Tib® V®n<£® PUBLISHED WEEKLY 'Dedicated to the promotion ot the cultural, social and rptntua life of a great people.*-_ _ Melvin L Shakespeare Publisher and Editor Business Address 2225 S Street 2-4033 If So Answer Call 5-7908 Ruble W Shakespeare ... Advertising and Business Manager Dorothy Green.Office Secretary Mrs. Joe ireea ...Circulation Manager _Member ef Use Am Haled \e«r» Press and Nebraska Pres* Asseelatloa Entered as Second Class Ma'ter. tune *. 1*47. at the Post Office at Lincoln Nebraska, under the Act of March I 1871 I year subscriptran . t? M Single copy.10c Out of State 1 Tear Subscription <2 50- Single Copy 10c Editorially Speaking Georgia s favorite race segrega tionist, Governor Herman Tal tnadge, attacked last week several TV shows that featured Negro en tertainers and mixed groups. Talmadge singled out Arthur Godfrey, Ken Murray and Clifton Fadiman. A rebuttal by Godfrey ended in pity for the governor. Godfrey said, “I’m sorry for his excellency, Gov. Talmadge, but as long as I’m on this show the Mari ners are going to stay with me.” The Mariners are a mixed quar tet of two whites and two Negroes. Talmadge. race-haler extraordinary. last week in his weekly newspaper, “The States man.” devoted a three column front page editorial to criticism of television shows that feature Negroes and whites on an integrated basis. He said the shows offend southern white people "who have to sit in their living rooms and take these insults or turn off the get and miss good shows." Walter Winchell, in his Sunday Bight broadcast said: “The recent article written by Governor Talmadge of Georgia proves him to be the bigot we have always thought he was, and was a demonstration of the most' base ignorance that could be prop erty of a public official of a state of this nation.” Another blast came at Talmadge from Dick Campbell, vice-chair man of the Council of Negro Per formers. Campbell wrote Tal madge: “Your article is a sad commen tary on our democracy for which thousands of Negro soldiers are Drake Star Gets Nelson Trophy BOSTON.—Johnny Bright. Drake University’s 21-year-old Negro halfback, Saturday night, ac cepted the -Swede” Nelson sports manship award and disclosed plans to try out for the United States Olympic team in the de cathlon events. Dedicated to a former Harvard player and coach, the Nelson foot ball trophy is awarded annually by the Gridron club of Boston tc SMITH Pharmacy 2144 Viw PresenptwM — Drags F sustain — 3—tries fWsc 2-1454 • dying in Korea and a ridicule ol our American way of life in the : eyes of the world.” • • • TV, WHICH HAS been short or serious music, is to get a new series starting in February titled ‘Meet the Masters.” Contralto Marian Anderson has been se lected to appear along with other greats on this coast to coast tele cast. • • • TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE re ports one lynching in 1951 (in Florida, of course), one killing (also in Florida) “technically” not a lynching since the sheriff did it all by himself; and three near lynchings (in Va., Ala. and N.C.), one of them white. The statistics do not include the bombing to death of the martyred Mr. Moore of Mims. * * * I EVAN EDWARD WORTHING,! Houston, Tex., millionaire, left a $500,000 trust fund recently to provide scholarships for deserv-j ing graduates of Houston Negro ,high schools. He was a white man. • * * THE UNITED STATES SU PREME COURT dismissed the case against the University of Tennessee last week when the college assured the court that Negroes would be admitted to the graduate and law schools of the University. the player “who demonstrates a high esteem for the football code and exemplifies sportsmanship to' a high degree.” “Even to be considered for the Nelson award would have made me very happy,” Bright told the Gridiron club diners. “But get ting it is the biggest thrill of my life” The 213-pound Bright, from Fort Wayne, Ind., is an all-around track performer, although he has not had much opportunity to com pete in that branch of intercol legiate sports. The Nebraska Typewriter Co. 125 S*. 11th Lincoln 2-2157 Royal Typewriters Mimeograph - Duplicator*. Dictaphones - Clary Adders Sold - Rented - Repaired I VINE ST. MARKET GROCERIES b MEATS 2-4563 — 2-4564 h !AMKS C. •LSONf SmptrrutfmJm Delegates to Congress The sixth and—not counting the period which T. M. Marquette, the first congressman from Nebraska, served as delegate prior to the state’s admission into the union— last territorial delegate to Con gress was Phineas W. Hitchcock. Though Mr. Hitchcock, the father of Senator Gilbert M. Hitchcock, is best known for his later career as United States Senator, his cam paign for the post of territorial delegate in 1864 created a great stir in Nebraska politics. 