10c Per Copy “and Worth It” SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 194* Our 19th Year—No. 39 Political ! NEWS JOE C. STOLINSKI FOR COUNTY ASSESSOR Since he has been in public of fice Joe C. Stolinski has made a re cord for fair and impartial deal ing with all people, he has never played favorites nor has he lis tened to pressure groups, large or small to assess property this way or that. He has done what he has considered the right and fair job. • CARL JOHNSON AND JOSEPH V. BENESCH CANDIDATES FOR THE LEGISLATURE It is to the best interest of the people of this community to elect Carl Johnson. State Senator from the Fifth legislative district and Joseph V. Bcnesch to represent the Sixth legislative district. • ROMAN L. HRUSKA, FRANK BEST AND H. B. BERQUIST FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONERS ROMAN L. HRUSKA is serving his second year as chairman of the County Board. He is the only attorney member of the Board. For 17 years he has successfully engaged in general practice of law in Omaha. As chairman of the Board. Mr. Hruska has ably presented Doug las Countv's contentions to the State Legislature in regard to laws and bills on county business. FRANK C. BEST has establish ed himself as a man of action in public office. His good judgement with the welfare of the people foremost in his mind, has resulted in economy and efficiency in the Douglas County administration. Through his appointment of the “Hospital Investigating Commit tee" which was composed of civic minded leaders, the Douglas Coun ty Hospital has been reorganized and definitely taken out of poli tic^. He actively supported the Polio Ward in the hospital for victims of the dreaded infantile paralysis which rendered such splendid service in the present epidemic, this being attested to by medical men and parents alike. H. D. BERQUIST S record as a present member of the Douglas County Commission warrants his re-election.. for a continuance of efficient management. Since Mr. Berquist became a member, the County Board has paid off a $550,000 deficit incur red b ya previous regime; also $2,000,000, in road and hospital bonds. This leaves Douglas Coun- ! ty with a debt of only $35,000, which can easily be paid off in two years, .leaving Douglas Coun ty debt free. In charge of operation of River view Home. Mr. Berquist has man aged the Institution humanely and efficently. • T. H. MAENNER and GERALD E. COLLINS QUALIFIED CANDIDATES FOR PUBLIC POWER DISTRICT In these days of greatly increas ed living costs, it is comforting to learn that at least one necessity of life for every Omaha family can now be lowered. This situation is the direct re sult of the foresight and courage of a group of loyal Omaha citi zens who acted at a critical mo ment to purchase the Nebraska Power Company for the people of this community. The Company is now in the pro cess of being transferred from that local-non-nrofit group to the Omaha Public Power District. This District, being publically owned, will effect sufficient sav ings over the old private owner- J ship to pay off the purchase price and at the same time reduce the I cost of electricity to all users. Two men who were leaders in i the group which acted for the\ people are now candidates for Di- j rectors of the new District. They | are T. H. Maenner, prominent Omaha real estate insurance agent and Gerald E. Collins, well-known Omaha attorney. The experience and knowledge of the situation which these two men gained in acquiring the Com pany for the people will be ex tremely valuable to the new Dis trict. The District is composed of seven Directors, two of whom will be elected November 5. The selec- j tion of the two Directors is not a political matter, but a matter of choosing experienced and capable men who have proved that they have the best interests of the peo ple at heart. • NATURAL GAS WHAT ABOUT RATES? The City of Detroit, after years of dealing with Natural Gas Com panies, officially and through the City Corporation Council, makes four suggestions to any city which contemplates changing from Man ufactured to Natural Gas. 1. Know exactly what the rates are to be, especially the rate to home consumers, and reduce the understanding to writing. 2. Know what the contracts are between the distributing company and the pipeline company—all con tracts. 3. Reach and adequate under standing for the elimination of un necessary standby and obsolete equipment. 