I - "-'A . " ilJ 71 I "I mm i itriw ii i r f.;-,..X.,t'.,',;..:.,- The Bulletin, Friday, July 26, 1963 Dramatic fight for civil rights being waged in Brooklyn, N.Y. Court decision gives boost fo desegregation campaign SUMMER THEATER Bill Bowers, in title role in "Don Juan in Hell," points an accusing finger at George Tadevic, who plays the Devil. Bend Community Players are repeating two-part slit from "Man and Superman," by George Bernard Shaw, as an added attraction for Water Pageant Days. Shows will be Friday, Saturday and Sunday, at 8:30 p.m. at Bowers Studio, 447 E. Greenwood Avenue. Also in cast are Bryant Hilliard, Shirley Snively and Jan Mouser. Classic Shaw think-piece is described as a dream sequence in abstract form. Postmaster General Day quits, fo enter capital law practice WASHINGTON (UPI) - Post master General J. Edward Day has resigned to accept what he called "an unusual opportunity" to enter law practice in the na tion's capital. The Post Office Department an nounced Thursday night that Day had submitted his resigna tion in a letter to President Ken nedy expressing "deep regret" at leaving the post. President Kennedy has accept ed the resignation, a post office spokesman said. Day told Ken nedy July 15 that he was resign ing, the spokesman said, and it was agreed at that time that the announcement would be made at Kennedy's discretion. Authoritative sources said President Kennedy has n o t yet decided upon a successor to Day. There have been recurring ru mors that Day would resign. Asked last March about such a report, the President told news men that he had no plans to re place the postmaster general. Dispute With Brawley . Day was reported to have been In disfavor with the White House since last fall when he was in volved in a dispute with Deputy Postmaster General H. W. Braw ley. Brawley left and joined the Democratic National Committee as executive assistant to .he chairman, but there was specula tion that Kennedy was displeased with Day's position. Day is the third cabinet mem ber to leave office in the Kenne dy administration. Others were Abraham Ribicoff, former secre tary of Health, Education and Welfare who is now a Senator from Connecticut and Labor Sec retary Arthur J. Goldberg, who was named to the Supreme Court. In his letter to the President, dated July 19, Day said that "be cause of an unusual opportunity that has been offered to me I can no longer postpone my return to private life." Leaves For Law A Post Office spokesman said Day was leaving to practice law here as partner in charge of the Washington office of the Chicago firm of Sidley, Austin, Burgess and Smith. Day was associated with the firm from 1938 when he graduat ed from Harvard Law School un til 1949 when he became an as sistant to then Gov. Adlai E. Ste venson of Illinois. Day told the President that it had been "a great honor to serve in your cabinet" and reported that "the Post Office Department is in excellent condition." "The goals which at your di rection I set out to accomplish are all on their way to success ful fruition," he wrote. "There are no pending department crises of a serious nature." Ex-Peace Corps member fells of frusfrations WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (UPI) A former Peace Corps worker said Thursday that many Peace Corps members are becoming "frustrated and disillusioned" be cause they find many foreign gov ernments "don't really want our help." "They discourage us because they are afraid we'll acquaint the masses with a better way of life" said Charles L. James, 27. "Auto crats can control a discontented intclligensia but they wouldn't be able to control widespread unrest." They agree with him on cherri les WASHINGTON (UPI) - Offi cials of the food and drug ad ministration (FDA) are inclined to agree with Sen. Philip Hart, R-Mich., about the lack of cher ries in frozen cherry pies. But they don't know what to do about it. Hart contended recently that pictures on the packages of the frozen pastry showing lucious wedges of pie crammed with cherries were a snare and delu sion. The Senator said the pies more often than not contained far less cherries than the pictures would lead the purchaser to believe and even those floated in watery juice. Hart, whose home state produces more cherries than can be sold, was indignant. He asked the FDA to investigate. The first word today from Mal colm R. Stephens, chief of the FDA enforcement bureau, sup ported Hart's complaint. "We think some of the pictures are not truly representative," Stephens told United Press Inter national. Thomas Bellis of FDA's food standards division suggested weight of the fruit might be the best standard for assuring the proper proportion of cherries. By Al KiMttner UPI Stiff Wrlttr At the corner of Clarkson Ave. and Lenox Road in Brooklyn, New York City, one of the most dramatic skirmishes in the civil rights battle is being waged. The immediate Issue at stake is the alleged discrimination against Negroes in the employment of construction workers. The crux of the matter appears, however, to be part of a long-standing and simmering bitterness against what Negroes call the North's segregation in fact." Thursday saw "chain-ins" in troduced to the New York racial struggle. Negroes locked them selves together at the Brooklyn site where a new hospital is un der construction next door to the basic sciences building of the downstate medical center. Police separated the demon strators with bolt cutters and hauled them off to jail. At 2 p.m. Thursday, the count was 532 ar rests for the week, a record not matched in many places in the South. Demonstrators lie down before moving traffic on Lenox Road. iey have nailed a number of huge cement mixers carrying fresh concrete to the new build ing whicli has its steel girders up. Some have narrowly escaped being run over. Liberal Voting Area In the tree-shaded Brooklyn neighborhood, a mixture of frame private dwellings and large apart ment buildings, the chain-ins have provided a strange commen tary on tlie race issue. It is an area apparently picked for this reason where there is a large liberal vote in every election. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple (NAACP) and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) have heavy membership in that section of New York. The predominant goal is this: Negroes and Puerto Ricans, often in competition for jobs, have joined forces in a battle for more jobs in the building trades. The Brooklyn hospital project was se lected because of periodic charges of discrimination there. The demonstrators are demand ing they be hired under a formu la of 25 per cent Negro, 25 per cent Puerto Rican and 50 per cent other races on jobs financed by state or city funds. Reject!: Formula Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, whose New York City office has been regularly picketed over the issue, holds that the demanded formula is unworkable. "We cannot abandon the con cept of giving equal opportunity to all by giving special privilege to a few," the governor said of the proposal. As for the city's 122-union building trades council, a spokes man insisted there is no discrim ination in hiring. But the council recently has proposed a new cen tral board to review Negro appli cations for apprenticeships and journeymen (advanced) jobs. "The barriers are Invisible and it will take time to remove them," Rockefeller said. The arrested pickets included ministers who broke into the strains of "We Shall not be Moved," an often-heard hymn at the integration rallies in Dixie Negro churches. The fight of the Negroes was for more of the good jobs. A top grade construction worker can earn almost $11,500 a year in New York for 40 hours of work a week. Sheriff Britton found innocent KLAMATH FALLS (UPI) Klamath County Sheriff Murray Britton was found innocent of al lowing a prisoner to escape by a circuit court jury early today. The jury of eight women and four men brought in the verdict at 2 a.m. after eight hours and 32 minutes of deliberation. Britton was accused of causing a prisoner to escape official de tention in a case involving a man charged with stealing a horse. The charge was subsequently dropped and the man did not stand trial. Another charge and a civil ac tion still are pending against the sheriff. He has been charged with contempt of court involving al leged tampering with a juror in another case, and the civil action involves a man who contends he was held unlawfully. ITALIANS OK ALL NAMES ROME (UPD A bill was filed Thursday that would let Italian parents give their children non- Italian first names. Use of such names as John or Ivan instead of Giovanni was banned by a Fascist law of 1939 that still is in force. By United Press International A concerted campaign by inte gration groups for faster public school desegregation has received a new boost from a significant fqdcral court decision. U.S. District Judge Edwin M. Stanley ruled Wednesday that a "stairstep" desegregation pro gram in the schools of Durham, N.C, after just one year's trial, is too slow. He ordered elemen tary and junior high schools de segregated in September and high schools one year hence. Stanley's decision, if upheld in the higher federal courts, could provide the legal foundation for attacking similar plans in opera tion in a number of other South ern school systems. It was one of the rare cases since the Su preme Court school decision of 1954 in which a court has thrown out a gradual desegregation pro gram already in operation. Integrates By Degrees Durham, which began a grade-a-year Integration program by school divisions in 1962, admitted to previously all-white schools 33 Negroes at the elementary level. 30 to junior high and IS to high school. Stanley ordered almost 200 Ne groes admitted to Durham white schools this fall, gave others the chance to transfer by Aug. 12 and directed the total desegrega tion of everything through high school by September of 1904. Until recently,' federal courts have been inclined to accept "stairstep" desegregation plans as moves In good faith by school boards. The jurists usually have retained supervision over the pro cedure to make certain it was not being Used in a discrimina tory fashion. District Judge Frank A. Hooper refused to speed up the grade-a-year program of the Atlanta schools. Hooper ruled that the city school board was moving in good faith. Alabama Law Upheld At the pupil placement level, Alabama's law has been upheld by the Supreme Court which left its good faith application up to Alabama school authorities. A dis trict judge has ordered Birming ham to prepare a September do segregation plan under the law. Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg, speaking for tile court in a Memphis, Term., parks de segregation case, warned that it "was never contemplated that the concept of 'deliberate speed' would countenance indefinite delay in elimination of racial barriers In schools, let alone other public fa cilities ..." LIKES GOLDWATER WAYNESBORO. Ga. (UPD The Burke County Democratic Party Executive Committee urged fn a resolution Thursday that Americans "regardless of party" support Sen. Barry Gold- water, R-Ariz. for president. FAMILY-STYLE CHINESE DINNERS FOR 3 . . . Your choice of any 3 dishes, only $3.75. Try itl SKYLINE DRIVE-IN 1143 S"Uttl Third . . . 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