The Detroit tribune. (Detroit, Mich.) 1963-06-15 [p 1]

1
- Tttrrf" '/ I'pußuci f f55‘% wf v # “mnw mm^ r C r I | k ol0» 'w Fathar-Mothar Cod:" Triumphant Divina Rights of Man WIS VOLUME 41—NUMBER SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1963 "SUBURBS WORST "NATION'S CRIME RATE STILL ROCKETING ...FBI" Free Press, May 6 * * * GOD VIA HIS DETROIT TRIBUNE: by Andrew F. Fruebauf, +++ BECAUSE THE DEVIL'S BIRTHS 'FLOODS' OF NON-CHRIST SCIENTISTS! OVERWHELMS SATAN BOUND LEADERSHIP! HEBREWS, CATHOLICS, GREEKS, PROTESTANTS, ASIATICS, AND OTHER PRISONERS OF THE DEVIL ! THE NON-CHRIST SCIENTISTS ! "THE GHASTLY FARCE OF MATERIAL [so-called! EXISTENCE" ! p. 272, C.S. textbook SAVIOUR OF BIBLES ! CLERGY I E-V-E-R-Y ONE ! AND REDUCING (See CRIME, Page 2) A CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST COMMENTATOR OF VISION "ALLOW THE SPECIAL KOREAN WAR TAXES - _ WHICH WERE ADDED ON TOP OF ALL THE WORLD WAR II TAXES - TO EXPIRE JUNE 30." "TAX CUT-NEW APPROACH" By Roscoe Drummond, The Christian Science Monitor, May 29 President Kennedy has been unintentionally painting himself in a corner in the way he has been arguing the need for tax reduction. At his press conferences the President has so over- simplified the case for a tax cut that he has left the im- pression that its primary purpose is to avert a recession. (See VISION, Page 2) No. 6, "TEN NEGROES" N.Y. Trib., May 6 DR. RAYFORD LOGAN, PROFESSOR OF HISTORY .. they are not going to get it now .. This is the sh.th article of the 10-part series, "Ten Negroes," by the HereM Tribune's national correspondent Robert S. Bird, on the attitudes of Negroes toward white America. An Angry Young Man of the 19205, a Williams Col- lege man who took his master's at Harvard, was arguing with another Angry Young Man of the 19205, also a Wil- liams man who had taken his doctrine at Harvard both Phi Beta Kappa that things really haven't changed much in 40 years despite all the dramatics on the current “° ne- . . . . >. .t- J 4*l Sterling B. Brown, author, essayist and poet, and one of the giants in literary scholarship on the Negro, was the Angry Young Man of the 1920s who was trying to convince his friend who needed no convincing whalever that the supposed young "New Negro" of today is no different from the one of four decades ago. Nor are many other as- pects of the race situation. (See NEGROES, Page 2) THE TWO' WEATHERS: Droughts, Hurricanes, Floods: DEVIL'S ADAM-EVE LORD GOD'S! (Gen. 2:7. etc.) EXCESS RAIN. HEAT. COLD OF SATAN BOUND: EUROPEAN RELIGIOUS CRIPPLES I WHITEWASH THERAPEUTICS I M-Y-T-H-SI THE UNIVERSE IS 100% OF THOUGHT I God's Christ Scientist —THE REAL: "IN ATMOSPHERE OF LOVE DIVINE. WE LIVE, AND MOVE, AND BREATHE," AND HAVE OUR BEING I—- CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HYMN. HEAVEN AT HAND WITHIN YOU ! E-X-C-L-U- S-l-V-E R-E-A-L-l-T-Y OF GOD'S HEAVEN AND ETERNAL LIFE NO BIRTHS I DEATHS, SIN, MATTER, HELL AND THEIR FATHER THE DEVIL GIGANTIC ADAM-EVE FRAUDS M-Y-T-H-S ! Gen. 1:27: "MALE & FEMALE" IN O-N-E AS PER C-H-l-L-D-L-E-S-S JESUS ! AND GREAT- EST MARY, BAKER EDDY'S MORE THAN 40 YEARS I V. 31: "AND GOD SAW E-V-E-R-Y THING THAT HE ITHE ONE R-E-A-L PARENT I CREATOR HONORED BY THE C-H-l-L-D-L-E-S-S CHRIST JESUS II HAD MADE, AND, BEHOLD, IT WAS [-I-S-] VERY GOOD" ! SEE BACK PAGE FOR REVELATIONS OF—- EXCLUSIVE REALITY - ETERNAL PERFECTION OF GOD'S CREATION - YOUR TRUE BEING I- - EXPOSURE OF THE M-Y-T-H-S - DEVIL. HELL. SIN, BIRTHS. DISEASE. DEATH. WARS. MATTER I ADAM-EVE. MURDERQUS CAIN. JUDAS - "GHASTLY FARCE" - FOOLING SAULS OF TARSUS. 90 YEARS PLUS RIP VAN WINKLE. - "LORD-GOD" - NON-CHRIST SCIENTIST CLERGY! LAYMEN I LEADERS I MASSES I 870 GRATIOT AVENUE, DETROIT, MICHIGAN SINGLE COPY, TEN CENTS; PER YEAR $4.50 "Total War" Declared On Bias GOAL Blasts Detroit Mayor And The Police Commissioner Brutality By Boston Police Gets Protest BOSTON. A vigorous pro- test has been launched with the Boston Police Commissioner over actions by police during a recent outburst of violence here. In a sharply worded letter to Commissioner Edwin McNamara, Kenneth C.uscott, called for the transfer of the police captain in charge of the station where the outbreak occurred. “Many of the Negro citizens of Boston have need not just for protection by the police, but from the police,” Mr. Guscott said. The original incident occurred when fighting broke out between two Negro youths. Both Neg- ro and white spectators gathered and many of the whites were armed with bats, tire irons and other weapons. The police arrested several Negroes, but none of the armed whites were apprehended. One Negro woman spectator who was arrested stated that she had been struck by several white youths, one of whom she named. The police took no action, how- ever. In his letter Mr. Guscott cit- ed several other instances of police brutality and stated that the incident did not reach riot