xt7vq814r83b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vq814r83b/data/mets.xml Kentucky Negro Education Association Kentucky Kentucky Negro Education Association 1941 The most complete set of originals are at Kentucky State University Library. Call Number 370.62 K4198k journals English Kentucky Negro Educational Association: Louisville, Kentucky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. Kentucky Negro Educational Association Journal African Americans -- Education -- Kentucky -- Periodicals The Kentucky Negro Educational Association (K.N.E.A.) Journal v.11 n.2, January-February, 1941 text The Kentucky Negro Educational Association (K.N.E.A.) Journal v.11 n.2, January-February, 1941 1941 1941 2020 true xt7vq814r83b section xt7vq814r83b five‘i‘ fiffifi Jamaal?» 11877 O‘HUAL 0594" o GENE“ evumnonnL 3% Vol. XI January-February, 1941 No. NATIONAL DEFENSE NUMBER r11 1 “—7 EV A Defense Class in Auto-Mechanics CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOIFLOUISVELE. KY. R. J. BROWN, Inst. Z. E. SCOTT, Supt. "An Equal Educafionu Opportunity for Every Raunchy Child" The Kentucky State College Established 1866 Franldort, Kentucky A Progressive State Supported Institution COURSES ARTS and SCIENCES AGRICULTURE HOME ECONOMICS MECHANIC ARTS Class A Four-Year College For All latex-nation, Write To B. B. Atwood. President LINCOLN INSTITUTE Lincoln Ridge, Kentucky Courses Offered HIGH scncaL BUILDING TRADES AGRICULTURE HOME ECONOMICS APPLIED ELECTRICITY COMMERCE PLUMBING STEAM BOILER RADIO arm-rm" musxc WORK SCHOLARSHIPS AND N. Y. A. SCHOLARSHIPS ARE AVAILABLE For Further lnlornutiun Write Director Whitney M. Young. Lincoln Ridge. Ky. The K. N. E. A. Journal Official Organ of the Kentucky Negro Education Association Vol. X1 JanuatyJ‘elbruai-y, 1941 No, 2 Published by the Kentucky Negro Education Association Editorial Office at 1925 W. Madison Street Louisville, Kentucky Atwood S. Wilson, Executive Secretary, Louisville, Managing Editor. S. L. Barker, Owensboro, President of K N. E. A. BOARD OF DIRECTORS Lyle Hawkins, Louisville Whitney M. Young, Lincoln Ridge E. Fusion, Paducah Victor K. Perry, Louisville- Pubiished Bimonthiy during the school year: October, December, February and April PRICE 50 CENTS PER YEAR 0E 15 CENTS PER COPY Membership in the K. N . E. A. (One Dollar) includes iubscription. to the Joumal Rates for Advertising space mailed on request Present Circulation, 2,000 Copies. 1940 K. N. E. A. Membership 1460 TABLE OF CONTENTS K. N. E. A. Committees for 1940-41 .............................. 3 Editorial Comment The Negro in the Building of America New President at Hampton Institute. . The National Defense Conference at Hampton Institute The Teachers’ Retirement Act. . . ......... . . . . . . . . .15 .17' Teniaiive Program of 19441 K. -.N E A Convention N. Y, A. ijects Receive Honorable Mention Honor Roll 1940-41 .. K. N. E. A. Kullings. K. N. E. A, Announcements. The President’s Letter ..... A Letter from Mrs. Lucy H.311 Smith... A Letter from Professor H. E. Goodioe 0mm: Spiritual Chaos. A Threat to Civilization—Juanita Battle. .26 Oration: The Present Crisis and Civic myaity—Patsy Lewis ...... .27 Built For Your Protection The DOMESTIC LIFE and ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO. Louisville, Kentucky INTER-COLLEGIATE PRESS 615 Wyandotte Street KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Manufacturers and Distributors of : YEAR BOOKS DIPLOMAS JEWELRY CAPS AND GOWNS INVITATIONS CLASS GIFTS VISITING CARDS MEDAIAS W. C. COCHRAN Kentucky State Supervisor K. N. E. A. Committees For 1940-1941 LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE A. E. Meyzeek, Louisville, Chairman .1. B. Caulder, Lexington Dr. E. E. Underwood, Frankfort C E. Cabell, Henderson R. B. Atwood, Frankfort G W. Adams, Winchester M. H. Griffin, Padncah J. H. Ingram, Frankfort W H. Humphrey, Maysville M. J. sleet, Psducah A. L. Garvin, Louisville W, O. Nuchols, Providence H E. Goodloe, Danville D. H. Anderson, Paducah w. L. Shobe, Lynch C. R. Bland, Paris Rep. C. W. Anderson, Jr., Louisville S. L. Barker, President of K. N. E. A., Ex-Omcio Member ADVISORY COMMITTEE H. C. Russell, Louisville, Chairman E. W. Glass, Hopkinsville W. S. Wheatley, Owensboro g.EAII'i‘\i\lykendaxl‘l,1§OWfing Green Rev W. H. Ballew, Louisville omas, oulsvi 2 Benjamin F. Spencer, Frankfort W N Johnson, Lancaster 0 N Travis, Monticello C.A Alexander. Cavingifion Rev. G H Jenkins, Louisville Rev L. R. Stewart, Hopkinsville Rev. Homer Nutter, Lexington assownous comm-rm: .l. H. Ingram, Chairman, Frankfort W. H. Perry, JR, Louisville Carl Walker, Hazard W. O. Nnchols, Providence