4. Know on what capital the rate will be based—have that cry stal clear. Let's take Detroits advice and get a definite understanding as to what the little fellow is going to pay in comparison with the big fellow, before we sign that blank check—Committee for Telling the Other Side. • NATURAL GAS WILL CUT COSTS TO GAS USERS, DISTRICT SAYS Definite reductions in gas costs to Omaha users will result if the city's voters approve full Natural Gas in the election, according to a statement by the Metropolitan Utilities District. Pointing out that the Utilities FEDERAL GRAND JURY Indicts Six in Jones Lynching NEW YORK, Oct. 24th—Six men named by Albert Harris Jr., as members of the mob which lynched his cousin, John Jones, and beat Harris, in Minden, La., on August Sth were indicted on Oct. 18th by a Federal Grand Jury for violation of civil rights sta tutes. Young Harris and his fath er Albert Harris, Sr., made a dra matic trip to Monroe, La., last week under the protection of US marshals and accompanied by the executive secretary of an NAACP branch, to present their evidence to the grand jury. The indictment charged that Chief of Police B. Geary Gantt, Deputy Sheriffs Charles Edwards and O H. Haynes, Jr., deprived the Negroes of their Constitution al rights by “causing them to be released from jail and handed over to a mob which inflicted a beating upon both. The others named were Samuel Maddry, Sr., H. E. Perry and W. D. Perkins. The indictments followed an investigation by the FBI at the request of the civil rights section of the Justice Department, before whom Albert Marris, Jr., presen ted his testimony last August af ter his escape from the lynch mob through NAACP interven tion. In a letter to Attorney General Tom Clark, Walter White, exe cutive secretary of the NAACP stated: “The NAACP is very happy about the Federal Grand Jury’s indictments of six men who parti cipated in the lynching of John Jones and the beating of Albert Harris Jr. in Minden, La., August 8th. We feel, however, that the only way to insure a full and cor rect prefantation of the case would be through the appoint ment of a Special Prosecutor by you. “The record of United States Attorney Malcolm LaFargue, in regard to Negroes, which is well known to you and to us, seems to make this imperative”._ SAYS NATURAL GAS WILL EASE COAL SHORTAGE Public Pulse, Omaha Guide, Omaha, Nebr. Dear Sir: The oil and coal dealers oppos ing Natural Gas are criticizing the fact that there is only forty year3 of reserve natural gas. How can they talk. I heard over the radio the other day that there was only 32 days reserve supply of coal available, John L. Lewis thinks it about time to pull another coal strike and hike the price of coal still higher on the helpless public. . i I don’t see how these coal deal | ers have the nerve to object to : 40 years of gas supply when they can only offer us thirty days and even that depends on the whim i of John L. Lewis. If the people 1 are fooled again on Natural Gas by the coal and oil dealers, they are certainly dumb. Our city needs Natural Gas for equal competition among larger cities. The longer we put this off j and the more times we vote on the subject, the longer it will take to have reduced rates. Yours truly, C. S. Bosanek, 5919 S. 36 St. Decline to Restrict Contribution to Negro Schools SLEEPING CAR PORTERS BECOME SPONSORS OF 2 RURAL SCHOOLS As a contribution to better ed ucation in rural America, the Bro. therhood of Sleeping Car Porters has recently, through Save the Children Federation, 1 Madison Avenue, New York 10, N. Y., be came the sponsor of two rural schools in Wyoming County, W. Virginia. A. Philip Randolph, pre sident of the Brotherhood declin ed to restrict the contribution to Negro school aid, telling the Fe deration “You are doing excellent work. Please use the money where you see fit”. The Federation has selected from numerous applicants for help two Negro schools in Wyoming j County, which under the supervi sion of a local Save the Children , County Committee, will receive aid in providing the children with the necessities of education and the stimulus of contact with the ''outside". Such help usually takes the form of assistance in the est ablishment of a school lunch pro gram, health and recreational pro motion, or providing badly need ed teaching materials. Further, the Federation will make it poss ible for these children to receive good, useable clothing and shoes. About 900 schools in disadvanta ged rural areas in six states now receive (such, help through the Save the Children Federation, as well as more than a thousand schools in Western Europe. Brother Benjamin F. McLaurin, the Porters organization field re