proportions in spite of, not be- cause of, the police. A complete investigation of the current procedures of the Boston Police Department has been asked for as well as the transfer of Captain Paul Sullivan. » # i f 1 ? % 4 I * m I" ! jg||pfllk ! I jr" v mj tt 4 Courts, Juries, Police Dep t. Called Unfair DETROIT The Group On Advanced Leadership (GOAL) will ask tho United States Civil Rights Commission to investi- gate the “systematic denial of Negro rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments by the prosecutor, the police, and the courts in Detroit.” Richard B Henry. GOAL presi- dent, also said he has asked the Reverend Albert B Cleage. a GOAL member, to bring the sit nation to the attention of tin’ Executive Committee for the Freedom Walk, of which Cleage is a member. “As far as I am concerned." Henry said, ‘we are at total war against all those forces of op pression represented by the high handedness of the Wayne County Prosecutor, all-white jur- ies and race-oriented judges in Recorder’s Court, double-stand- ards in traffic court, and the flagrant abuses of Negro rights by a gestapo-like police depart ment. “Police Commiafcioner Ed wards ind Mayor Cavanagh and many bther powers in the city have promised the red-carpet treatment for the Reverend Mar- tin Luther King when he arrives for the Freedom W’alk on Sun- day, June 23rd." Henry said “But all of these people mu>t realize that it is not enough to walk with us one day of the year. They must end their sil- ence. inaction, and reaction in Detroit." Henry said Michigan’s Attor- ney General Frank Kelly has di- rected Assistant Attorney Gen- eral Gerald David White, head of the Detroit office, to investi- gate the recent refusal of Wayne County Prosecutor Olsen to is- sue an assault and battery war- rant requested by Henry against two police officers. The GOAL president said he has asked Attorney O. Lee Mo- lctte, GOAL’S General Counsel, to take the following actions within the week: 1. Request the Chairman of the federal Civil Rights Com- mission to conduct hearings in Detroit looking toward Congres- sional action which will protect Negroes frl unreasonable search ands zure by police; and from all-wi te juries; 2. Ask the Detrcit Civil Liber tics Union to make available to GOAL information from their files on the conduct of the Pro- secutor’s office a nd the police department, and 3. Empanel a committee of GOAL lawyers to bring in re- commendations within 30 days, for ending abuses against Ne- groes in Recorder's and traffic courts. SENATOR PHILIP A. HART goes over testimony with Rich- ard H. Austin, of 9460 Wood- ward, Detroit, before Mr. Aus- tin testified before the Senate Subcommittee on Constitu- tional Rights. Mr. Austin, a member of the Michigan Ad- visory Committee to the U. S. Commission on civil Rights, testified in favor of a bill to extend the life of the Ccm- mission and to expand its pow- ers which was introduced in the Senate by Senator Hart. Night Rider Murders Medgar Evers The iynching party finally came off. Medgar Evers is dead, murdered in the night. A short time after President Kennedy appealed to the nation to examine its conscience on the moral issue involved in inter-racial relationships in America, Medgar Evers was shot to death in the street outside his home. Roy Wilkins, NAACP Executive Secre- tary who was arrested with him at a demonstration site in Mississippi recent- ly called Evers death "an assassination." It is not illogical to assume that the "assassin" will not be apprehended and brought to justice because a threat made by a Mississippi Sheriff, James R. Grimes- ly has been carried out. In the issue of November 17, 1962 The Detroit Tribune carried a warning to Evers. Sheriff Grimesly told Laplois Ash- ford, NAACP Youth Secretary, who was In jail for "Breach Os The Peace" attempting to buy a Greyhound Bus tic- ket at the "white" window in Pascagoula Mississippi, "We have a "lynching par- ty" waiting for Medgar Evers." Evers was shot in tne back with a high powered riflle as he got out of his car at his home. A white girl reported seeing three men flee the scene at the time of the killing. Evers led demonstrations in Mississippi that saw the police arrest hundreds. An Angry crowd formed outside the Evers home to assure his bereaved widow that "someone must pay for this" and "this is NOT the end of the matter." Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., has call- ed for increased action in all areas of the country as the result of Evers' killing. Dr. King said, "this act of violence should inspire Negroes everywhere to rise to non-violent action with renewed vigor." Aaron Henry Freed By Miss. Supreme Court JACKSON, Miss. ln an un- usual move the Mississippi Sup- reme Court this week ruled on the side of justice and reversed the conviction of a lower court against NAACP President Aaron Henry of Clarksdalc. Dr. Henry’s militant leader- ship in the state has long been a thorn in the side of Mississippi white supremacists. Several oth- er attempts have been made to harass the NAACP official into silence. The most recent attempt occurred in early April when a bomb was thrown through the window of his home causing dam- age of SI,OOO. Direct Action Increases Against Segregation in Fia. Girls Abused In Jails NEW YORK Charges have been revealed that teen-age Neg- ro and white girls, arrested dur- in g Freedom demonstrations, have been subjected to indig- nities in prisons in Mississippi and Georgia. Rape, sexual abuses and oth- er indignities were reported by Dr Jean Noble of New York University, and Dorothy Height. President of the National As- sociation of Negro Women. Com- plaints are expected to be filed with the Justice Department. TAMPA, Kla. The entire State of Florida is seething with activity throughout the State demonstration for desegregation of public facilities, schools and increased employment opportun- ities are held. Due to protests, several cities have appointed bi-raeial commit- tees to work on overall pro- grams of desegregation of pub- lie facilities and accommodations. Despite threats of violence from white hoodlums and ar- rests in one city, the demonstra- tions are continuing in full force. —ln Gainesville, there have been demonstrations all week. Picketing of theaters and stores continued desegregation of the public summer school has been (Continued on Page 4) Fx-DPW Workers Sentenced In City Fraud By ISAAC JONES DETROIT Twenty-eight for- mer Department of Public Works employes and six rubbish con- tractors were sentenced last Fri- day by Recorder’s Judge Arthur j. Koscinski for their part in a $1.25 million municipal incine- rator fraud case after they were convicted by a jury. Three DPW ex-foremen were sentenced one to five years in Jackson Prison and the fourth ex-foreman got 18 months to five years. Thirty other former DPW workers were placed on proba tion, fined and given four months in the House of Correction. Only one former DPW worker who was convicted with thirty thre j others, was given a sus- pended sentence. He is Arthur E. Reid, of 16881 Burgess. In releasing Reid Judge Koscinski said he noted by the probation report that Reid did not profit from the fraud. Those who were placed on probation with time in the House of Correction and assessed court costs, were told that the money must be paid within sixty days after their release frrom prison. Pres. Kennedy Calls For Justice 2 Negroes Enter U. of Alabama WASHINGTON President Kennedy told the nation Tues day night that it faced a “moral crisis” as a result of the "rising tide” of Negro discontent. “This is a problem which faces us all in cVcry city of the North as well as the South,” Mr. Kennedy said in a brief address televised by all three national networks. It was a time to act, the Pres- ident said. He promised to send to Congress next week sweep- ing legislation to speed school desegregation and open public facilities to every American re- gardless of color. Above all, Mr. Kennedy sol- emnly told the millions of citi- zens watching him speak from the White House, the problem of the Negro’s place in Amer- ican life “must be solved in the homes of every American across the country.” THE OBJECTIVE of every citizen, the President said, must be “for every American to en- joy the privilege of being Amer- ican without regard to his race or color”—to be treated “as one would wish his children to be treated.” Mr. Kennedy’s address was made in part as the result of the successful desegregation of the University of Alabama. But the President seized the occa- sion to make a broad appeal that Negroes and liberals of both parties had been urging upon him for weeks. TUSCALOOSA, Ala. Feder- al troops forced the admission of two Negro students to the University of Alabama Tuesday —putting an end to Gov. George Wallace’s defiance and shatter- ing the last symbolic bastion of school segregation in the South. There was no violence. The action came after Wal- lace, flanked by state troopers, staged a carefully planned show of defying a Federal court de- segregation order. A temporary injunction hand- ed down by Federal Judge Sey- bourn 11. Lynne in Birmingham last Wednesday forbade Wallace and those acting in concert with him from “physically interpos- ing” to block the enrollment of the two Negroea, CHARGES civil contempt punishable b> 1 ?rms or fines, can be brou* against viola* tors of the order. The governor refused four re- quests Tuesday morning from a Justice Department official that he allow Miss Vivian Malone and James Hood, both 20 years old, to enter Foster Auditorium and register This was in keeping with a campaign pledge in 1962 that he would “stand in the school house door” to prevent integra- tion of Alabama's educational system. Check Your Speed