P. Moore, Hopkinsville William Wood, Harlan L. R. Johnson, Princeton RESEARCH COMMITTEE Miss Maude Brown, Louisville L. N. Taylor, Frankfort Dr. H. B. Crouch, Frankfort r. R. Dailey, Frankfort H. R. Merry, Coving‘ton R. L. Dowery, Columbia AUDITING COWITTEE P. L. Guthrie, Lexington, Chairman J. D. Seward, Frankfort M. .T. sleet. Paducah NEGROLOGY COWITTEE Amos Lesley, Hodgenville, Chairman J. W. Weddell, Elkton Mrs. V. B. Alexander, Louisville YOUTH COUNCIL ADVISORY COMMITTEE Miss Bettie L. Whitenhill, Louisville, Chairman Miss Eunice B. Singleton, Louisville, Advisor Mrs. Blanche Elliott, Greenville Mrs. Ann J. Heartwell, Frankfort MissF. YolandaBarnett, Louisville W. J. Christy, Versailles C. L Harris, Newport Mrs. LucyH Smith, Lexington Miss Emma Edwards, Owensboro Miss Lillian Carpenter, Lomsville COWITTEE 0N VOCATIONAL TRAINING PROBLEMS Frank Orndorfi, Russeilville, Chairman A. J. Pinkney, Lincoln Ridge M. H. Griflin, Paducah Miss L. A. Anderson, Frankfort Miss A. M. Peyton, Louisville SCHOLARSHIP LOAN FUND COWITTEE Miss Estella M. Kennedy, Louisville, Chairman H. s. Osborne, Middleaboio F. L. Baker, Lexington Miss Alice Nugent, Louisville Mrs. Bettie Davis, Georgetown Secretary-Treasurer A. S. Wilson, Ex-Officio Member COMWTTEE ON RURAL SCHOOL PROBLEMS Mrs. M. L. Copeland, Frankfort, Chairman Mrs. Cornelia Weston, Pembroke Mrs. A L. Simms, Mayslick W R Cummings, Pikeville M. Smith, Davistown A L Poole, Bowling Green Polk Grifiith, Guthrie COMMITTEE ON PROGRAM OF EOUALITIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION Dr. J. T. Williams, Frankfort Chairman E. Whiteside, Paducah Devan eDavicIA Lane,.l’r, Louis- T. Buford, Bowling Green w. VWe Maddox, Paducah COMMITTEE ON EXPENDITURES 0P PUNDS ON EDUCATIONAL TNEQUALITIES L. W. Gee, Hopkinsville, Chairinan F. A. Taylor, Louisville Helen Noel, Madisonville Sadie M. Yancey, Lexington R. B. Atwood, Frankfort Privileges of Active Membership in the K. N. 'E. A. 1. The privilege of attending all general sessions of the Association. 2. The privilege of participating in the departmental sessions. 3. The privilege of speaking and holding office in the Kentucky Negro Education Association. 4. The privilege of voting and participating in the busi- ness affairs of the Association. 5. The privilege of receiving all literature of the Assam— tion, including the official publication, The K. N. E. A. Journal. No Kentucky Teacher Should Fail in Enroll Send One Dollar To A. S. WILSON. Secretary»1‘reasurer 1925 W. Madison Skeet, Louisville. Ky. Editorial Comment THE NATIONAL DEFENSE PROGRAM On the outside cover of this issue of the K. N. E. A. Journal is a picture of one of a vocational defense class in auto-mechanics at the Central High School in Louisville, the instructor being (Mr. Richard J. Brown. This is a group of men who are employed as chaufieurs, garage workers, etc., who are supplementing their training so as to render better service in the national defense. Other classes are on the retresher basis and include carpentry, concreting, sheet metal work, welding, and foundry. A relatively small number of colored schools in Kentucky which are equipped to offer trades and industrial courses have started new activities in vocational education which should care for the first phase of the program However, it is especially important for all teachers and laymen to realize that by improving the quality and quantity of the total educational program of a community they are also making a distinct and greatly needed contribution to national defense. Health and physical strength, understanding of rapensibility, of citizenship, proper use of leisure, ability to solve everyday problems by use of local resources—these and other phases of a toml educational program of any community are most important in today‘s total de- fense programt There is a responsibility resting upon the school to de- velop to the highest stage the abilities of its pupils and to create in the school and community those attitudes which would promote the ideals of our democracy and bring about a cooperative and patriotic type of American life. us-x ADVANCE ENROLLMENT Already more than four hundred teachers have sent in their en- rollment fees for the school year 194041. The K. Ni E. A. Honor Roll published in this issue of the Journal lists these schools and their ad- ministrative officers To each county superintendent or city principal there has been sent a Certificate of Honor. These are generally placed on school bulletin boards and serve as daily reminders to the teachers of the appreciation on the pan of K, N E, A. officers for their advance enrollments We