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into play to cause the location of new mass-employment plants in such cities as Jackson, Miss., and Cambridge, Maryland, and Danville, Virginia. Such new factories would be under the obligation of the federal government to employ Negroes in all job classifications on a strictly non-segregated and non-discriminatory basis.

Both the new pattern in the working force of such plants and in the life of the union in them, would be consciously ordered to serve as models and illustrations of the advantages of a non-discriminatory way of life which could benefit mutually all Southern workers -- Negro and white.

In any event, the bastions of bigotry, the cesspols of segregation and anti-Negro  violence, such as Jackson, Miss., must and will be cleared away. The Negro people demand it, the national interest requires it, and the forces are strong enough and in line to bring it about.

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