Transcript of The Detroit tribune. (Detroit, Mich.) 1963-06-15 [p 1]

Page 1: The Detroit tribune. (Detroit, Mich.) 1963-06-15 [p 1]

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Tttrrf" '/ I'pußucif f55‘% wf v#“mnw mm^•rCr I| k ol0» 'w Fathar-Mothar Cod:" Triumphant Divina Rights of Man

WISVOLUME 41—NUMBER SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1963

"SUBURBS WORST"NATION'S CRIME RATE STILL ROCKETING

...FBI"Free Press, May 6

* * *

GOD VIA HIS DETROIT TRIBUNE:by Andrew F. Fruebauf, (£ +++

BECAUSE THE DEVIL'S BIRTHS 'FLOODS' OFNON-CHRIST SCIENTISTS!

OVERWHELMS SATAN BOUND LEADERSHIP!HEBREWS, CATHOLICS, GREEKS,

PROTESTANTS, ASIATICS, AND OTHERPRISONERS OF THE DEVIL ! THE NON-CHRIST

SCIENTISTS ! "THE GHASTLY FARCE OFMATERIAL [so-called! EXISTENCE" ! p. 272,

C.S. textbook SAVIOUR OF BIBLES !

CLERGY I E-V-E-R-Y ONE ! AND REDUCING(See CRIME, Page 2)

A CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST COMMENTATOR OFVISION

"ALLOW THE SPECIAL KOREAN WAR TAXES -

_WHICH WERE ADDED ON TOP OF ALL THE

WORLD WAR II TAXES - TO EXPIRE JUNE 30.""TAX CUT-NEW APPROACH"

By Roscoe Drummond, The Christian Science Monitor,May 29

President Kennedy has been unintentionally paintinghimself in a corner in the way he has been arguing theneed for tax reduction.

At his press conferences the President has so over-simplified the case for a tax cut that he has left the im-

pression that its primary purpose is to avert a recession.(See VISION, Page 2)

No. 6, "TEN NEGROES"N.Y. Trib., May 6

DR. RAYFORD LOGAN, PROFESSOR OF HISTORY.. they are not going to get it now ..

This is the sh.th article of the 10-part series, "TenNegroes," by the HereM Tribune's national correspondentRobert S. Bird, on the attitudes of Negroes toward whiteAmerica.

