till!IIII//////✓/>✓ f I hewtotheune\ EQUAL OPPORTUNITY HA.0800 VOLUMN XXI NO. 6._ THE OMAHA GUIDE OMAHA NEBR. Saturday, March 13th, 1948 ONLY TEN CENTS PER COPY “$1,000 in Prizes to be Awarded In Clean-Up Campaign” __ Clean Up, Paint Up, Fix Up Campaign MARCH 15th to SEPT. 15th 19484 “Omaha Guide’s Annual Clean Up—Fix Up Campaign” In cooperation with your local Housing Contractors $1,000 in Prizes for the Most Improved Homes GEORGIA DARES WRATH OF KLAN Two Suspects Ordered to Scene of Crime Atlantic Ga. (UP) — In a double barreled assault again tsanti-lynch legislation Friday, Gov. M. E. Thompson1 1. Ordered two killer sus p e c t s publicly transferred from State Prison to the scene of their crime. 2. Called for State Laws to prohibit “intimidation” meet ing by the Klu Klux Klan. The governor announced the hour and the route for the tra nsfer of two Tennessee bro thers ccused of killing a State Police agent from Tattnall Prison to the Emanual County Jail. He said he was demonstr ating that Georgia can con trol mob feelings. The Klan meetings should be outlawed, Mr. Thompson maintained because the hood ed organization has “cut the ground from beneath the feet” of Southern Congressmen who try to assure the world that Federal anti-lynch laws are necessary. “FORMER OMAHA RES IDENT RETURNS FOR FUNERAL . Miss Margaret Starks, for mer resident of this city re turned to attend the funeral of her grandmother, Mrs. Mar garet Jackson, of 2506 Jeffer son St. Who passed February 14th of this year. Miss Starks jeft for her home in Oakland California, Tuesday morning, during her three weeks in the city, she was the recipient of many courtesies extended by her many friends. TEST IS NEAR ON CIVIL RIGHTS GOP High Command To Oppose Rider The civil rights fight mov ed to the House floor Monday with the GOP leadership ap pearently ready to side with Dixie Democrats. The showdown test shaped up over ,an anti^discriminaj tion rider to the $1,017,851,000 Labor Department-Federal sec urity appropriation bill up for probable late Tuesday. The issue is: Shall states that do not give equal educat ional and job opportunities to citizens of all races, when those opportunities are financ ed with Federal funds, contin ue to receive the money? Representative Keefe (Rep., Wis.) said he would offer it on the floor and give the en tire House a chance to vote. The announced stand of the GOP high command is that the proviso has no place in an appropriations bill and should be concidered as a sperate bill. As for the prospect of a roll call vote, one top Republician said: “We would just as soon not go on therecord on this thing.” Meanwhile, Senator Byrd of Virginia told a radio audience that his fellow Southern Dem ocrats face a “very difficult” task in trying to stave off civil rights legislation. Natfctng New Here In 1804 the Pierce-Arrow had a gearshift lever on steering column and a single lever controlled the Gas-au-lec. FIRST PRIZE Console Radio- Phonograph SECOND PRIZE Deluxe Refrigerator THIRD PRIZE 1948 Electric Range Florence Incident Not Community Sentiment I sincerely hope the recent episode in our “peaceful val ley’’ of Florence will not cause any white or colored people to believe it expresses the senti ments of our community. I havp been a continuous resident of Florence for 33 yrs., and I know whereof I speak. My two sons, have been grad uated from Florence School. I am a past president of Flor ence P. T. A. and I have done some teaching in Omaha. When two fine principals ](Mr. Peterson and Mr. Krebs) have offered so much to Flor i ence School and this commun ; ity it is a downright shame their planning to help youth j should be thwarted in such a senceless manner. A Florence Citizen R e f u s al of permission for the Lake School basket ball team to play in the Florence gym because of a colored boy I was very foolish. People of Fl | orence, your children come in contact with them every day .unless you are sending them to private school. And so far I have not heard of any con tamination. Mfs. Fornetta Elmore SITTING WITH NEGROES ILLEGAL1 SAILOR FINED Galveston, Tex.