presentative, has been designated District is a public property and makes no profit, the statement emphasizes that “economies af fected by the use of Natural Gas will be passed on to all gas users in the form of reductions in cost for gas service”. •From experience in other ci ties that use Natural Gas, and from estimates of our own and leading gas engineers, the savings from Natural Gas will be substan tion ", the statement says. If Natural Gas is not approved the city will be forced to a 75 percent mixture of Natural and manufactured gas, which would be but a temporary remedy for the acute gas shortage, according to District officials, and a change to full Natural Gas would have to be made anyway in five years or less. The Utilities statement points out that only a small part of the gas plant will be abandoned if Natural Gas is adopted. The only part of the plant that would not i be used with Natural Gas would be the generator and purifying equipment. The rest of the equip ment and plant, holders, compres sors, boiler plant, valves, fogging equipment etc.,, .would continue to be used with Natural Gas as they are today. Gas home heating..now restric ted—would be open to all who want it if Natural Gas is adopted the District says. j YOUR OPINION DOES COUNT IDONT FAIL TO VOTE NOV. 5. ititiiiiiiiimimiiMmmimiiiimiiiiiimtimiimiMitiMiiiiMHMiiiiiiiMiiiiiiimimiii \ as the official correspondent for the project. NAACP ASKS END OF LABOR UNIONS’ SEGREGATION NEW YORK Oct. 24th—Follow ing the first meeting of the NAACP’s National Labor Com mittee, Walter White announced that joint NAACP and labor ac tion was one of its key objectives. The National Labor Committee which will work with Clarence Mitchell, NAACP Labor Secre • tary and former director of field operations for the National FEPC will follow a 7 point program. As announced by the Committee, its objectives are. 1. Elimination of discrimina tory employment practices in in dustry and government which re sult in refusal to hire colored workers, wage differentials based on race unequal opportunities for training and promotion, unfair dismissals and segregation in em ployment because of race. 2. Greater participation of col ored persons in the trade union movement. 3. Ending of segregated locals auxiliaries and other discrimina tory practices in labor unions. 4. Passage of state and federal j FEPC legislation. 5. Inclusion of non-discrimina- j tion clauses in state and federal laws pertaining to the employment of persons in the execution of gov ernment contracts. 6. Joining with labor unions favored by labor for the repealing of unfavorable legislation. 7. Expanding and improving opportunities for vocational train ing on the basis on non segrega uon. The Committee voted action to prevent discrimination. against minority workers in the Employ ment Service when it is returned to the states on November 15, and discussed plans for the full util ization of colored building con struction workers in the current veterans housing program. Ways of implementing an NAACP Na tional Convention resolution call ing for support of the AFL and CIO drives in the south were also discussed at the meeting. Members of the Committee are: Frank Fenton, AFL director of Organization: Boris Shiskin. AFL economist: Nelson Cruikshank, AFL director of social insurance: Walter Reuther. UAW-CIO pre sident; George L. P. Weaver, di rector of the CIO Committee A gainst Discrimination; Willard S. Townsend, president of the United Transport Service Employee CIO; the Rev. Francis J. Gilligan, St. Paul, Minn.; Alfred Baker Lewis, Greenwich, Conn.; and Palmer Weber, research director, CIO PAC, New York City; Mrs. Elea | Officers of Negro Group Praised By A11 y.- Genera] Attorney General Tom Clark praises officers of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People for nullifying attempts on the part of local un its of the organization to ban the showing of a musical version of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The Attorney General’s commen dation is contained in an article in the December American Mag azine in which he says “intoler ance is on the increase largely be cause a growing number of Am ericans are unwilling to grant to people they don’t like the rights and privileges they, themselves enjoy under the Bill of Rights”. Well-meaning groups often stum ble into dangerous practices, he says, explaining: ‘ Take the Negroes. For decades they have fought to abolish lynch ing, poll taxes, and discrimination But recently Negro groups took a stand that was an attempt at censorship. In many cities, local units of the NAACP campaigned to ban the showing of a musical version of Uncle Tom’s Cabin on the ground that is portrays the Negro in a derogatory manner. It is to the credit of the national officers of the NAACP that they quickly saw that a civil rights issue was involved and wired the locals to desist from their attempt to suppress the play.’