are anticipating an enrollment of about 1200 more teachers and friends of education and have set 1600 for our membership goal for 1941. Advance enrollments permit us to plan with more assurance our program for the 65th Convention in Louisville, April Iii-«19, 1941. This plan permits each teacher to receive the membership card, prognm, and badge in advance of the meeting and greatly tacilitates the hand- ling of records in the secretary’s office. Each principal or oflicial is 5 therefore requested to enroll the teachers of his stafl in one group and send the fees to the secretary as soon as possible. Let us make this March of 1941 the biggest month for advance enrollments in the his- tory of the K. N E. A. Each teacher is asked to give the principal of his school or the organizer of his county his dollar membership fee for 1941. Those teachers who pay $150 are listed as honor members of the K. N. E. A. These names appear annually in the proceedings. The activities of the Kl N. E. A. require the same membership as the K. E. A, namely $150. Let us have many volunteer memberships of $150. Many teachers have already done this, The membership fees are the main source of our income If We are to continue the same high type programs and continue our efforts toward eliminating inequalities in the teaching profession and in the Negro schools, a $150 membership fee is imperative Each teacher is asked to enroll now regardless of his or her plans to attend the April. 1941, convention. tact THE NEGRO NEEDS HELP (This is an article that is reprinted from a recent Sunday edition of the Louisville CourierJoutnaL Its contents speak for itself.) The late Julius Bosenwald made many millions of dollars out of Sears, Roebuck and spent a lot of them in sensible philanthropy, One of his best known schemes is the Julius Rosenwald Fund which is in- terested chiefly in Negroes and therefore in the South Last week officers of the Fund reported that there is a need for Federal aid for primary schools in the rural sections of the South. The report said this section is the only one “reproducing itself abundantly" and the young people of the area are going north, east and west for jobs and homes. They don’t get an adequate primary edu- cation because Southern States aren’t rich enough to provide good schools “One of the surest Ways at preserving a sound and Virile demo- cracy is to provide adequate opportunity for the education of all of our children," the report stated. “No single act will transform a great region, but this plan will basically afiect the growth of the Nation’s reservoir of children and will be another great step toward better op< pottunities for Negroes.” The report stated that the attitude of other Americans toward the “oneetenth of our population made up of Negroes is a threat of the whole theory and practice of democracy.” 1 o c , PERMANENT TENURE Most of the states in the United States have some sort of teacher tenure law. In most instances after a teacher has taught three years, she is considered employed permanently as long as she is in good health Only in case of proven inetriciency, immorality, or such con— duct that a special board of inquiry shall deem unworthy, are grounds 6 for dismissal after a period of probation has been served The legislative committee of the K. N. E. A. should contact the oflicers of the K. N. E. lA. so that we might jointly sponsor such legis- lation at the 1.942 Kentucky General Assembly. It is unfair to a teach- er who has proven his or her worth after a period of several years of successful teaching, to have to be annually, in doubt, as to the future. In many cases, teachers are made victims of corrupt politics, or are dismissed without cause, in Kentucky. Kentucky now has a teacher retirement act which follows the ex— ample of other states that are making progress in education. The at- tainment of a teacher tenure law in Kentucky is the next step in guar- anteeing to our teachers their just rights and insuring to them that security they deserve after years of faithful service. Federal em- ployees, such as letter carriers and clerks have long had such protec- tiont Teachers, write your representative and senator in the Kentucky legislature concerning this matter. and create such a sentiment that it will insure the enactment oi the teacher tenure law in Kentucky COMMENCEMENT PROGRAMS The K. N. E. A. recommends that the various High Schools in Ken— tuclq feature a theme for the spring commencements along the line of the theme of our 1941 convention: “Education and the National Crisis." It is possible that some high schools might Want to modify this