(AP)—Clar ence Jack Peterson, 27, sea man from Birchwood, Wis., was fined $25 and court costs Friday for sitting with Negro es on a Galveston Bus. HARRY KNUDSEN FILES for CITY COMMISSIONER Files Independently Harry Knudsen, one of Om aha’s present City Commission ers filed independently for re election. Mr. Harry Knudsen issued this statement at the time of filing: I’m not on any slate or tic ket .I’m grateful to the people of Omaha for having confiden ce in me and the matter is en tirely in their hands. I am just “Awards to be Judged by a Committee Picked by Mayor Anyone having any repairs made on them home during this period are qualified to en ter. Call the Omaha Guide and register. A committee appoin ted bv the Mayor will act as judges. The home which is judged the most improved will be the winner of the first prize. Select one of the local con tractors whose advertisement will appear in this paper be . ginning March 2th, and make arrangements for your improv ements. These merchants who will list with us are reliable and can be depended upon to give you the best service at a j reasonable cost. By George McDavis Promotional Director concluding my fifth term in office and want to assure the people of Omaha that I will continue to serve them to the best of my ability.” Commissioner Knudsen has servel nine years as Finance Commissioner, where he had done an enviable job and has also served as Street Commis sioner and as Commissioner of the Police Department. Mr. Knudsen ranks as the senior member of the present City Council and with his^iast experience and outstanding service, should be re-elected so that the people of Omaha may get the fujl benefit of that ex perience and of his ability. M i Over Stimulated With Intox icating Liquor George C. Higgins came to the front door of the Police Station in a intoxicating con dition Sunday, Mar<;h 7th, was fined $1.00 and cost. Felix Sutton Fined a $1.00 and costs for drunkness and being a vagarent, 5 days in the jail. Preston J. Green fined a $1. and costs ,for drunkjiess Robert Gaston about 1:30 P. M. Friday, March 5 told police that he was at the Crosstown Bar 2024 North 24th St. He went to the mens rest room, and while he was their two men, Clayton Anderson, and Arthur McCarthy tried to take his money. They struck him in the face several times causing Going Through Red Light Charge Dismissed Dr. H. Wiggins, 3016 Em met St. was dismissed in pol ice court on Monday, March 8, 1948 on charges of going through a red light on Wednes day March 3, 1948. After his explanation to Judge Nimitz his reason for having to go through the light, the Judge granted a dismissal of the char ge. The reason being that the light turned red while he was in the middle of the intersect ion at 30th and Lake St., two other %ars blocking his turning East. laceration under the right eye. He was treated by Dr. A. L. Hawkins, and sent home. Reported to Rinn and Weide- j man. ANTIAIRCRAFT A MD RAINS IN JAPAN .r rm-t-., *—». .. .~--r?r-g - VLJJ A . ^ Members of the 933rd Antiaircraft: ArtiHery (Automatic Weapons) Battalion Yokohama t , " °f the battalion receiving instruction and in position at three of the units Sew ’served w^no^AM^?3 * U"dergoing intensive field training. Shown here are men from First Lieutenant Eugene Pfauth, Fairmony, Michigan. Left to right- Corporal Henrv Bensol Ch’ ^ the gun director crew are receiving instructions California; Lieutenant Pfauth; Private First Class Sam D Coons Detroit Henry Benson, Chicago, Illinois; Private First Class James Maryett, San Francisco gun crew of “C” Battery, 933rd AAA Battalion, is shown in posZ’afoneS “eSfttali's Lela“d Witherspoon, Brooklyn, New York. Ce^“ Serf811? wTr 1 !;,Haye!’ Columbia, Missouri; Private First Class Alex Thomas St. Louis l gU“' Members of the &un crew are, left to right: Stall Sergeant William Morris, Williamson, West Virginia- Private First ria=<= a v °U1?’ ^lssoun: Private First Class John O. Battles, Ardmore Pennsylvania F?itPClVate f’J81 w8SS Ge°ree L’ Br°Wn’ Chicag0- Illinois. At right members of" the blttar6™6’ Technician Fifth Grade James Edwards, Muncie, Indiana W ^ PCr’ Hammond> Indiana; Technician Fifth Grade Bennie GroomsMi™iFi 'd tin,p?B.,tlon at a 50 calibre machine gun. Left to right: Private W and Private First Class Theodore Henderson. Chicago, Illinois. Miami’ F1°nda: Technician Fifth Grade William Battles, Goldsboro, North Caro Omaha Public Power Reduce Electric Rates Omaha Public Power District to Reluce Electric Rates by $1,250,000 Rate Cut Effective Aprill 1948 There was news—good news —this week for customers serv ed by the Omaha Public Pow er District. Tuesday of a one million, two hundred-fifty thousand dollar electric rate reduction follow ing a special meeting of the Board of Directors of th^ Dist ict. All classes of customers will [benefit from the reduction, which becomes effective April 1, 1948. The action followed a rec ommendation of the