An Angry Young Man of the 19205, a Williams Col-lege man who took his master's at Harvard, was arguingwith another Angry Young Man of the 19205, also a Wil-liams man who had taken his doctrine at Harvard bothPhi Beta Kappa that things really haven't changed muchin 40 years despite all the dramatics on the current“°ne-

. . .. >. .t- J 4*l

Sterling B. Brown, author, essayist and poet, and oneof the giants in literary scholarship on the Negro, was theAngry Young Man of the 1920s who was trying to convincehis friend who needed no convincing whalever thatthe supposed young "New Negro" of today is no differentfrom the one of four decades ago. Nor are many other as-pects of the race situation.

(See NEGROES, Page 2)

THE TWO' WEATHERS:Droughts, Hurricanes, Floods:

DEVIL'S ADAM-EVE LORD GOD'S! (Gen. 2:7.etc.) EXCESS RAIN. HEAT. COLD OF SATANBOUND: EUROPEAN RELIGIOUS CRIPPLES IWHITEWASH THERAPEUTICS I M-Y-T-H-SI

THE UNIVERSE IS 100% OF THOUGHT IGod's Christ Scientist—THE REAL:"IN ATMOSPHERE OF LOVE DIVINE. WE LIVE,AND MOVE, AND BREATHE," AND HAVE OUR BEING I—-

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HYMN.HEAVEN AT HAND WITHIN YOU ! E-X-C-L-U-

S-l-V-E R-E-A-L-l-T-Y OF GOD'S HEAVEN AND ETERNALLIFE NO BIRTHS I DEATHS, SIN, MATTER, HELL ANDTHEIR FATHER THE DEVIL GIGANTIC ADAM-EVEFRAUDS M-Y-T-H-S ! Gen. 1:27: "MALE & FEMALE"IN O-N-E AS PER C-H-l-L-D-L-E-S-S JESUS ! AND GREAT-EST MARY, BAKER EDDY'S MORE THAN 40 YEARS I

V. 31: "AND GOD SAW E-V-E-R-Y THING THAT HEITHE ONE R-E-A-L PARENT I CREATOR HONOREDBY THE C-H-l-L-D-L-E-S-S CHRIST JESUS II HAD MADE,AND, BEHOLD, IT WAS [-I-S-] VERY GOOD" !

SEE BACK PAGE FOR REVELATIONS OF—-EXCLUSIVE REALITY - ETERNAL PERFECTION

OF GOD'S CREATION - YOUR TRUE BEING I--EXPOSURE OF THE M-Y-T-H-S - DEVIL.HELL. SIN, BIRTHS. DISEASE. DEATH. WARS.MATTER I ADAM-EVE. MURDERQUS CAIN.

JUDAS - "GHASTLY FARCE" - FOOLING SAULSOF TARSUS. 90 YEARS PLUS RIP VAN WINKLE.

- "LORD-GOD" - NON-CHRIST SCIENTISTCLERGY! LAYMEN I LEADERS I MASSES I

870 GRATIOT AVENUE, DETROIT, MICHIGAN SINGLE COPY, TEN CENTS; PER YEAR $4.50

"Total War" Declared On Bias

GOAL Blasts Detroit MayorAnd The Police CommissionerBrutality ByBoston PoliceGets Protest

BOSTON. A vigorous pro-test has been launched with theBoston Police Commissionerover actions by police during arecent outburst of violence here.

In a sharply worded letter toCommissioner Edwin McNamara,Kenneth C.uscott, called for thetransfer of the police captain incharge of the station where theoutbreak occurred.

“Many of the Negro citizensof Boston have need not justfor protection by the police, butfrom the police,” Mr. Guscottsaid.

The original incident occurredwhen fighting broke out betweentwo Negro youths. Both Neg-ro and white spectators gatheredand many of the whites werearmed with bats, tire irons andother weapons.

The police arrested severalNegroes, but none of the armedwhites were apprehended. OneNegro woman spectator who wasarrested stated that she hadbeen struck by several whiteyouths, one of whom she named.The police took no action, how-ever.

In his letter Mr. Guscott cit-ed several other instances ofpolice brutality and stated thatthe incident did not reach riotproportions in spite of, not be-cause of, the police.

A complete investigation ofthe current procedures of theBoston Police Department hasbeen asked for as well as thetransfer of Captain Paul Sullivan.

» # i f 1 ? % 4 I * mI" ! jg||pfllk ! I jr"v

mj tt 4

Courts, Juries,Police Dep t.Called Unfair

DETROIT The Group OnAdvanced Leadership (GOAL)

will ask tho United States CivilRights Commission to investi-gate the “systematic denial ofNegro rights under the Fourthand Fourteenth Amendments by

the prosecutor, the police, andthe courts in Detroit.”

