Tib ® V®ns® rutIJSHtU WtE&LI “ "t>rdtratcd to the promotion of the cultural, social and spiritual itfr bif a prcttt peopie." _ _ _ Melvin L. Shakespeare •‘Oftltnir ud MU* final neer AlMa 22J» • Him Bm MKU t-4C*U it Mo anewsi 0*j< >-760? ft uni* t* ttuahcqatn . .... .. Advertising IM Business Managei Iiurutr» uren .. Office Secretary Alto >ue ,r«et. .... Circulation Managei SlmitM-f Of hr aneedated Nicn Press snd NrUnukt Press Awortetlas Mmeret as hermit Claes Mo tor itme W 1*47. «r the Post Office at Lincoln, JQeimtiMm unde i the Act at Marct a. 1871 3 rout euhacTtptujn . I?W Sing* copy.....................Ida Out at State 1 Tea' Buherriptlon K W-Bidls Copy 10e Between the Lines B' Bean Gordon B. Hancock for AST As one moves along Richmond s famous Monument Avenue, one is struct by the monument to Stone wall Jackson, who was mortally wounded in the nattle ol Chancel - larsville during the Civil War. In one of the fiercest engagements of the war, one of the soldiers said of Jackson, "There he stands like a stone wall,” while shot and shell and Hell in a hundred forms raged about him. The name Stonewall stuck; and it is by this name that he will be remembered by posterity. President Truman’s stand on crril rights is one of these “stone wall” stands. While lesser souls are dilly-dallying and quibbling ht>ti quarreling and quaking amid uncertainties and expediencies. Truman stands like a stone wall. In sc doing he is giving this na tion its most dramatic lesson in statesmanship and moral bril Wkummmm I. Today be is paying with his political life fnr his: courageous stand on the civil rights issue. But •the political life he is giving will be found in greater abundance when posterity accords him the immortality that lesser men would deny hurt. We are being treated to the sorry spectacle of two Republican candidates, Taft and Eisenhower sacrificing a great principle tax political gain. Both Taft and Eisenhower are willing to sacri fice Constitution and the future of minority groups if they can only win the Republican nom ination which carries with it the seeds of national calamity. Expediency as formula for po litical success will not regain the lost prestige of this nation. One of the calamities of current times is this self-same loss of prestige by the United States which fed the hungry and clothed the naked and sheltered the homeless in the uttermost parts of the earth. Why this moral debacle? Why do nations have this subtle hatred of us in suite of our endless phil anthropies and benevolences? Why do we of all nations have to buy our friends who refuse to stay bought for any length of time? It is because of the thing that Taft and Eisenhower are offering the people—expediency above principle. Taft and Eisenhower know the justice and righteous ness of civil rights, but they lack he honesty and the courage to ipenlv advocate civil rights, as hey pertain to Negroes. Only rivil rights do Negroes pose any' problem. WMr Taft aad Flirftwnr aril fees The call of the hour in this na tion is not for candidates of ex pediency, but for moral courage which Truman is evincing in this . critical hour of our nation’s his i toiy. "Stonewall Truman” is a moral redemptionist. Hear ye him! The [ fate or fortune of Truroanism will determine the fate or fortune of ■ our great and mighty nation! Appeals For Christian Candidates A prominent clergyman last week appealed to the American people to join him and his church in a pledge to support a candidate fnr the presidency who will work lor a true democracy. He is Dr. J. C. Austin, vice president of the National Baptist Convention, USA Inc., which rep resents some 5.000,000 citizens. He pleaded tor the aid of de mocracy bated on color in Amer ica Him the beginning of true de mocracy based on Christian ideals. It ms appeal Dr. Austin said in part: “I move that we do here and now pledge ourselves to give full and united support to hie candi date fur the presidency of uese united States of America whose platform anri policy stand for trite democracy, for equality of all citizens, lor a form of government vi for and by the people, for a form of government which makes us one national invidisible;’ “A candidate who will give himself unreservedly to the full filling of the purposes of needs of the nation under our constitu tion which promises full protec tion and equal rights to all citi zens regardless of creed, color, or conditions. “We pledged to support the man who guarantees to each and every citizen equal rights and pro tection in his pursuit for life, lib erty and happiness, and who promises that every citizen as a toiler or laborer in these United States of America will be guar anteed equal and fair employment “I make this motion in the faith that cur performances will coin cide with our promises contained in our Declaration of Independ ence and Constitution. Anything else makes democracy a deception and our pretense erf Christian liv °it> . nebMska r h IAMBS C. OLSON, SufitriHttndem r ST*T* IIITOIICU IOC1ITT Nebraska's Senators Of Charles H. Van Wyck, U.S. 1 Senator from 1881 to 1887, the I late Dr. Addison E. Sheldon once wrote: “(He) was the most hated man in Nebraska politics—at least until the arrival of George W. Norris.” Senator Van Wyck was indeed a controversial figure, and from al most the day of his arrival in Ne braska an active force in the po litical development of the young ‘ commonwealth. , When Mr. Van Wyck moved to Nebraska in 1874 to take up lands he had acquired near Ne braska City in 1857 he already ‘ had made for himself a rather considerable record as a soldier and politician. A native New Yorker, he had been a