*_ nor Roosevelt: and Mr. Charles Houston, Washington, D. C. Liberals Plan Organization NEW YORK—Preparation to build the most powerful liberal movement ever brought together in the history of the United States to fight for progressive govern ment and to outlaw such evils as racial discrimination took shape this week when leaders of the groups who formed the Confer ence of Progressives Coordination Committee met in New York. The group chose a nominations committee, which inccluded suc-V outstanding national leaders \ j Walter White, secretary of the National Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People to consider the affiliation of new groups. CIO president Philip Murray who presided over the session de clared “we expect this movement to expand to become the most •powerful liberal or progressive organization ever brought toge ther in the history of the United States”. Nucleus of the organiza tions who attendd the first Con ference of Progressives in Chicago last month. x lit: t/umcicuv.c uicw up on uug platforms in Chicago calling for a Federal Civil Rights Bill “to in sure effective Federal protection of civil rights in every state by abolishing the poll tax, punishing lynchers and establishing a perm anent FEPC. It also demanded that all funds under the GI Bill of Rights be withheld from any educational institution that prac tices discrimination. Murray said that the Coordina tion Committee would later have city, state and county committees “so that the actual work will get down to the grass roots”. He too pointed that the movement will include industrial workers, mem bers of the arts, sciences, profes sions, farmers, small businessmen and white collar employes. He set as the purpose ,of the movement "to bring before the people all the important issues af fecting the well being of all our people and the nation’’. The Coordination Committee planned a second meeting in Wash ington on November 8th and an nounced its intention to hold a 2nd major conference sometime in mid January. RACE MAN OPENS NEW FIELD IN INDUSTRY by Susie Conway for Omaha .Guide Benjamin White of Fort Byron, New York has opened the Cayu ga Foundry Co., Inc., on the N." Y. Central Lines near four main high ways (Rochester, Aubury, Buffa lo and Syracuse). The foundry specializes in bronze, brass, alum inum castings and foundry equip ment flaska. The plant employs nineteen people with the personnel being protected with unemploy ment insurance and social secur ity benefits. No racial barriers are evident among the employees with the administrative structure being of Negro personell. During the war the foundry carried an ‘A’ rating which was the highest pri* ority rating. The plant produced carrier parts and 75 milimeter bomb-locks and war contracts re lative to navy and ordinance pump sheels for amphibians. Business contacts are Sampson, Inc., Rums Mfg. Co., Carrier Corp Syracuse Stamping Co., Caldwell Cland and E. C. Tteams. Mr. White’s talented and attrac tive daughter is treasurer of the firm. During his spare time Mr. White has built a spacious and modern home from the ground up. It is a master piece of architect ure. His home is modestly furni shed and designed by his wife, Ber tha, who specializes i ninterior de corations. Be sure to look in on our fellow worker as he is an as set to the Nation and his race. j Would Restrict Negro Vote By Constitutional Amendment In Alabama MONTGOMERY, Ala. (Global) The State Democratic organiza tion will put before the voters in the November 5th election a con stitutional amendment measure, the Boswell amendment, which | would set up as a qualification for | registration the ability of the pro- j spective voter to read, write and interpret the Constitution of the \ United States. This same political trick which was used to restrict Negro voting after the Civil War would vali date the present voting qualifica The proposed measure is op tion of ability to read and write and own property valued at $300. posed by Governor-Elect Folsom, Republicans, PAC and several lo cal business groups. War Dept. Orders Release of 55% of Lockburne AAF Officers 1 - — —^. ■ - - New Hotel Opened at 2504 Charles St. - » Realizing the need