Richard B Henry. GOAL presi-dent, also said he has asked theReverend Albert B Cleage. aGOAL member, to bring the sitnation to the attention of tin’Executive Committee for theFreedom Walk, of which Cleageis a member.

“As far as I am concerned."Henry said, ‘we are at total waragainst all those forces of oppression represented by thehigh handedness of the WayneCounty Prosecutor, all-white jur-ies and race-oriented judges inRecorder’s Court, double-stand-ards in traffic court, and theflagrant abuses of Negro rightsby a gestapo-like police department.

“Police Commiafcioner Edwards ind Mayor Cavanagh andmany bther powers in the cityhave promised the red-carpettreatment for the Reverend Mar-tin Luther King when he arrivesfor the Freedom W’alk on Sun-day, June 23rd." Henry said“But all of these people mu>trealize that it is not enough towalk with us one day of theyear. They must end their sil-ence. inaction, and reaction inDetroit."

Henry said Michigan’s Attor-ney General Frank Kelly has di-rected Assistant Attorney Gen-eral Gerald David White, headof the Detroit office, to investi-gate the recent refusal of WayneCounty Prosecutor Olsen to is-sue an assault and battery war-rant requested by Henry againsttwo police officers.

The GOAL president said hehas asked Attorney O. Lee Mo-lctte, GOAL’S General Counsel,to take the following actionswithin the week:

1. Request the Chairman ofthe federal Civil Rights Com-mission to conduct hearings inDetroit looking toward Congres-sional action which will protectNegroes frl unreasonablesearch ands zure by police;and from all-wi te juries;

2. Ask the Detrcit Civil Libertics Union to make available toGOAL information from theirfiles on the conduct of the Pro-secutor’s office a nd the policedepartment, and

3. Empanel a committee ofGOAL lawyers to bring in re-commendations within 30 days,for ending abuses against Ne-groes in Recorder's and trafficcourts.

SENATOR PHILIP A. HARTgoes over testimony with Rich-ard H. Austin, of 9460 Wood-ward, Detroit, before Mr. Aus-tin testified before the Senate

Subcommittee on Constitu-tional Rights. Mr. Austin, a

member of the Michigan Ad-visory Committee to the U. S.Commission on civil Rights,

testified in favor of a bill toextend the life of the Ccm-

mission and to expand its pow-ers which was introduced inthe Senate by Senator Hart.

Night Rider Murders Medgar EversThe iynching party finally came off.

Medgar Evers is dead, murdered in thenight.

A short time after President Kennedyappealed to the nation to examine itsconscience on the moral issue involvedin inter-racial relationships in America,Medgar Evers was shot to death in thestreet outside his home.

Roy Wilkins, NAACP Executive Secre-tary who was arrested with him at ademonstration site in Mississippi recent-ly called Evers death "an assassination."

It is not illogical to assume that the"assassin" will not be apprehended andbrought to justice because a threat madeby a Mississippi Sheriff, James R. Grimes-ly has been carried out.

In the issue of November 17, 1962 TheDetroit Tribune carried a warning toEvers. Sheriff Grimesly told Laplois Ash-ford, NAACP Youth Secretary, who was

In jail for "Breach Os The Peace"attempting to buy a Greyhound Bus tic-ket at the "white" window in PascagoulaMississippi, "We have a "lynching par-ty" waiting for Medgar Evers."

Evers was shot in tne back with a highpowered riflle as he got out of his car athis home. A white girl reported seeingthree men flee the scene at the time ofthe killing.

Evers led demonstrations in Mississippithat saw the police arrest hundreds. AnAngry crowd formed outside the Evershome to assure his bereaved widow that"someone must pay for this" and "thisis NOT the end of the matter."

Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., has call-ed for increased action in all areas ofthe country as the result of Evers' killing.Dr. King said, "this act of violence shouldinspire Negroes everywhere to rise tonon-violent action with renewed vigor."

Aaron Henry Freed ByMiss. Supreme Court

JACKSON, Miss. ln an un-usual move the Mississippi Sup-reme Court this week ruled onthe side of justice and reversedthe conviction of a lower courtagainst NAACP President AaronHenry of Clarksdalc.

Dr. Henry’s militant leader-ship in the state has long beena thorn in the side of Mississippiwhite supremacists. Several oth-er attempts have been made toharass the NAACP official intosilence. The most recent attemptoccurred in early April when abomb was thrown through thewindow of his home causing dam-age of SI,OOO.