congress-1 man from that state for four terms, and had served as a briga dier general in the Union army, commanding the 56th New York volunteers. In Nebraska he continued his political career almost without interruption. He was a member of the Nebraska constitutional convention of 1875, and was, elected to the state senate for three successive terms. In the legislature he was an active ad vocate of railroad rate legislation and tax relief. Mr. Van Wyck went to the s United States Senate in the hotly contested legislative fight of 1881. • Senator A. S. Paddock, seeking,! re-election, was opposed by half 1 a dozen candidates, and it was not ’ until the 17th ballot that any man was able to gain enough strength to secure the election. That Van Wyuck was the winner was at tributed in part to the powerful support given him by the Omaha Bee. Senator Van Wyck was elected - as a Republican, but from the be ginning of his term pursued a course so highly independent as, to alienate strong elements within his party. He was a vigorous supporter of tariff reform, rail road regulation, protection of the public lands, and direct popular i election of senators. Before the end of his term, he was considered to be much more of an Anti-Mo nopolist than a Republican. He reecived an overwhelming plurality for re-election on the preferential ballot, but was turned down by the legislature in favor of A. S. Paddock, whom he had defeated six years earlier. 1 — Iing a curse. “1 offer this motion conscious that the critical eye of the world is watching America today as she offers democracy to others while failing to practice it at home. The world is watching the United States and not the state of Georgia or Florida or Mississippi of Hli-i ; nois. | The President is the represent-; ative of the United States to all the world. Therefore, we will sup port a candidate for President who will consider it the responsi : bility of the United States to see [ that the Amercan promise is ful ■ filled, and that the American - dream does not become a night t mare to its colored citizens, ij "The United States cannot con i tinue to be the leader in the family - of nations if it continues to have . the reputation of mistreating peo .’pie because of their color.’* Dr. Austin also is president of i the Illinois Baptist State Convec tion, which includes some 125,000 : persons and pastor of Pilgrim Baptist church, one of Chicago's largest congregations. The Political Picture By ANP Five minority parties to have presidential candidates current in terest centering on the activities 'of the two major political parties !—the Republicans and the Demo crats—has almost dwarfted the fact that at least five other politi cal parties will have presidential candidates on the ballots. Most of the minority parties on this year’s presidential ballot probably are more to the left than either the Republicans or the Democrats. They include: Progressive party, Socialist party, Troskyite Socialist Workers party, Socialist Labor party, and Prohibition party. The Progressive party, which polled 1,157,172 votes in 1948 with Henry Wallace as presidential candidate, will meet at Chicago 'during the July 4 week-end to formally nominate Vincent Ham nan of San Francisco for Presi dent and Mrs. Charlotta Bass of New York, former editor of the California Eagle, as vice-presi dent. Darlington Hoopes, Reading, Pa. was selected presidential nominee in place of Norman Thomas, the Socialist party’s candidate for some 20 years. Thomas opposed any presidential campaign for the party this year. Samuel H. Fried man, New York publicity man for the United Jewish appeal, is the party’s vice presidential candidate. The Socialist party once polled nearly a 1,000,000 votes, but sank to a measly 139,521 last time. The party is assured a place on the ballot in 18 states already and expects to be on those in 25 to 30 states. Farrell Dobbs is the Troskyite Socialist Workers party candidate for president. The vice presiden tial candidate will be chose at a New York convention July 17-20. ■ .■-TT^i BEAL'S GROCERY Frssh Frails & Vegstabiss Moots 2101 B TsL 2-6933 For Everything in HARDWARE Baker Hardware 101 No. 9th 2-3710 [ Dobbs, a candidate for mayor of New York in 1945 and for governor in 1946, served some 13 months in prison after his con viction with others i n Minneapo lis on charges they conspired to create insubordination in the Armed Forces. The party maintains that its members are “the only true Com munists and the only true social ist in the country—there’s no dif ference.” It expects to be on the ballot in 15 to 18 states this year. Tlje Socialist Labor party, on the ballot as the industrial gov ernment party in some states, is running Eric Hass, editor of the party magazine, Weekly People, for president, and a New York subway dispatcher, Stephen Em ery, for vice president. The party platform has just one plank—“abolition of capitalism.” Its candidates polled 29,061 votes in 1948 and they expect to be on the ballot in 22 states. The Prohibition party’s candi dates is California singing cow boy, Stuart Hamblen, who said he is a reformed drunkard. They are expected to name E. A. Holtwick as Hamblen’s running mate and come out for a platform against communism, universal military training, high taxes, extravagance and corruption in government and the production and consumption of intoxicating liquors. Other minority parties which have an outside chance of being on the ballot in some states, in clude the American Vegetarian party, and the Greenback party. $1 a week Will Buy « DIAMOND Price. %m Q75 from . 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