for additional Hotel accomodation for transient and permanent guests, Mr. and I Mrs. John Walker, 2721 Parker ! St., recently purchased the proper ; ty at 2504 Charles St. where they i have opened a modern spacious hotel with accomodation for 30 people. WALLACE TO SPEAK NOV. 4 Former Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace will deliver his first New York address since his resignation from the cabinet at a ! luncheon at the Hotel Commodore ; Monday, November 4th. sponsor ed by thhe National Citizens Pol itical Action Committee, it was I announced yesterday by Dr. F. i Kingdon, chairman of the organ | ization. The speech will mark Mr. Wal lace’s only Neww York appear ance during the current election ! campaign. Thhe luncheon, which is the closing event in National ; Citizens PAC’s campaign activi ties, has as its co-chairman Mrs. Stephans Wiman, chairman of the Women’s Division, and Mr. Paul Tishman, chairman of the Busin essmen’s Division. C. B. Baldwin, executive vice-chairman of Nat'i Citizens Political Action Commit tee, will serve as toastmaster. Colored Rail Firemen FIGHT FOR JOBS BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Oct. 24— Assembled in the Fifth National Conference in Birmingham, Ala., the industrial center of the south the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters’ Provisional Committee to | Organize Colored Locomotive Fire men, to wage an aggressive and relentless battle (1) to maintain jobs colored firemen have and other Negro workers employed in the operating-running crafts of the railroads, (2) safeguard their security (3) consolidate security on the jobs, (4) and keep the door of employment open to Negro workers in the railroad industry. Delegates from all are leading h tilro.,13 in tiie south, were in at tendance at the Conference and gave graphic and dramatic stor ies of the injustice and hardships they were suffering at the hands of the Southeastern Carriers, the Brotherhood of Locomotive En ginemen and Firemen and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen. A presentation of the cases now in uic luiu to piaimcu uj uc filed was made by attorneys T. W. Johnson of Macon, Ga., Thur man L. Dodson of Washington D. C. and Samuel H. Gellman of Richmond, Va., M. P. Webster, former member of the President’s Committee on Fair Employment Practices and First National Vice President of the Brotherhood^of Sleeping Car Porters, gave the history of the work of FEPC in the interest of the colored firemen and other Negro railroad workers. He also deplored the misrepresen tation of the Brotherhood of Sleep ing Car Porters and the AF of L by some of the papers. A. Philip Randolph, chairman of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Provisional Committee for the organization of colored loco motive firemen presided. In his op ening statement, he pointed out the war between two world sy stems of ideas for dominion over the hearts and minds of men, touched and affected the Negro in Birmingham just as it affected the peoples of Greece, China, the Mid dle East and France. Negroes must make a choice said he, between the totalitarian philosophy on the right and left espoused by Hitler’s Germany and Mussolini’s Italy and there was more need in Nebraska represented in the Western Demo cracies. Totalitarianism, Fascist, and Communist, achieve social, economic and political convictions through police terrorism and those who dissent invite liquidation. The democracies, on the other hand achieve convictions and decisions on economic, social and political EXPERT CONSULTANT — Dr. William E. Allen, Jr., St. Louis, Mo., who has been appointed a j consultant to the Secretary of War | through the Surgeon General. He will work in conjunction with other medical experts in a program de signed to improve the quality of 1 medical care given the American ' soldier. (Photo by Young from War Department Public Relations | Division.) Klansman ‘Mayor* of Nationj Capital BY FRED d’AVILA It was August 9, 1946. The Amer ican people, who had just helped win a bloody war to crush fascism heard a scratchy, nasal whine over a national radio hookup, declaring that, “I am a member of the Ku Klux Klan No. 40, called the Bilbo Klan No. 40, of Mississippi.” Theodore Gilmore Bilbo, 69-year old thrice elected Senator from Mississippi, was brazen but not rash. Admission of membership in the rope, terror and bedsheet club was part of his race-baiting stra tegy that has made him a success ful politician in his polltax “para dise.” But—and it concerns the whole nation—the flat-headed