T& @ V@S(£® PUBLISHED WEEKLY “Dedicated to the promotion oj the cultural, social and spiritual Ufe of a great peopled Melvin L. Shakespeare Publisher ana Editor Business Address 2225 S Street Phone 5-6491 11 No Answer Cali 5-7508 Ruble W Shakespeare........ Advertising and Business Manager Dorothy Greene .....Office Secretary Mrs. Joe Greene .Circulation Manager Member of the Associated Negro Press and Nebraska Press Association . Entered as Second Class Matter. June 9. 1947 at the Post Office at Lincoln, Itehraska under the Act of March 3 1879. 1 year subscription .$2.00 Single copy.5c EDITORIALS The views expressed in these columns are those ol the writer and not necessarily % reflection oi the policy ol The Voice.— Pub. BETWEEN THE LINES Lacking in Leadership By Dean Gordor B. Hancock for ANP The uncertainty and confusion of the times make great leader ship imperative. The nations are standing confused at their Twen tieth Century Babel with not only a confusion of tongues but a confusion of thought and thinking on the graver issues that concern our earthly salvation of damna tion Security and peace are pos ing questions that cry unto high ; Heaven for answers; but there is no certain voice and no positive mandates save those which stem from Calvary. But men today are not turning toward the formula ol Christ as they must if they would not perish from the earth; instead they are busy trying to find “some other way.” A powerful and far-sighted leadership holds the only hope that mankind can survive the crisis that is already upon us. In this critical day ot decisions of destiny, we are floundering about on the sea or abject dismay and uncertainty. What is more, there is no social or economic or political John The Baptist crying in our wilderness. The mediocrity of current leadership is pathetic. How we miss our lamented Franklin Delano Roosevelt! When the cat is away the rats come to play; and it is even so when such as Roosevelt leaves the scene. The little political pigmies whose voices were muffled before the majesty of a Roosevelt come rumbling out with a pathetic fury under Truman who is feeling the impact of a dreadful reaction against Roosevelt whose power lesser men feared. Truman is not as bad as the reactionary and lean Republicans would have the world believe. He is rather the victim of a cruel circumstance that pits him against the great Roosevelt background. As we look today out upon the nation we cannot see one towering leadership figure. The most pow erful leaders are obstructionists. The men who could help Truman put over a great and constructive program are unequivocally com mitted to obstructionism and ob scurantism. It would be interest ing to know just how far our leadership is behind our follow ership. The defeat of President Tru man’s civil rights proposals is easily one of the great moral tragedies of the Twentieth Cen tury. It is not so much a defeat for the Negro as for the nation in the eyes of the world. Were it not for the hope of invading our exchequer by the nations, they would hold our nation in derision. They are quite willing to wink at our blunders if we finance their wink at so much per wink. But divested of further hope to cash in on their proffered friendship, the nations show no inclination to admire our proclivities to preach one thing and practice another. Our Congress is pathetic. It has flaunted defiance at Truman and gotten away with it. It has broken faith with the people who elected Truman over the protest of the powers that be. But the great de feat has not been for Truman but for the nation which is losing prestige in the eyes of the world. Where would we stand in the es timation of the world without our stuffed pocket-book? The nation today needs a powerful and far visioned leadership. Such leadership is sorely lack ing. McCarthyism too sadely rep resents far too large an area of our national leadership. He had a good point but he faltered in its presentation. His was a case of bad lawyer with a good case. This nation cannot survive with a lead ership too generally characterized by straddling the fence with ear to ground at the ;ame time. The future of this nation is being crucified on the cross of petty politics. When we turn from the national picture to the racial one we find the same lack of firm leadership. Very seldom do we come across a reputed N#gro leader who is will ing to suffer for his convictions. Nearly eleven-tenths of the so called leadership is directioned by what Negroes want instead of what they need. Nobody wants to breast the tide of opposition. Al most everybody wants to be popu lar with the crowds with their ac clamations. It cannot be seriously doubted that in the defeat of the civil rights program of Truman the race has suffered a major set back. We need a great leadership how to inspire the race. The race’s current frustation demands hold leadership. When the Congress of the U.S.A. sides with our foes, which is our next move? Remember DAD with a BUXTON Stitchless | Convertible BILLFOLD 1 1 $5 . J plus la.*: I 1 1- jg The versatile billfold with jjj the removable card photo case and ah-h-h! There’s a secret pocket for big bills! I • • 1 Hi You receive a matching Buxton | Key-Tdiner absolutely without cost. . . jjj ^ Four locked loops and free key return I LEATHER GOODS . . . First Floor I | fflULERlPAIR E | b VAMIS C. OLSON, Superintendent •TATI I1STOAICAL SOCIITY Nebraska’s Governors—17 Charles H. Dietrich, elected gov ernor in the bitter, close campaign of 1900, served the shortest term in the history of Nebraska—it lasted only five months. Those five months, though, were hectic ones in state politics, and Gover nor Dietrich probably was glad to retreat to what must have seemed like the comparative calm of the United States Senate—but before going into that, I’d like to give you a little background on the 17th man to serve as governor of the state or territory. Governor Dietrich was born at Aurora, 111., Nov. 26, 1852, the son of one of the many Germans who fled to America during the critical year of 1848. He quit school at 12 years of age and went to work on a farm. After four years as a farm hand he got a job in a hardware store. He soon gave this up and went to Arkansas, where he was promptly robbed of the money he had saved to start in business for himself. Adding to his adventures, he took part in the Black Hills Gold Rush, locating the Aurora mine in Hidden Treasure Gulch near Deadwood in the spring of 1877. The next year he sold his holdings •and went back to Aurora. He was not long for Aurora, however, be cause the next year saw him in Hastings, where he engaged in the mercantile business and became an important force in the com munity’s development. In 1900, when the Republicans were looking for a way to break the fusionist hold on the state, they unanimously selected Dibt rich as their standard bearer. The fusionists renominated Gov. Wil liam A. Poynter. As I indicated, the race was bitter and closely fought. The final tabulation gave Dietrich the election by the slim margin of 861 votes out of more than 227,000 cast. The legislature which convened in January, 1901, had before it the problem of electing two United States senators, one for th^ reg ular term and one to fill out the term of Sen. M. L. Hayward, who had died before taking office. After a long and complicated fight, which occupied the legisla ture’s attention to the virtual ex clusion of all other business for almost three months, J. H. Mil lard, Omaha banker, was selected for the regular term, and Gov ernor Dietrich, to fHl out Hay ward’s term, to expire in 1905. So Governor Dietrich resigned on May 1, 1901, to become United States senator. Although he had a rather stormy career in the sen ate, he did valuable pioneering work in promoting the develop ment of the beet sugar industry and reclamation, both of vital im portance to present-day Nebraska. Governor Dietrich died at Has tings, April 10, 1924, and is buried in Parkview cemetery there. He was an enthusiastic collector of Alaskan and Philippine materials. BEAL'S GROCERY Fresh Fruits & Vegetables Meats 2101 R TeL 2-6933 . PEAK of QUALITY Smith Pharmacy 2146 Vine Prescriptions — Drugs Fountain — Sundries Fhone 2-1958 After his death, his valuable col lection was given the State His torical society by his widow. Subscribe to The VOICE—Your subscription helps make this pub lication possible. 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