theme and yet carry out the general idea of recognizing our program of Na- tional Defense At this time our democracy is on trial and it is necessary that our boys and girls recognize the true meaning of democracy and the re- sponsibilities and obligations that it implies Principals of our schools might plan for the writing of orations and presentation of panel discussions that will make the public aware of our present day prdhlem and the part the Negro can play in the pro- gram of National Defense. ' Elsewhere in this Journal you will find some orations used at the mid-year commencement of Central High School in Louisville. These are suggestive of the type mentioned in the foregoing paragraphs. These orations, a panel discussion on “Edueation and the Common Defense," along with suitable patriotic music constituted the program of the Central High School commencement. Having a commencement theme is stimulating and informative to the public Such programs can bring about a desirable cooperation between the school and the community. NOTE: Read the Orations of Miosses Juanita Battle and Patsy Lew‘s on pages 26 and 27. The Negro in the Building of America (i. D. Reddick) Taken from Negro History Journal Some day history textbooks Will be written difierently. Then, no land will be singled out as “God’s Coun .” Neither Will any particular “race“ or class he glorified as “the chosen people.” Instead, the story will be told in terms of the whole society, in terms of the interplay of all of the forces which have made for the uphuilding, the destruction and the rebuilding of civilization and cultures In that day of the future, written history will look more like the history that actually happened. , Until the dawn of this histor- ian's Utopia, it will be necessary to furnish a corrective to the text‘ books; to place alongside of them, commentaries and supplements which include essential elements left out of the story One of the most flagrant of the omissions from the usual History of the United States is the part the Negro has played. in the mak- ing of the Nation. The signifi- cance of this omission becomes clear after a moment’s reflection upon the question: “Would America he the America we lmow today, if the influence of the Ne- gro were subtracted from our history?” Concretely, W h a i: would American music he?" The dance?“ The “Cotton Kingdom?” The tradition of the long struggle for human freedom? Would Am- erican life possess its present var- iety and richness minus the Ne. gro? The posing of these questions suggests the answers. 1. Discovery and Exploration. The Negro began his contribu- tion in the early days when Wes- tern Europe moved to the “dis- covery" and exploration of the New World. Black men were with Menendez, Balboa, Cortes, Dfliefln, DeSoto and others. Stephen Dorantes, better known as “Little Stephen," from 1527 to 1539, tramped across a great part of what is now the southeastern and southwestern parts of the United States. In his search for the fabulous “Seven Cities of Cihola,” he was the first to explore what have become the States of Arizona and New Mex- ico, Jean Point Du Sable was the first permanent resident, the founder, of the present city of Chicago. There was one Negro with the Lewis and Clark expedi- tion of 1804i Today, Mathew Henson, assistant of Commodore Peary, is the only living person to have stood at the North Pole. 1L Economic Life Few will deny the role of labor as the basis of modern civiliza- tion. The involuntary gift of some two centuries of slave labor was a tremendous contribution, despite the inhumanity of any human bandages The Atlantic slave trade furnished a principal source for the accumulation of capital in the commercial and in~ dustn'al revolutions Black hands tended the rice, stripped the to- bacco, picked the cotton and cut the cane on which rested so much at the life of the South and the commerce of the nation. Moreover. two details from the ante—helium picture are general- ly overlooked. First, all of the slaves were not unskilled. 