High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 16 text:
“
In the schools the Negro must develop socially as well as mentally. Cleanliness Cmental and physicalj, homemaking, government participa- tion, and learning to adjust themselves to a new social status of living among and sharing with other races and creeds are important things which have to be learned. After he has mastered these things the Negro is entitled to the social equality he desires. The sad mistake was made after the Civil War when social equality and the right to vote was lavishly bestowed upon the poor ignorant Negro. Of course, he did not know how to act. How could he suddenly become a fine, upright, and understanding citizen when he had been kept in poverty and ignorance for centuries? That old error has cost the white man and the Negro much unnecessary suffering. However, it is not too late to right the folly, at least part way. We should begin now to make the Negro what he should have been for many years, a true American in every sense of the Word. After we have accomplished this, I believe we will reap many benefits. Fear of stabbings and race riots will lessen to almost an imperceptible degree. One of the greatest organizations lbeside the public school systemh to help readjust the Negroes to the new social living is the Church. This powerful organization has done little to break down race prejudices, yet it constantly teaches that we are all God's children. When the white peo- ple and Negroes can attend church together we will enter into a fellow- ship which will prove to be invaluable. The problem of the Negroes' social equality is greater in the South than in the North. The Southern people will have to change their whole code of ethics and this change must be made very gradually. As I said before, what to do with the Negro is a problem of great scope. Then, after we educate them, we must give the Negroes economic freedom. It is nonsense to argue for better educational opportunities for the Negroes and then not wish to give them a chance in employment. Allowing the Negroes to have jobs requiring more responsibility will increase his incentive to work. Several business executives have already hired competent Negro girls as secretaries. Of course, this means greater competition for the white people. I feel that competition will stimulate the whites, and that the new social system would not cause much commer- cial strife. There are and still will be many Negroes who will be glad to keep their present lowly jobs. If we have a true democracy, we will allow the Negroes social and economic equality, and, after all, the United States is supposed to be the ideal example of freedom for everyone. If we choose to keep the right of equal opportunities from the Negro, we, indeed, have a miniature feudal system with the whites as masters and the ignorant Negroes as serfs. 14
”
Page 15 text:
“
CONSIDER Tl-IE NEGRCD LOIS WANINGER Out of the reconversion problems of America today, stands the cen- tury-old question of what to do with the Negro. Although there are other minority groups which have caused controversy, nothing has ever been so hotly contested as the Negroes' economic and social status. We were told that we fought World War II to make our earth safe for democracy. The United States is the ideal of all the liberated nations, but wouldn't those countries be surprised if they knew that a partial state of serfdom existed in their beloved America? Even many Americans would be shocked at hearing the word serfdom. But the conditions of the Negro can rightfully be called this. Let us consider them a moment. In the North and Middle West, Negroes live in one section of each city. An example of this is Harlem in New York. Here live more Negroes in a small Manhattan borough than in any Southern city. Sanitation is poor, houses are crowded together with little light, and the worst is that these Negroes have a very small chance of ever leaving this area for a better one. That they are too poor to afford anything better is one reason, and another is that restrictions are placed on districts outside of the so-called colored section. In many Wcities Negroes were mauled for moving into new areas. Not only in securing living quarters do the Negroes find it hard. Employment has been a constant fight. Many white employees refuse to work with Negroes, while employers are slow to hire colored help. The usual jobs open to Negroes are as janitors, laborers, or jobs requiring back-breaking work and little mental effort. On the other hand, the Negro's condition has improved considerably in the past few years. As many as 1,500,000 were employed in war indus- tries. More and more are being taken into the federal civil service. Some are teachers and some are policemen, even in the South. The housing situation for Negroes is slowly becoming solved by the availability of family units built by the Federal Housing Authority. The army prohibited race discrimination at post exchanges, and the navy has broken former tradition by allowing colored boys to become regular sail- ors and, in some cases, officers. But these are only a few improvements. Well, what can we do about it? The first thing to do about it is to improve the Negro socially. Large scale education is one of the big steps toward this aim. Statistics show that in 1920 fifty per cent of the young Negroes were in school. In 1930 the number jumped to sixty per cent. Today the percentage must be about seventy or seventy-five per cent. But this is not high enough, it should be one hundred per cent. This can be attained only if our government provides equalization of educational expenditures which it has not done up to now. 13
”
Page 17 text:
“
CDUI2 CCDUNTIQVMEN ARE ALI. MANKIND DOROTHY SUMPTION Democracy is based on the rights of the people. The essence of democracy is expressed in the old proverb, My rights end where yours begin. This statement needs no explanation for it is seen in practice every day on the streets and in the oflices of our progressive nation. Our form of government is based on the freedom and equality of the common man. It has been proven in other countries as well as our own that democ- racy based on these ideals can really be made to work. A nation is made up of society, that is, any number of persons living together and dependent upon each other in their daily life. Society is con- stantly changing. Under the democratic system this change is brought about gradually through open discussion and frequent expressions of the will of the people. When this gradual change is not permitted, change is brought about periodically by revolution. Any democracy, if it is to remain such, must anticipate and welcome change, politically, socially, and economically. If it does not, it ceases to be a democracy, for a nation which stagnates cannot remain entirely free. The world progresses and to be a functioning government democracy must progress also, so that it may meet the challenges continually placed before it. The basic essentials of the democratic wayof life are freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, and freedom of reli- gion. These freedoms go for making an intelligent, decision-making society which can guide its own destiny. An example of democracy in action is any classroom in the United States. Here partisanship and bias are much less in evidence than other places, and scientific techniques of attack on social, political, and economic problems are not only used but their uses are likewise taught. We have today in our country a working democracy,-a beckoning light to all those who would have the security and opportunities offered by a real government by the people. I do not mean to say that our system is perfect-strikes and labor disputes prove that this is not true-but we here have the opportunity to make it so. We are on the way to a really stable and enduring form of government if we can but find that one illu- sive link in the chain of progress which hampers us. The qualifications of self-government are not innate. They are the result of habit and long training, and for these they will require time and probably much suffering. -Thomas J efferson. 15
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.