Special Rate Reduction Committee of the Board which hes been studying the possibilities of lower rates for the past several months. Serving on the com mittee were Samuel L. Cooper, Charles D. Saunders, and Carl A. Swanson, of Omaha: and Roy E. Bott of Hooper. According to wr. cooper, chairman of the Rate Reduc tion Committee, savings will amount to more than a month’s free electricity for most Omaha homes. General trnsi ness customers, including the stores, offices, and small in dustries will receive a cut a mounting to $500,000 annually. In addition, a special new low rate is being put into effect for all public and parochial schools public buillings, churches, and charitiable institutions. In commenting on the rate reduction, which comes after only 16 months of public own ership, Mr. Charles D. Saund ers, chairman of the Finance Committee and member of the R,a t e Reduction Committee said, “Before a cut could be recommended by the commit tee, we had to be sure resulting lowered revenues would be enough to amply protect the principal and interest on the District’s bonds. We also had to make sure income would be sufficient to propedly maintain the properties and provide ade quate working capitol for op erations. It was further nec essary that rate cuts be dis tributed among all classes of customers in a fair and equit able manner.” “After the new rate schedu les had been prepared, they WILLIAM E. HILL Named director of commun ity relations of the South Side Planning boarl, Chicago, was William E. Hill, former field representative of the Ameri can Council on Race relations. A Johnson C. Smith univer sity graduate, who received an M.A. degree in economics were sent to our engineering consultants, Burns and M c Donnell of Kansas City, the\ agreer with our findings anc the recommendations,” M r. Saunders stated. - He explained that when the District acquired the propert ies on December 2, 19*46, the Directors were faced with twe urgent duties. ‘Our first duty,’ Mr. Saunders said, ‘‘was to make certain the District was properly financed. This has been accomplished.” Our second duty was equalh important. Plans' had to be made for a program to insure continued dependable service for our* customers) and take care of their grooving needs. Within the next two months, a new turbine will be in oper ation at our South Omaha plant. Construction of an add itional 30,000 kilowatts of gen erating capacity is well under way at the Jones Street plant and over the period of the next five years, the tost of our pro posed expansion program will be in excess of $15.000,OOo,” he said. l In addition to the cost of this expansion program,” Mr. Saunders continued, “the com mittee was also faced with the problem of increasing costs of fuel, materials and labor. These costs have increased more than $500,000 in the last year on the basis of price alone. And, of ourse, the District continues to pay nearly a milliom doll ars a year, in lieu of taxes, to the state, cities, counties and school districts in the territor ies it serves.” “All of these facts were car efully weighed by the commit tee,” he stated, “but after com pleting our study, we still felt there was justification for re ducing rates at this time. Nat urally, we are highly pleased that this substantial reduction in the- cost of electric serv ice for our customers can be made at this time substantial re urally, we areduction in the cost of electric service for our customers can be made at this time. Mr. J. M. Ilarding. Presi dent of the Omaha Public Power District, said, “In vot ing this rate reduction, the Board of Directors is fufilling its promise to distribute to the users of service the benefits | of public ownership”. from Columbia university, he will act as liasion officer be tween Negro agencies and SSPB directors in the inter ests of church, social, frater nal, health, education and neighborhood activities. Prev iously he served as race rela tions advisor of the U.S. Housing authority for the west and mid-west, and was the first housing manager for the Pittsburgh Housing authority, in a project now occupied by both white and Negro famil ies. BASEBALL HIT ON NEGRO ISSUE Continued exclusion of Neg roes from most of organized I baseball was attacked Sunday by Dan W. Dodson, executive director of the Committee on Unity in New York. He declared that Brooklyn Dodger President Branch Ric key has been charitable toward h i s colleagues in indicating that discrimination does not exist in baseball. “One has only to look