RANDOLPH SAYS BAN ON MARIAN ANDERSON SHOULD STIR FIGHTING SPIRIT OF THE NEGRO PEOPLE (Continued from page D - apparent in the aggressive storm j of resentment and the will to fight ; againrt racial barriers, now mani fested among the Negro people For. mqre important than Marian Andersen's singing in Sonsrituiim Wall or the Auditorium of any whit i retool is thn recognition t>■ Kegr -os of their right to have het ping ‘here, and an umiving deter mine'.Voft to fir hit for t>at right. 1 . is thi* growing realization on . the part of fh; N-ernes that, the’ pn?',-r,". ’rights and a courageous heol't*.' ’[1"d * 'ii«in*' < * ;'*‘ t mjo> that rig’t is the heartening atpiril. to struggl: tc exorcise and this whale episode. Moreover,when by s ’*rer d’nt of protest and fight fug. the Negroes themselves com pel rr'ogriu' 1 of ihcir const it u tior 1 it endows them with « dignity and power, in lependn’i and ability of character which anako for s®etiri‘y and salvation ymrr.ise and progress. Verily, this awakening, even if J temporary, which we hope is not the case, means much more to the Negro people than the old and decrepit women of DA.R had gran ts Marian Anderson the privilege to sing in Constitution Hall, will cut a fighi'. The pri raiy significance of this whole affair lies in a developing awareness of the power of strug gle through mass action and or r anized effort against race and color discrimination. And most im portant of all is the implication n ' possibility that this awaken ing and awarness may be trans a. ■ i and introduce 1 into the field j >T labor and political struggle, to ! ' uiH organizations to secure eeo- 1 nemic justice, the only sure foun- j atior of an enduring cultural su per-structure for Afro-America, f?ut the question logically arises “How is this deepening wrath of tie Negro messes and their de <:ii for s< cial justice to he ex- j vr-'-rd and employed to meet the ituCion created hy the anti-Ne ; o policy of the DAR. and the fo-srl pr Education ban on Marian '1 nrl statements of protest and con Ceil' THE MOTOiUNG * mw\ THE NEXT TIME IT RAINS GOME IN FOR A SAFETY DEMONSTRATION •Just one rainy-day ride on these new Goodrich Silvertowns with the Life-Saver Tread will prove to you that these remarkable new tires ■will stop you quicker, safer on wet Toads than you ever stopped before. That’s because the new Life-Saver Tread is actually a road dryer. It gives you a dry track for the rub ber to grip. Besides, the new Goodrich Sil srertown is the only tire that gives you the famous Golden Ply blow out protection. Come in for a free demonstration ride the next time it rains. Then you’ll know why this newSilvertown is called the safest f .thing on wheels. \(YES SIR,THIS1 ( NEW KIND OF \ l TIRE HUGS DRY 4 ROADS.ORIES < VVVETROADS/ 'NO EXTRA COST Many tire* coat more but no other tire at any price — can Hive you thia two-aray p,„».ri{rn againat akida ant hl'ni1 outt NEW SILVERTOWN STILL THE ONLY TIRE WITH GOLDEN PLY BLOW-OUT PROTECTION «_ • This famous Goodrich inven tion is another li/m-saving pro tection you get in the new Goodrich Safety SiSvertown at no extra cost! 5* •** Goodrich*53* SAFETY Silvertown Uf E-SAVER TREAD.GOLDEN PLY BLOWOUT PROTECTION demnation, though this procedure is not without a definite measure i of value and should be continued. It is generally expected, howev er. by the ruling whites of America that Negroes are content to meet a condition of injustice to which they arc subjected by petitions and polite diplomacy, which is but an other name for cowardice, it is obvious even to tho blind that the breed of American whites, respor. -iblo for the rank discrimination against Marian Anderson do not give a picayune for letter writing and name calling, alone. These forms of attack are splendid, but sometimes too dignified to impress the opposition so that they will know that the conflict their action has precipitated is not a pink tea party. Have wo as a group the courage to adopt the necessary drastic action to grapple with th" challeneg the DAR. and Board of Education have hurled into our teeth ? Now, wrat can be done that win set white Washington and the country as a whole thinking and thinking hard? Nothing could be more effective than for the Negro people of Washington to throw a mass picket line around Consti tutional Hall and the Board of Education and keep it there for months, with placards portraying that democracy, liberty and injus tice in America are dead. It will show white America that the Ne gro people have guts and are not afraid to fight -1—0 PRES. ROWLAND HAYNES SAYS NO DOLE ■* President Rowland Haynes of the University of Omaha today de fended work-relief against tnose who