'Dhere were artisans. Professor Marcus W. Jernegan has shown that as far back as the Colonial period, the few industrial establishments were often manned by Negroes. Secondly, before the Civil War all Negroes in this country were not slaves. There were a quarter million free Negroes in the North and an equal number in the South itself. In cities such as New Or- leans, these free people of color dominated the crafts. One creative function in this sphere is suggested by the fact that Negroes hold the titles to over 4,000 new inventions registered with the United States Patent Office. The Well-known experi- ments of such scientists as George W. Carver have been a boon to both agriculture and the various processing industries Today there are some 6,000,000 gainfully em- ployed black workers, Twenty- five thousand retail merchants in 1930 did a business of $101,000,- 000. There are approximately 800,000 farmers, one-fifth of whom are owners The great consumers’ market is yet unorganized. The sharecropper and the tenant~tar— mer are on the increase. III. Polifiu Contrary to popular belief, Ne- groes did. vote prior to the adop- tion of the 14th and 15th amend- ments to the Federal Constitution. Free Negroes in several states voted for the adoption of the Con- stitution itself. As late as 1835 there was no color bar in two of the Southern States, North Caro- lina and Tennessee One isolated colony in Louisiana voted as late as men. By this time anti-Negro feeling was so strong, even in the North, that Negroes could vote in only a half dozen states above the Mason-Dixon Line. The golden age of the Negro in politics came during the Recon- struction and post-Reconstruction periods Like the poorer whites of the South, the freedmen receiv- ed, for the first time, the general rights of the electorate. Some served in the State and local gov— ernments. From 1870 to 1901 twenty-two held seats in the nat- ional Congress Two of these, Hi- ram Rl Revels and Blanche K. Bruce, were senators. It is often said that the carpet-A bugger — scalaway - Negro gov— ernments were ignorant and dis-- honest This is partly truer Some- of the men did sink to the low- level of many politi ans of that day and of this. But the charge- has =heen exaggerated. More mon- ey was stolen by the infamous: Tweed Ring in New York City than by all of the Reconstruction governments of. the South corn- hined. What is more, the improve- ments made by these bodies are seldom mentioned, The Constitu~ tions of the reconstructed states were liberalized> systems of pub. lic education established and great strides made in social leg» islation. Through legal and extra-legal devices the Negro was ulhhnately pushed down and out of politics. This wholesale distanchisement left him as a negligible political factor up to the time of the first World War. At that time Euro- pean immigration was shut on. The great trek of Southern to Notthern cities began. They were answering to the call of the ex- panding industries. They found no racial restrictions on the sufirage in the new regions Accordingly, today the Negro vote in 16 states is strategic, if not decisive. There was and still is a growing toler- ance in the Border States There are Negro members of the legis- lature in a dozen states, includ— ing Kentucky; one Negro in the national Congress; and in one city, New York, there are four Negro judges. 1V. Social Institutions It was illegal to teach a slave to read or write. However, there are dramatic stories of clever youths who overleapt this bar- rier, Nevertheless, at the time of the Emancipation Proclamation, _ the vast majority were illiterate. Even so, there appears to have been an insatiable thirst for knowledge, The freedmen flocked to the schools. It was not unusual to see a plowman pause at the turn of his furrow to glance into his “Blue Back Speller." The Freedman’s Bureau of the Feder- al Government, the American Missionary Association and pri- vate philanthropy united in set- ting up such schools as Fisk, How— ard, Hampton, and Atlanta Uni- versities. With the aid of the State of Alabama, Booker T Washington founded Tuskegee. Here he was to elaborate a theory of education—learn by doing— which has become one comer— stone in the philosophy of Ameri- can education Today illiteracy is less than 17 percent. Notwithstanding the dire parities, there are today, 2,000,000 Negro pupils in Southern schools aloneThere have been 43,821 Ne- gro college graduates; some 200 have been elected to Phi Beta Kappa and an equal number have won the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. . In a broad sense, the Negro press, which goes back to 1827, is an educative institution as well as an agency of communication, There are 332 Negro newspapers and magazines in the United States today, They exert a wide influence. The Negro church has always been more than purely a “reli- gious institution." Yesterday and today the church met and meets a broad social and recreational need. Some were stations on the underground railroad. Others were the meeting place for plan- ning as well as the occasion for festival, Today there are 24 de- nominations with a total mem— bership of 5,000,000. The value of church property is estimated at $210,000,000. V. Cultural Contribution The gift of the Negro to Ameri- can music is the most known and accepted of the'cuiturai contribu. tions. Almost everyone agrees that it is one of the distinct ele- ments of what might be called American culture If the spirituals are in essence folk melodies, Rag~ time, the Blues and Jazz are, on the other hand, expressions of the urban way of life. Their secu- lar, mocking, otter; sophisticated moods are characteristic of the 10 city. Closely related are the free rhythms of such dances as the Cakewalk, the Pas Mala, the Charleston, Trucking and the Sus< ie Q. Humor, merriment, song and dance thus serve as a foil against the dehumanizing eflect of the machine. The average American can name scarcely a half dozen Negro authors. The fact is that special libraries like the Schom’burg Collection of the NEW York Pub- lic Li’brary contains thousands of volumes by Negro writers. These works cover almost every field: history, politics, labor, science and folk—lore This literature ap- pears in virtually every library formi Phillis Wheatley was the sec~ and woman poet of America She was the first Negro woman poet, but not the first Negro poet. This honor goes to Jupiter Ham- monr The lung line of biographies, essays, novels, short stories and orations reached a high point in the “Negro Renaissance” of the 1920‘s and continues today. The painting of Henry 0. Tanner is best known in Europe. This is al- so true of the play-acting of Ira Aldridge and the playwtiLing of Victor Seiour, an intimate of Na~ poleon 111 v1. Test of Democracy In one sense, perhaps, the great- est gift of the Negro to America has been aside from these more concrete contributions In one way or the other he has stood, in every historic period, as a test of the sincerity, the real reality of the preachments of democracy. In the American Revolution when the bold Declaration of Indepen- 11' dance asserted “All men are cre- ated equal” the quéxtion arose, “What about the Negro?" Cris- pus Attucks, a mulatto, had been the first to fall in the Boston Mas- sacre. Despite the hesitation and prejudice at first some 3,000 No- groes fought on the American side in the War for Independence. George Washington said that thEy made good soldiers Even more fulsome praise was accorded the black soldiers by Andrew Jackson after the Battle of New Orleans in 1815. The great social and political issue of the second quarter of the 19th century America was the question of slavery This, with its pseudo-science of inequality. pro— ved to he a most stubborn and flagrant contradiction to the dem- ocratic ideal, It is not so well known that Negro newspapers, such as “Freedom’s Journal" and “Walker's Appeal," and Negro leaders, such as Douglass, Garnet, Pennington and Ward, were in the forefront of the abolition movement which brought the na- tion hack again to its path; the path moving toward freedom and equality for all. The American Civil War began as a war to save the Union and ended up, also. in destroying human slavery. This furnished another historic ocmsion for the Negro to participate in push- ing forward the frontiers of dem- ocracy, Some two hundred thou- sand Negroes fought with the Union forces At first these men had to fight for the “privilege" of dying for their country; for the equal treatment accorded the com- (Continued on page 16, co]. 2) New President Al Hampton Institute In a quiet, simple, though im- pressive ceremony on November 25, 1940, famed Hampton Insti- tute inaugurated its sixth presi- denL Dr. Malcolm S. Machean. Dr. MacLean, a prominent edu- cator whose work as Dean of the General College at the Univelsity of Minnesota and as Director of the University of Wisconsin’s ex- tension service has made him na- tionally famous, pledged himself to the furthering, not only 0! this well-known lNegro institution, but of the race and Nation as well. Picturing the present status of the Negro through the eyes of economists and business men, psychologists, sociologists and so- cial workers; artists and music- ians; political scientists and poli— ticians;and philosophers, he fore- told great achievements by the Negroes in these many fields. He ms presented the charter of the institution, which was founded in 1868 by General Sam- uel Chapman Armstrong, by J. Henry Scattei'good7 chairman of the Board of Trustees Following the inauguration, Dr. MacLean opened the twoday Conference on the Participation of the Negro in National Defense The inauguration and opening session of the Conference was at- tended 'by more than 2,000 guests. Dr. Madtean’s inaugural ad- dress follows: “When you asked me to under- take