1 Phineas Hitchcock was born in New Lebanon, New York, Nov. 30, 1831, and came of New England stock. After a common school education in New York, he at tended Williams College, graduat ing in 1855. After graduation he; j worked as a newspaper reporter in contral New York state and, studied law' on the side. Shortly after his admission to the bar, however, he got the urge to go West, and in 1857 he settled inj Omaha, then only a frontier vil lage, despite the fact that it was the capital and most important community in Nebraska territory. The next year' he married Annie Monell. the daughter of Dr. Gilbert C. Monell, also a nattve New Yorker and a pioneer Ne-' braskan. In Omaha, young Mr. Hitchcock practiced law and engaged in business; for a time he was one of the owners of the j Omaha Republican, an important territorial newspaper. Like many another young man of ability and ambition who came to Nebraska ter ritory, Mr. Hitchcock soon was attracted to politics. In 1860 he was a delegate to the Republican National Convention which nominated Abraham Lincoln for the presi-1 dency. The next year, President Lincoln! appointed him marshal of Nebraska terri tory. Later he was surveyor-general of the territory. * The most important aspect of his terri torial political career, however, was his campaign in 1864 for the position of dele gate to Congress. * * • Hitchcock was nominated by the new Union party, with which the Republican party fused in 1864. His Democratic opponent was Dr. George L. Miller, who the next year was to found the Omaha Herald, fore-runner, in cidentally of the Omaha World Herald. with which Phineas Hitchcock’s son Gilbert was so long identified. ^ j campaign was a bitter one. Jess Williams Spring Service 2215 O Street Lincoln 8, Nebraska Phone 2-3633 Flense Ask For UMBERGER'S AMBULANCE 2-8543 t mhergert Mortuary, Inc. EVERYTHING FOR THE OFFICE Desk Calendars Letter B»ta Transfer Cases File Fatten latex Gattea Waa4 ansi Sled Desks Waste Baskets LATSCH BROTHERS 1124 OSk 2-4C29 Phoenix Cemetery Agrees to Bury Xegro I e ter an BY THOMAS GRIGSBY PHOENIX. Ariz.— (ANP) —In the face of opposition from three veteran's organizations and an aroused public. Greenwood Me morial park cemetery changed its policy to allow the burial of a, Negro soldier killed in Korea and| : thus brought to an end the five-, ■ week battle to obtain burial of the soldier. | The body of Pvt Thomas C. Reed, 19, had been resting in a mortuary since Nov. 28 awaiting clearance on a burial site in the^ cemetery, owned by Arizona lodge No. 2 of the Free and Accepted Masons. The three veteran organizations which asked the cemetery to per-j mit burial of any veteran without: special notarized letters of request were: The Luke-Greenway Post of the American Legion, Post 720 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the Disabled American Veterans. Until recently, Greenwood Me-j : Dr. Miller was a vigorous oppo nent of the Lincoln Administra tion and its conduct of the Civil War. Nebraska Territory was ’ overwhelmingly sympathetic to the Union cause, and in some communities Dr. Miller felt obliged to have an armed guard. Hitchcock won easily, with a ma jority of 1,087 out of a total of 5,885 votes cast. I .— morial park had restricted burial in the veterans section to white persons. However, several months ago it adopted a policy of con sidering special letters of request from the three veteran organiza tions and had allowed four Negro soldiers to be buried there. Pvt. Reed’s father had objected to having to ask the organizations to intercede in behalf of his son and send letters. _.— -— The Gulf of California is among the finest fishing grounds in the world. DONLEY-STAHL CO. LTD. 1331 N St DRUGS—PRESCRIPTIONS SICK ROOM NECESSITIES WE APPRECIATE YOUR PATRONAGE AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING WRECKER SERVICE 2-4295 HARVEY'S GARAGE * 2119 O St. Gilmour-Danielson Drug Co. PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS 142 So. 13th St. 2-1246 PARRISH MOTOR CO. 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