to the New York Giants and Yankee organizations to see this is not the case” Dr. Dodson said. He praised Mr. Rickey for signing Negfo players. The committee which he leads was appointed four years ago by the late Mayor Fiorello La Guardia to promote inter racial harmony. A subcommittee on baseball was named about three years ago. Dr. Dodson said this was prompted by a request from the Giants. The club told the Mayor an ‘End Jim Crow in Baseball Committee’ had thre atened to demonstrate at the Polo Grounds. The baseball committee ask 1 ed the “Jim Crow group not to demonstrate and it didn’t. Dr. Dodson said. “It is now the beginning of the third season since Mr. Ric key started his demonstration that Negroes could be success fully integrated into organized baseball. “The time has come to ask ■0 I I Little more than a year fol lowing the end of the second World War to perpetuate “democracy,” the status of the Negro still made of the word “democracy” a mockery. Despite Abraham Lincoln, the thirteenth amendment and the Golden Rule, American Ne groes are still underprivileged and ill-used. They are the vic tims of prejudice and fear. They are guilty of being a minority. A few Negroes rise to posi tions of moderate honor among Americans. Those who do rise are N admired hysterically by their own people, but* by ifiost so-called whites they are re garded affectionately as a sort of living proof that America is the land of opportunity. In reality, they were just part of the great mass of Am erican Negroes who make up the “problem” about which so much has been written, and about which so little has been, I decided. I he U.S. Negro is a tenth of America’s total population— there are 14 million of him. Some are jet black, some are as white as Mississippi’s vol uble Representative John Ran kin. They all can trace at least a part of their ancestry back to Africa. Some of their for bears came from a long civil ization, some were bushmen. Today the African’s Ameri can decendant has made one enormous jump. He waa one a slave whose human rights were non-existent. Now he is a free man whose rights are often un recognized. He is still living under the triple curse of the slave trader, his American plantation master and Harriet Beecher Stowe, who has typed him in American minds as an eternal Uncle Tom whose con versational abilities are limit ed to “Yassuh, Boss,” or ‘Yuk, yuk, yuk.” Millions of Negroes are so illiterate they cannot sign their names. Most of them have the equivalent of a third grade ed ucation. Some of them, such as New Yorker, W. J. Trent, Jr., director of the Negro College Fund, are sa highly educated that they insist the real prob lem is education of tfc“ whites. Politically, the way is clear er. This year, for the first time, Negroes may vote Ur. any pri mary in the country f ecause the U. S. Supreme Court has ruled that “white primaries” are unconstitutional. Only seven states still have a poll tax, and these are bound to crumple -under public pressure. All the pressure it not from the outside. The Southerners who have reacted to their sense of guilt since slavery days by attacking the ause of the guilt, hte Negro, have recently shown some inclination to ap proach the situation more ra tionally. Such organizations as the outhern Regional Coun cil, made up of leaders of both races, and the University of North Carolina Press, have been plugging a better deal for Negroes as a way to a bet ter deal for the South. The most ardent editorial crusades against the poll tax (and Jim Crow laws) are in Southern papers. Also, the C1U and the AbJ_ have gone into the South with the announced purpose of making Negroes politically conscious. Wtih anything like an even break, economically and pol itically, the Negro who is 10 per cent of the U.S. might well contribute mdVe than 10 per dent toward U.S. progress. For, as a group, U.S. Negro is have come further than any other. if it isn’t possible for both the Yankee a*nd Giant organiza tions to find some Negro some where who is worth being em ployed in some capacity in some league, however minor.” In Phoenix, Ariz., Horace Stoneham, president of the Giants, said his club has no objection to Negro players. “We have tried out Negroes for several years,” Mr. Stone ham said. “But as yet we have n’t found any who would fit in our plant.” Mr. Stoneham ' added the Giants would be glad to get hold of any Negro ball play ers who could fit into their organizations. Officials of. the Yankees could not be reached for com ment.