I VOL. 5, NO. 20 V-" ^ Nebraska Official and Legal Newspaper THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1951 O' v fO^ Committee Is Appointed. 05 oV Clyde Malone Education0 <,'**: R. Malone Named 1951 President Wednesday, Feb. 28, a Clyde Malone education fund was of ficially established by the Urban League board of directors. The fund is to provide college training for any worthy student interested in race relations. The fund is established in honor of the former | . executive secretary of the league who died recently. A committee appointed to work out details of the fund will include Tom Pan sing, chairman, Clayton Lewis, Mrs. Basilia Bell, Dr. M. F. Arn holt and Mrs. Helene Foe. A com mittee of interested citizens will be named to act in an advisory capacity with the board of di rectors committee. A basketball game was held at the Urban League building Friday between the Omaha Lettermen and the Lincoln Silver Streaks. Proceeds went to the fund. * * * ROBERT T. MALONE was named president of the league board of directors for the com ing year. Other officers elected were: Mrs. Roberta Molden, first vice president; Mrs. Helene Foe, second vice president; John Irv ing, recording secretary; Dr. M. F. Arnholt, treasurer. Financial com mittee include: Joseph Fenton, chairman, Mrs. Helene Foe, John ' Irving, B. G. Clark and Mrs. Ritha Banks. * • • A COMMITTEE appointed for the selection of a person for the position of executive secretary in / eluded Clayton Lewis, chairman Judge E d w a rd Fisher, Dale Weeks, Dr. M. F. Arnholt and Mrs. Basilia Bell. MRS. SARAH WALKER was named by the board as acting executive secretary. She will also continue in her present position of group supervisor. Atlanta U. to Take Part In Education Program ATLANTA. (ANP). -Atlanta university is slated to become the third Negro school to actively participate in the southern re , gional education program, accord ing to “Regional Action in Higher Education,” official publication of the Board of Control for South ern Regional Education. Atlanta U’s famed School of , Social Work will in conjunction with the 13 southern states active in the educational plan and accept Negro students beginning in the 1951-52 school year. Under the overall program 128 students of both races will attend regional schools. Of this number 53 Negroes will attend Atlanta. Each participating state will pay Atlanta U. $750 for each student enrolled. Under present plans, the fol lowing states will give $39,750 for the education of 53 Negro stu dents in social work: Alabama 5; Arkansas, 5; Florado, 5; Louisiana, 3; Missis sippi, 5; North Carolina, 10; South Carolina, 5; Tennessee, 5, and Virginia 10. By joining in this program, At lanta U. became the third Negro school to co-operate. Already Meharry Medical college is edu cating 47 dental and 108 medical students for $220,875 under this program, and Tuskegee institute is teaching 27 students for $20,250 in its veterinary school. Anderson To N.Y NEW v )—Marian Anderson, v, jus contralto celebrating the _enth anniver sary of her memorable return to America on Dec. 30, 1935, has just reached Portland, Ore., the mid point of a tour of 50 North Amer ican and Canadian cities arranged by Impresario S. Hurok. Miss Anderson, who has per formed on three continents since last May, will return to New York via the midwest for her only Carnegie hall appearance this year on Sunday evening, March 25. Laase, Wright File For School Board Posts When Lincoln citizens go to the polls for the primaries on April 3rd, they will be asked to vote for four people to fill as many vacancies on the Lincoln board of education. During the past week two able Lincoln citi zens have announced their can didacy for the school board. They were Homer L. Wright, 436 So. 29th, president of the Elliott school Parent-Teacher association and Mrs. Leroy T. Laase, 743 So. 34th, wife of Dr. Leroy Laase, chairman of the Department of Speech at the University of Ne- i braska. In a prepared statement, Wright declared that Lincoln has the re sources to develop one of the na tion’s finest school systems and that the attainment of that goal requires the fullest confidence and co-operation of the entire community. His platform is based on four main points: 1. Foresight and judgement in a long-range building program. 2. Development of a salary schedule to insure high quality teaching. « 3. Democratic exercise of pol icy-making without dissension. 4. Positive leadership in re establishing wholesale working relationship within the school system. In her statement, Mrs. Laase said, “I am not filing in order to run ‘against’ anyone. I am run ning ‘for’ the school board on the basis of my interest and qualifications. In a democracy, there should always be several interested candidates with some what different qualifications from among whom the citizens may choose.” Her platform includes: 1. Favor of the building pro gram to meet the educational needs of expanding enrollments. 2. A well-qualified staff of teachers and administrators work ing in harmony and with a sense of security. 3. An adequate, up-to-date curriculum . The terms of Robert C. Venner and Mrs. Roscoe Hill are expir ing this year. Venner has already filed for reelection and Mrs. Hill is expected to be a candidate. Mrs. Sampson to Speak At Lincoln Convocation Mrs. Edith Sampson, Alter nate delegate to the U.N., will I address a Nebraska University Convocation Friday morning at 11:00 A.M., at the Student Union, 12th and R Streets. .O.C. Week Is To Be Observed March ll-17th Observance of the Vocational Opportunity Week will be held March 11 thru March 17 at the Urban League. Fifty-six affi liates of the National Urban League are participating in this program. The main objectives of the Vocational Opportunity Cam paign is to stimulate the Youth to train and prepare for jobs; it also seeks to equalization of op portunities for education and vocational training; full oppor tunity for job placement for all who are trained and qualified; to convince employers that it is to their advantage to hire work ers according to their prepara tion and skills