Direct Action IncreasesAgainst Segregation in Fia.

Girls Abused In JailsNEW YORK Charges have

been revealed that teen-age Neg-

ro and white girls, arrested dur-in g Freedom demonstrations,have been subjected to indig-nities in prisons in Mississippiand Georgia.

Rape, sexual abuses and oth-er indignities were reported byDr Jean Noble of New YorkUniversity, and Dorothy Height.President of the National As-sociation of Negro Women. Com-plaints are expected to be filedwith the Justice Department.

TAMPA, Kla. The entireState of Florida is seething withactivity throughout the Statedemonstration for desegregationof public facilities, schools andincreased employment opportun-ities are held.

Due to protests, several citieshave appointed bi-raeial commit-tees to work on overall pro-grams of desegregation of pub-

lie facilities and accommodations.Despite threats of violence

from white hoodlums and ar-rests in one city, the demonstra-tions are continuing in full force.

—ln Gainesville, there havebeen demonstrations all week.Picketing of theaters and storescontinued desegregation of thepublic summer school has been

(Continued on Page 4)

Fx-DPW WorkersSentenced InCity Fraud

By ISAAC JONESDETROIT Twenty-eight for-

mer Department of Public Worksemployes and six rubbish con-tractors were sentenced last Fri-day by Recorder’s Judge Arthurj. Koscinski for their part in a$1.25 million municipal incine-rator fraud case after they wereconvicted by a jury.

Three DPW ex-foremen weresentenced one to five years inJackson Prison and the fourthex-foreman got 18 months tofive years.

Thirty other former DPWworkers were placed on probation, fined and given four monthsin the House of Correction.

Only one former DPW workerwho was convicted with thirtythre j others, was given a sus-pended sentence.

He is Arthur E. Reid, of 16881Burgess. In releasing Reid JudgeKoscinski said he noted by theprobation report that Reid didnot profit from the fraud.

Those who were placed onprobation with time in the Houseof Correction and assessed courtcosts, were told that the moneymust be paid within sixty daysafter their release frrom prison.

Pres. Kennedy Calls For Justice2 Negroes Enter U. of AlabamaWASHINGTON President

Kennedy told the nation Tuesday night that it faced a “moralcrisis” as a result of the "risingtide” of Negro discontent.

“This is a problem whichfaces us all in cVcry city ofthe North as well as the South,”Mr. Kennedy said in a briefaddress televised by all threenational networks.

It was a time to act, the Pres-ident said. He promised to sendto Congress next week sweep-ing legislation to speed schooldesegregation and open publicfacilities to every American re-gardless of color.

Above all, Mr. Kennedy sol-emnly told the millions of citi-zens watching him speak from

the White House, the problemof the Negro’s place in Amer-ican life “must be solved inthe homes of every Americanacross the country.”

THE OBJECTIVE of everycitizen, the President said, mustbe “for every American to en-joy the privilege of being Amer-ican without regard to his raceor color”—to be treated “as onewould wish his children to betreated.”

Mr. Kennedy’s address wasmade in part as the result ofthe successful desegregation ofthe University of Alabama. Butthe President seized the occa-sion to make a broad appeal thatNegroes and liberals of bothparties had been urging upon himfor weeks.

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. Feder-al troops forced the admissionof two Negro students to theUniversity of Alabama Tuesday—putting an end to Gov. GeorgeWallace’s defiance and shatter-ing the last symbolic bastion ofschool segregation in the South.There was no violence.

The action came after Wal-lace, flanked by state troopers,staged a carefully planned showof defying a Federal court de-segregation order.

A temporary injunction hand-ed down by Federal Judge Sey-bourn 11. Lynne in Birminghamlast Wednesday forbade Wallaceand those acting in concert withhim from “physically interpos-ing” to block the enrollment ofthe two Negroea,

CHARGES o» civil contemptpunishable b> 1 ?rms or fines,can be brou* against viola*tors of the order.

The governor refused four re-quests Tuesday morning froma Justice Department official thathe allow Miss Vivian Malone andJames Hood, both 20 years old,to enter Foster Auditorium andregister This was in keeping witha campaign pledge in 1962 thathe would “stand in the schoolhouse door” to prevent integra-tion of Alabama's educationalsystem.

Check Your Speed