the presidency of Hampton Institute, many men and women, in all fields of national and local, public and private service, joined in picturing vividly the import- ance of the task “Economists and business men said: ‘Hampton is important in national education and in Ameri- can life, because the thirteen mil- lions of Negroes in America are now buying out or their slender incomes more than three billion dollars worth of goods and serv- ices; further, they are contribut— ing between five and seven bil- lions of dollars to the total na- tional wealth; and, finally, if through college and high school training they can be further edu- cated and made skilled and set ‘free by learning to do all of those tasks of which they are capable, they will easily double their pur- chases and more than double their contribution to our total national wealth.’ “Psychologists, sociologists, and social workers said that certainly Hampton Institute is of first im- portance They told me that ’be- cause of the long, tough and val- iant struggle of the Negro race in America since the days of slavery, the majority of our American Ne- gro population has already ac- quired deepening human under- standing, sncial insight, and the powers of family, neighborhood, and community cooperation that, once set free through education, can enrich in untold measure the social life of the United States and the whole of our public wel- fare. “Artists and musicians said, certainly Hampton can he one of the great training and producing centers of art and music. Among our American Negroes, they told me, there is an enormous untap- ped resource for creation of things beautiful They have the means within them which, released through education and training, can capture the evanescent and fleeting beauties of trees and flowers, sunsets and stars. and bright water, and of human love and human sufiering on canvas and in stone. And, in their deep and subtle sense of rhythm and the universal melody of their voices, they em set all America singing. “Political scientists and politic- ians said, ‘Surely, in these times it is self-evident that Democracy can survive only if our powerful minorities are educated to throw their power behind Democracy. That,‘ they said, ‘is a major job for Hampton Institute} They told me that their scholarly studies showed them that wherever adult Negroes have thus far been given their full legal right to vote, these votes of Negro American citizens have almost universally been in support of sound men and mess- ures leading to total political, so- cial and economic good. “The philosopher said: ‘You will be wise if you do try to serve Hampton anda fool ifyou don’t.’ These men, setting the whole things of the past of the world against the present America, and peering clear-eyed into the fu- ture, told me that we in America have three profound lessons to learn. First, from the valiant agonies of the British in our sister democracy, a democracy which was reborn on the bloody shores of Dunkirk and in the bombings and black-outs of London, Coven- try and Birmingham; second, from the ancient wisdom and in- finite patience uf the Chinese in their slow, tempered, irresista‘ble engulfing of the Japanese assault; and, third, from the American Negro, who, in slavery, learned the glory of freedom and who, in freedom has developed strength and tolerance and the ways of slowly but steadily and powerful- ly making progress against the forces of fear, prejudice, super- stition, and hatred. “Deeply conscious that all of these profound reasons are valid, certain that they all sum up to equal the essential spirit of a Democracy on the defense in the modern world and sharply aware of a responsibility to you. to the students, faculty and alumni of Hampton Institute and to the Ne- gro race of this country, I accept on their ‘belief at your hands the Charter and the presidency of Hampton Institute for so long as I can render service to you all.” New Books THOMAS Y. CROWEIAL C0. Lone Star Rising GINN 8: CO. People and Places. We Find Out. THOMAS NELSON 8: SONS Working with Words-Grade 2-7 Enjoying English—{Books 1-4. Democracy in America. ROW, PETERSON AND CO. Anything Can Happen. JOHN C. WINSTON C0. Stand Fast for E‘reedomr l3 The Naiional Defense Conference At Hampton Institute At the nation—wide Conference on the Participation of the Negro in National Defense, which closed recently at fiampton Institute and for which some 350 Negro and white leaders assembled, the United States was told that it could expect limpet cent loyalty and responsibility from Negro Americans in every walk of. life. A specific program of action f