders filled far parties, fraternities and *• rarities and ather seeasiaaa Genuine KarmelKorn Fresh Buttered Popcorn Pralines KARMELKORN SHOP 122 No. 14 YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF TO VISIT Corine Beauty Shop 224 North 7th Street Come in and ret acquainted Phone 2-562C PRESTO . . . A NEW ROOM PAPER & PAINT FOR < EVERY NEED ^.OuvU'iVatk'v & Jits. VINE DECORATIVE WAUI»mS AND PAWlf 14ih and P Phone 2-7549 L____"" COMPLETE FUB SERVICE HORACE L COLLEY “Trust your furs with a furrier" 1745 South 11 3-65t2 OntofOldNebraska BY JAMES C. OLSON Siiperintrndfit. Stale Historical Society. Ogallala. gateway to the upper plains and northern terminus of the Texas cattle trails, was Ne braska's cowboy capital during ? the 10 years from 1075 to 18&5— i 10 years that form an epoch in ; the town's history as colorful as - any period in the annals of old Nebraska. According to the town's his . tori an. Dr. Norbert R. Mahnken, Professor of History at Oklahoma ; A. & M. College, "gold flowed freely across the tables, liquor across the - bar, and occasionally blood across the door. ' as Wyom ing and Nebraska cattlemen met with Texas cattle kings in Ogal lala's hotel and saloons to haggle over the prices to be paid for longhorns driven up the trail. Ogallala's career as a cowtown was a by-product of the Union Pacific railroad. It began in 1874, when the railroad officials con structed a cattle pen and loading chute just west of town, hoping to recapture here the profitable trade they had enjoyed at Kear ney and Schuyler and other Ne braska shipping points for Texas cattle. The trade was brisk, and dur ing the summer of 1875 more than 60.000 head of Texas cattle were driven to Ogallala. At almost any time during the next few sum mers, upward of 35.000 head could be counted on the plains south of town. During the last years of the decade, more than 100.000 Texas cattle made their way through the Nebraska cow- * town each season. In addition to shipments east. 1 a solid basis for the Ogallala trade was the development of the cattle industry in western Nebraska and CLEANING and SANITATION SUPPLIES All Types Brooms—Furniture Polishes Mops—Floor Seal and Wax Sweeping Compounds Mopping Equipment Kelso Chemical j 117 North 9th Si. 2-3434 For Every thing in HARDWARE Baker Hardware 101 No. 9th 2-3710 eastern Wyoming. Many of the early herds in this area got their & start from the Texas cattle driven into Og allala. The town's terrific cattle busi ness was carried on only during the summer months. As a result, it found itself filled to overflowing with population during part of the year, and almost deserted dur ing the remainder. This naturally didn't make for steady growth. In the summer of 1*84. a seri ous epidemic of cattle fever brought into the state from Texas ^ devastated large areas in western Nebraska As a result, Nebraska cattlemen, who had begun by this time to build up their herds through introduction of blooded stock, demanded that Texas cat tle be excluded. The quarantine, added to other burdens on the trail drivers, brought an end to Ogallala's ca reer as a market for Texas cattle. Og allala. the boisterous cowtown, began to be replaced by Ogallala, the modem seat of Keith county. Patronise Our Advertisers. CAPITAL FLOOR COVERING CO. » Specialist in Floor Laying Service. Carpet — Linoleum Tile Laying Rug Binding. Serging Rug Washing, Moth Proofing 230 No. 12 2-1277 Sittt-tMi la frtmti floor Ujia{ Strritf For Better Values * • Drugs • Cosmetics • Stationery • Candy t Prescriptions CHEAPPER DRUGS # 1325 O St. Lincoln V CbidusL J>WUl White’s First In Furniture ‘ Buy Now and Save m t I r f 108 NORTH 10th ST. 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