would supplant this program with a direct dole. Admitting that any form of pub lic relief will injure morale anJ taint the American tradition of ‘rugged indivdualism,’ President Haynes declare: “The Country can’t very well avoid the relief problem at tho pre sent time. It’s very much like a flu epidemic—it’s bound to have its bad effects, but you can’t very well overlook it. “I feel that if we can afford it wo should keep work-relief instead of a dole. I feel that the extra cost pays for itself partly in the increased morale of the people and partly in the work done. A dole leaves nofhing to show for it ex cept some stomachs partly filled. Mr. Haynes has himself been »n social welfare work for more than a quarter of a century. Before be coming president of bhe University of Omaha in 1935, he was head of tho Nebraska division of the Fed eral Emergency Relief Adminis tration. The president stated that worn relief, like any type of work, de pends for its efficiency on careful planning and good foremanship. The WPA has been working on the University of Omaha campus since last fall. Of the work thu9 far j completed, President Haynes said: “Check tests show that the effi vieney for the work ranks high The men grading and the west end of the campus for an athletic field have often removed ten carloads of dirt apiece during a single day's work Work like that doesn’t give much time for shovel-leaning. The president added that he “would like to see those who poke fun at the WPA try their own hamta at shoveling. I doubt if very ■ many of them wuold do the job as well as the W'PA workers.” Mr. Haynes thinks the relief problem will be with us for a long time to come. England, he pointed out, has had it for a number of decades. The problem has hereto , fore been stalled off in the United States by the free land* of the ‘ West, the development of mass production and other similai fac tors. Now we can’t stall it off any longer. This new phenomenon will have its effect on American public life, Mr. Haynes believes. Chief effect, he asserted, will be a readjustment in public expendi tures. Outlays for education may be cut to make way for relief ex penditures. “The public pocketbook can con tribute just so much. Most of our communities today are like a man with a wife and children whose , brother in law has died, leaving an added demand on the man’s income to help support his widowed sister. ' “This added demand on his in- | come reduces the anuount he has for the education of his children. The pocketbook ia now confronted by the same situation." : PERSONALITIES in if * ^ NICK and CHARLES KENNY, A.S.C.A.P. ^ 1-The Gold Mine Is Still in the Sky By Daniel I. McNamara NICK fought In five wars. He was stroke oarsman on a sailors' twelve-oared racing cutter that never was beaten. He was star foot ball player and all around athlete in the U. S. Navy. Today he is a powerful, smiling giant—but if you sing a song of tender sentiment, like as not you’ll see a tear well in the eye of this soft-hearted swashbuck ler, for Nick Kenny is himself a writer of songs of appealing senti mentality. He loves to entertain the children on his radio programs. A success in New York journal ism, Kenny insists that he is a song writer first, newspaper man inci dentally. For he started writing songs when he was a youngster in th6 navy, and has been writing them for ihore than 20 years. He has writ ten more than 60 successes, many of them among the best sellers. Nick, however, has not' cornered the talent in the Kenny family, for bis accomplished brother, Charles, a violinist and composer, frequent ly shares with Nick the honors of creating new song successes. Nick, ft native of Astoria, L. L, served two complete terms in the navy, starting as a coal passer. He became the fastest signal man in the Navy. Three of his brothers were lost in the world war. His second enlist ment ended the day of the Armis tice. After two years in the Mer chant Marine, he went to work as a cub reporter in Bayonne, N. J., soon became sports editor, then worked on newspapers in Boston and New York. He was a pioneer in the de velopment of the radio column as a newspaper feature. For more than a decade he has been an authority on news of the radio. Both Nick and Charles are mem bers of the American Society of Com posers, Authors and Publishers and their copyrighted songs are in the Society’s repertoire. Active in New York newspaper work, they have found music an avocation of great possibilities. One of their latest ef-j forts is "Cathedral in the Pines”, a song of romantic appeal, and one of the most popular numbeni of cur-J rent radio programs,, {Music Features ft Photo Syndicate) Because of