hate mon ger is also “mayor” of the United States Capitol. As ranking mem ber of the District Committee be cause of his Senate seniority. Bil bo calls the shots for a city of nearly a million people. Bilbo’s viciousness has been equalled by his political durabil ity. He survived a clouded scandal as supervisor of a girl’s school in 1908 as a state senator. At a grand jury hearing, he admitted taking a bribe to swing an elec tion, but claimed he had accepted it to expose the bribe givers. He avoided expulsion from the state senate by just one *ote, after the senate had pass*- u a resolution asking hi mto resign and declar ing him “unfit to sit with honest upright men in a respectable leg islative body.” While thousands of Cohens and Kellys, Massettii# and Hansens were giving their lives for victor ry, Bilbo contributed to national unity by referring to millions of Italian citizens as “dagoes,’’ by reviling Jews as “kikes,” and by calling Negroes “niggers.” D. C. residents eight years ago rolled up a 7-1 majority in favor of home rule and a 12-1 majority for national representation. In the referendum scheduled for November 5th, it is expected that majorities will be even more over whelming. After all, no self-re spectitng capital could long toler ate a Bilbo as “mayor.” —from CIO News. . 11 —.— —- I Dewey Bans Bilboism from New York: Administration Outlaws K. K. K. iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiDimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMtitiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiuiiKiiiimiiiiinmil questions through intellectual com bat in the arena of public decision. Senator Morse Says Democrats Refused To Block FEPC Filibuster Text of letters addressed by Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon to the New York Herald Tribune, and to the National • Association for tty; Advancement of Colored Peo ple. Fditor. New York Herald Tribune New York, New York Dear Mr. Editor: I have just finished reading a special article which appeared in your paper of October 18 written by my good friend, Walter White entitled, ''Will Negroes Vote Re publican?” In this article, Mr. White makes some observations and draws some conclusions which make good propaganda for the Democratic Party but which cer tainly cannot be reconciled with the best political interests of the Negroes in America. I am sure that any fair-minded person who reads Mr. White’s ar ticle will see that the conclusion which he would like to have them draw is that the Republican Par ty is no more friendly to protec ting the civil rights and providing the Negro people with equality of economic opportunity and freedom under our Constitutio than is the Democratic Party. I am at a com plete loss to understand how Wal ter White, for whom I have an exceedinly high regard and great respect, could so completely for get when he wrote his article the wretched record which the Demo* crais in Congress wrote for them selves in the 79th Congress. I am sure Mr. White knows it was the Democrats in the Senate of the United States who, by way of the filibuster, defeated time and time again the attempts of a considerable number of Republi can Senators to force through to a vote on its merits the FEPC bill. “In behalf of the people of this State, I want to identify for the slander and scurrility that they are, the statements reported in the press as having been made by Bilbo about New York. We, here in New York, live together as free Americans, regardless of what differences there may be among us in race, creed or color. In contrast to the man from Miss issippi, we do not claim to have achieved perfection in human rela tions. We confess, frankly, that we are learning to improve them all the time. Nothing else could measure up to being the American way. “We have no opology to make to Bilbo, or anyone else, for being the first State to pioneer with an Anti Discrimination, Law. Democracy in employment is one of our av owed objectives “The tar brush, the lyncher’s rope and the klansman's sheet for which Bilbo stands, have no place in New York, nor anywhere in America. As dangerous to welfare there is nothing to choose between Bilboism and Communism. Both are wretched, both are subver sive. “As for myself, I feel that so far as it is in his power to do so. Bilbo has conferred upon me an honor by attacking me in terms only slightly more abusive than he has used to vilify a number of distinguished Americans”_Gov ernor Thomas E Dewey of N. Y. yjn. yes, mere were a tew Demo cratic Senators who were support ing the