14 APRIL 1939, Page 6

Listeners to Raymond Gram Swing's broadcast from the United States

on Saturday evening heard Mr. Swing describe pointedly how Marian Anderson, the well-known coloured soprano, was, on account of her negro blood, refused leave by the Daughters of the American Revolution per- mission to sing in their Constitution Hall (one of the finest buildings in Washington, where the sittings of the Naval Conference in 1921 and 1922 were held). As Mr. Swing mentioned, one of the first reactions was an offer by Mr. Harold Ickes, the United States Secretary of the Interior, to allow Miss Anderson to sing from the portico of the Lincoln Memorial—an unprecedented honour. She sang there on Sunday. Now Mrs. Roosevelt, who had already resigned her membership of the Daughters of the American Revolution as a protest, has invited Miss Anderson to sing before the King and Queen when they visit Washington. It seems a decisive gesture, in worthy succession to the action of President Theodore Roosevelt in inviting Dr. Booker Washington, the negro leader, to the White House.

* * * *