regardless of race, color, religion or national origin. Friday, a group of Whittier Junior High and Lincoln High School students met with Mr. C. W. Holmes, General Chairman and formed a co-sponsoring or ganization to assist in stimulat ing interest in the Vocational Program. Officers chosen are: Beverly Holcomb, Co-Chair man. Mattie Sue Nevels, Vice Chair man. Vonna M. Finley, Secretary. Emma White and Ida Ad kins, Sgt. of Arms. Lincoln Jaycees Sponsor Forums The Lincoln Junior Chamber of Commerce will sponsor this spring a series of forums on topics of local concern, according to an announcement Thursday by Lin coln Jaycee President, Pat Ash. The Lincoln Forum series will be free to the public and through the cooperation of the Extension . Division of the University of Ne- . braska and the Jaycees the “town i ball” meetings will be held in the ] auditorium of Love Memorial Li brary at 8:15 on the evenings of ] March 13, April 11 and May 9. The topic for discussion on 1 ruesday, March 13, will be: ] ‘Should Nebraska have a sales . tax?” Ash said that the modera- < tor and the members of the panel . for the first forum would be an lounced during the first week of Vlarch. The topics for debate in \pril and May will be, respec ively, “What Will Lincoln Be fjke In 1975?” and “How Can ifou Provide for An Adequate Education for Your Child?” The series of forums will be jroadcast by both radio stations £FOR and KOLN. The Lincoln raycees plan to conduct a series >f similiar forums each year, the faycee president said. Chicago Major Receiving the DFC Maj. Charles E. McGee, 31, of Chicago, as he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross at South Dogpatch Air Base in Ko rea for extraordinary achieve ment and heroism in action re :ently by Gen. Earl E. Partridge, the commanding general of the Fifth Air Force in Korea. Maj. McGee, who is the son of the Rev. Lewis A. McGee, pastor of the Free Fellowship church in Chicago, is a graduate of the Uni versity of Illinois in Champaign. His wife and tw--* 'h;M-3n live in the am, us ’ iANP). Leaders Present 6-Point Program to Pres. Truman BY ALICE A. DUNNIGAN WASHINGTON—(ANP)—A six-point program aimed to increase national unity, to weaken communist propaganda and to strengthen America’s cause among the colored peoples of the world was presented to Presi dent Truman last Wednesday by 12 outstanding Negro leaders representing various sections of the country. . .. At the beginning of their prepared statement to the President, members of the group let it be known they were fully aware of the increasing responsibility that rests upon the President as a result of the perilous world situation and assured him that it did not come to add to his cares but rather to offer something worthwhile to the moral health and well being of the nation. The President was reminded that in the hour of global crisis this country should demonstrate to the world that its people are united and that it is not only talking democ racy and fighting for it across the earth but that it is actually being demonstrated at home. Bunche to Present Academy Award to Best Movie of Year By Harry Levette HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (ANP). Dr. Ralph J. Bunche, director of the United Nations trusteeship di vision and Nobel Peace prize win ner, will present an academy award to Hollywood’s top movie maker, March 29, at the Pantages theatre. The Academy of Motion Pic ture Arts and Sciences, sponsor! of this event, announced this weel that Dr. Bunche had accepted th( invitation to present the Osca] for the best motion picture of th< year. This marks the first time tha a Negro has ever presented ar award at the Academy Award program. It is also the first time that any person not connected in any way with the motion picture industry has ever awarded a glit tering Oscar. in oraer tnat tne iuuest use oi the services of Negro citizens be utilized at this time, the dele gation urged President Truman to exercise the powers inherent in his office to: 1. Abolish racial segregation in the nation’s capital. 2. To appoint qualified Ne groes on the administrative and ■ policy making level of the gov r ernment. 1 3. To integrate Negroes in all > new agencies that are being es tablished and will be estabished - as a result of this emergency, s 4. To appoint Negroes more c widely in the foreign and diplo 2 matic service of the United r States. e 5. To issue an Executive Or der guaranteeing the maximum t use of all manpower in all pro i duction efforts irrespective of 1 color, race or national origin in the emergency and provide an adequate machinery for its en forcement. 6. To abolish once and for all racial segregation of Negro sol diers in the United States army. The president was very friend ly with the group and accepted its program with some enthu siasm. He assured it he was already doing all he could to see that the things they suggested are being carried out. On the question of an emer gency FEPC established by Ex ecutive Order, the President as sured the Negro leaders that they did not have to sell him on this idea. He said he had already committed himself on the mat ter. In a press conference held at Carver hall immediately follow ing the conference with the President, Walter White pointed out that the Negro voters had not asked for as much as had labor and farmers, but it is a known fact, he continued, that the Negroes in Illinois, Ohio and California elected the president to office. When the President took cre dit for the integration of Ne groes into the United States Navy and Air Corps, Mr. White, mentioned the tremendous dis crimination which is now being practiced in Korea against Ne groes in the army. He presented fixtures to the President’s as sistant, David Niles which had been revealed by the NAACP special counsel Thurgood Mar shall regarding court martials against Negroes in the armed forces on the fighting front. In addition to the prepared statement presented to the Presi dent by the group, Mrs. Bethune commented that this emergency is not only an American emer gency but one of world interwt (Continued on P. 1)