his concern for the “public pocketbook’’ President Hay nes refused this year to ask the city of Omaha for increased tax support for the municipal Univer sity of Omaha. The army of dependent Ameri cans will also have its effect on partisan politics declared the presi dent The effect will be not un liko that of any other pressure group which seeks to gain its ends by lobbying and by influencing the major political parties. “Various organized special inter est groups have milked the Trea sury in the past and continue to do so today," said Mr. Haynes; “And I can’t see that it’s any worse for a bunch of poor people to do this than it is for any other pre suro group.” Tho University of Omaha presi dent sees agitation to supplant federal administration which local administration as an attempt mere ly to transfer control from one group of politicians to another group. “My experience in relief and welfare work convinces me there is little to be grained by gfiving lo cal administrators more control. I can’t see that the rottenness of local politics is any less rotten than the rottenness of federal politics. “In general, federal administra tion tends to be more and above loard—if only becase the local peo ple are on the watch for any slips on the part of the federal adminis trators But when relief is in the hands of local administrators, there is considerably less vigilance. ‘‘The present relief burden is one which only the federal govern ment can shoulder because of its broader avenues of taxation. 1 think the federal government has no right to spe-nd money without su pervising its use. "I recall that before the war. New York City gave millions of dollars to private institutions for AMERICAN WEINER SHOP 2609 North 24th Street Best Chili sad Best Hot Dogs in the West All Kinds of Sandwiches HOME MADE ICE CREAM the care aid Dr. Witman, the Latin dicta ERNEST k. ADAMS DESERVES YOUR SUPPORT FOR CITY COMMISSIONER gw I —■■■■■ . ■_ ... ■■■. Political Advertisement tor will get little encouragement from hi* German colleague. “Hitler is now most interested in pursuing the policy of eastward expansion he outlined in ‘Mein KampF. Until he has consolidated his position in Central and Eastern Europe, he will try to avoid trou I bio with France and Britain.’’ The University of Omaha poli tical scientist has other reasons for doubting the stability of the Rome-Berlin axes. Apparently, the German dictator made his recent junket into Czechslovakia without informing his Italian playmate, an indication that there is very little collaboration between Berlin and Rome. Moreover, Adolph may displease Benito by trying to muscle in on tho latter’s territory. As the Ger- ' man pi* hes eastward, it is likely that 'he will try to get Hungary anti Jugoslavia under his influence, said Dr. Whitman. Heretofore theso countries have been consid ered part of the Italian orbit. “Already the Italian position in Central Europe has been irrepar ably damaged with the absorption of Czechslavakia. German control there limits Italian influence. “Mussolini must recognize that to stick to the axis threatens Ita lys position as a great power. Even if Germany and Italy waged war together successfully, Italy could expect little more than crumbs as her share of the spoils. A success ful Germany might even threaten Italy’s national existence”. Whether or not Britain and France give in to Mussolini’s de mands for expansion in the Medi terranean, Dr. Whitman still be lieves that Italy will break the axis w'hen war comes. Concessions to Mussolini might not have an im mediate apparent effect on the ax is, but the real effect will show when the crisis comes, he declar ed. If Britain and France turn a eoUl shoulder to II Duce’s demand Ita ly will still side with them against Hitler wnen the Showdown comes, said the professor, because Muss olini will have to consider that a German victory would hurt Italy more than she could gain from such a victory. Then there is a little matter of 250,000 Germans in what was formerly part of the Austrian Ty rol and is now part of Northern Italy. Of course Hitler has promis KIDNEY TROUBLE STOP GETTING UP NIGHTS — i i To harmlessly flush poison* and acid from kidneys and relieve ir ritation of bladder, so that you can Htop “getting up nights” get a 35 cent package of Gold Medal Haar lem Oil Capsules and take as dir- 1 ccted. Other symptoms of kidney and bladder- weaknesses may be scant, burning or smarting pas sage—-backache—leg cramps—puf fy eyes. Get the original GOLD MEDAL. ed Mussolini that he has no de signs on the Tyroleans; but Beni to is too smart a man to believe one of Adolph's promises. 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