bill, but there was not a single Democratic Senator who, at any time gave any support whatsoever to those of us on the Republican side of the aisle who l took the position that the only way to beat the filibuster against the FEPC bill was to hold the Senate in session for twenty-four hours a day for as many days or weeks or months as might be ne cessary in order to drive the vi cious practice of the filibuster from the floor of the Senate. I We not only failed to get any help from a single Democratic Senator in that fight but those Democratic Senators who were as suming leadership on the Demo cratic side of the aisle in favor of the FEPC bill actually advised against it and refused to cooper I - Already occupied with the dif ficult task of effecting a 53 per cent reduction in civilian staff, part of a nationwide economy move, Col. B. O. Davis. Jr., Lock bourne C. O., announced last week the receipt of orders to separate 196 of the presently assigned 357 officers from active duty with the Air Forces. This week, following its edict to cut the officer staff more than 55 per cent, the War Department that Lockbourne, among twenty other military posts, was consti tuted as a Separation point to facilitate the processing of out going personnel. According to Col. Davis, this reduction of officer strength is ordered by Headquarters, Army Air Forces as part of the national economy drive. It is expected that the officer strength, Tactical Air Command Stations will be cut ap proximately 50 percent. At the time this order was received from Tactical Air Command, a total of 358 officers were assigned to the Ohio Air Base. Approximately 12 and one half percent of the num ber to be separated under the di rective will be relieved from duty and assigned to Squadron ‘‘X’’ for separation from the service by October 1st. The remainder will be released upon orders from higher headquarters. Officers being separated will be tendered the opportunity to accept commissions in the Air Reserve, equal to the grade which they hold at the time of separation. Of ficers who were originally com missioned in other branches of the service will also be given an op portunity to take commissions in the Air Reserve. Authorities at the Base stated that of the number to be released approximately 72 percent are fly ing officers and 28 percent are non-rated. The same proportion existed before the separation pro cess. VETERAN U. P. WAITER RETIRES Ralph Emmons. 60, oldest wait er in length of service on the Un ion Pacific Railroad, has applied for annuity under provisions of the railroad retirement act. A waiter operating out of Omaha since 1912, Emmons has been on leave of absence for ten months due to illness. ate with us in, our atcmpts to secure a majority in favor of holding continuous sessions in or* der to beat the FEPC filibuster. I cite this as one of manv exam ples I could site in support of my charge that there is a great diff erence between the professings of the Democratic Party on minority race issues and its practices. Cer tainly no one of the Negro race in this country should be surpri sed with the hypocracy of the De mocratic Party on race issues when .it is well known that the Party is controlled by the anti Negro forces of the South. Then too. Mr. White I am sure is fully informed of the political jockeying that Democratic lead ers participated in during the last lew days of the 79th Congress on the anti-poll-tax bill. They know that the complete failure of the tax bill up on the calendar for a vote on the merits was stirring up bitter and deserved political op position to the Democrats among the Negro voters of the country. So what did they do? They pulled a stunt of political window-dress ing but surely Walter White could not have been fooled by it. • WATCH for The GUIDE’S Cameraman! FOR THE ( LATEST / PICTURES ‘ READ THE OMAHA GUIDE Receives $1200 Graduate Social Study Award NEW YORK—Mrs. Aldena B Runnels receives the first fellow ship award of 51200 sponsored by the Adam Hat Welfare Commit tee and given through the Nat’l Urban League for graduate study in social work. Others in the pho ] tograph are, Julius A. Thomas, director of the League’s Industr i ial Relations Department, the Honorable Francis E. Rivers, Ju stice of the city court of New York and JosephSaik, member of the Adam Hat Welfare Commit tee. Mrs. Runnels, who will study at the New York School of Social Work, is a graduate of Prairie View State College, Prairie View, Texas, and was formerly assist ant to the Executive Secretary of the Portland Ore., Urban League.