-...'..IV V-.
ourt Sets lew Orleans Desegregation Back To Original Timetable
New Orleans, La.-IUPII-The
U S. Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals set the dcscRrcgation
of New Orleans public schools
back on its orifiinal time
table Monday. It ordered Ne
groes admitted to the second
and third grades Sept. 4.
A thrce-judKe panel of cir
cuit judges also ordered the
school board gradually to end
its system of separatc-but-equal
school districts for Ne
groes and whites. The effect I
I of the order would be ulti-1
! matcly to make one school ;
system for both races. The
jpanel consisted of Circuit:
Jude.es John Minor Wisdom,:
John Brown, and Richard T.
Rives.
The first grade has been !
integrated in New Orleans ;
since November, 10(10.
The court ordered abolition j
of the dual school system for '
V
'I
V
-, a? sit. ,
URGES REDUCED RATES - Director Kriwnrc R. Murrow of
tile United States Information Agency told the Senate For
eign Relations Committee that the USIA should have reduced
rates in using the Administration's proposed space satellite
communications system as a "reservation of public domain
for public use." Murrow was the leadoff witness as (he com
mittee resumed hurry-up hearings on the long-stalled hill
under orders to report back to the Senate by Friday. (UPI)
the first and second grades
in September, 1083 and to
abolish it for the third, fourth
and fifth grades in September,
19B4.
In its ruling, the court af
firmed the original desegrega
tion plan by former U. S. Dist.
Judge J. Shelly Wright in
l!)(i0. Wright issued plan when
the embattled school board
failed to submit one.
Judge Wright now with
the Appellate Court in the
District of Columbia had or
dered a grade a year deseg
regated beginning in Septem
ber, 19B0. However, only
limited desegregation has
been introduced in New Or
leans' schools. A total of 12
Negroes now attend six previ
ously ill-white schools in the
city.
Last April, Judge Wright
amended his order and called
for the desegregation of all
six grades of New Orleans
schools. The parents of 101
Negro pupils asked for the
action, charging the school
board was trying to limit de
segregation by use of the
Lousiana pupil placement
plan. This signed students to
various schools.
Frank B. Ellis succeeded
Wright when he moved up
to the Appellate Court. Ellis
overturned his predecessor's
order, and reinstated the 1980
staircase plan.
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Day
or
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Service
Jamaica Becomes
Independent Nation
Kingston, Jamaica -IUPII-Jamaica,
once a center of pi
racy and slavery, became an
independent nation Monday
after three centuries of Brit
ish rule.
The Caribbean island gain
ed its sovereignly officially at
midnight acquiring dominion
status within the British Com
monwealth. Sir Alexander Bustamanle,
the I.aborile prime minister
heading Ihe first independent
government, has pledged Ja
maica to an anti-Communist
sland in cooperation with the
United Slates and Britain.
U.S. Vice President Lyn
don B. Johnson, representing
President Kennedy, said after
arriving from the United
States Sunday that his gov
ernment will aid the new na
tion in working for a world
"in which all are well-housed,
well-led and properly edu
cated." Johnson Is presenting a
$75,000 scholarship fund to
Jamaica as an independence
gift.
JFK Accused of
Indecisiveness
In lax Reduction
Washington UPU Congress
and outside economic experts
added new fuel to the tax cut
debate with one Republican
senator calling for a $5.5 bil
lion reduction and accusing
President Kennedy of "agoniz
ing indecisiveness."
The '"cut-now" plea of Sen.
Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) was
echoed by J. Fred Weston,
business professor at the Uni
versity of California, Los An
geles, in testimony before the
Joint Economic Committee,
However, Weslon did not at
tack the President.
He agreed with other wit-nesh-cs
that the rate of econom
ic growth has slowed down.
He urged that corporate taxes
be cut by 5 percentage points
and the lowest bracket per
sonal income tax rates be cut
in half.
Weston also asserled that
Senate Finance Chairman
Harry F. Byrd's insistence on
a "rigid debt ceiling" in the
fall of 1957 was a major cause
of the $12.4 billion deficit in
fiscal 1958-59.
Other developments on the
tax cut issue included:
-The Senate-House Econom
ic Committee opened public
hearings on the state of the
economy. Called to testify
were Ira Ellies, DuPont eco
nomics Prof. Daniel B. Suits
of the University of Michigan;
and James Wishart, research
director of the AFL-CIO Meat
cutters and Butchers Union.
-Treasury Secretary Doug
las Dillon and Budget Director
David Bell were called to a
closed session of the House
Ways and Means Committee,
which also is considering the
nation's economic situation.
-Ladd Plumley, president
of the U. S. Chamber of Com
merce, said in a prepared
speech that it would be "a
calculated risk'' for Congress
to wait until next January to
cut taxes. He said taxes should
be cut immediately to help
spur the economy.
Demos Hear Attorney General
Defend FBI's Communism Efforts
Seattle "L'Pli Democrats i Ferry said, "then it is because and saboteurs percola ting
from 13 western stales mov-1 the FBI has failed to do its througn tne republic, rerry
"No one cares to have spies
Inspectors Seize
'Balloon' Loaves
ed into the final day of their ' job in controlling them."
three-day conference here to
day after listening to a break
fast speech by Attorney Gen
eral Robert F. Kennedy.
Kennedy arrived here Mon
day night and began his stay
by defending the FBI's ef
forts to control Communist
spies against charges made
by a critic who spoke earlier
in the day.
Kennedy said Communist
subversion was a "serious
problem and anyone who un
derestimates it is doing a dis
service to the nation."
W. II. Ferry, a vice presi
dent of the Fund for the Re
public, had told the confer
ence that FBI head J. Edgar
Hoover had fostered a "myth
that Communists are nine feet
tall" by continually warning
the nation of the Red menace.
"If Hoover is correct in his
analysis and Communist spies
are an important problem,"
Portland -WPH- State Agri
culture department inspec
tors seized "balloon" loaves
of bread Monday from Port
land supermarkets. They said
the loaves will be turned over
to the Multnomah county dis
trict attorney's office.
The department has ruled
the fluffy loaves illegal. It
said baking one-pound loaves
in larger pans is deceptive.
Bakeries replied the weight
is printed on the package.
Kenneth Carl, chief of
dairy and consumer services
in the department, raid the
seized loaves were baked by
six bakeries.
Firm Replaces
Striking Workers
the conclusion of a broad new
trade . agreement with the
European Common Market."
"Without such an agree
ment," he said, "our com
mercial position in these im
portant European countries is
going to become much tighter
over the next few years."
Another administration of
ficial, John E. Home, adminis
trator of the Small Business
Administration, defended the
President against charges he
is anti-business.
"Far from despairing over
the administration's attitude
towards business," he said,
"the small businessmen of this
country are more hopeful to
day than they have been for
many years."
during 1961 and fought fires ... counscl to the prcs'idcnt.
spoke to an estimated 500 per-
said. "If the FBI is not up to
finding and prosecuting them,
let us set up an agency that
can."
Peter T. Jones, deputy un
dersecretary of commerce for
trade policy, explained the
Kennedy administration's for
eign trade bill to a conference
session Monday.
"The most important objec
tive of this act," he said, "is
22r907 Alarms Call
Firemen in 1961
Salem - (UPll - Oregon fire
men answered 22,907 alarms
that did a record-breaking
$17,858,189 damage, State
Fire Marshal Walter Korlann
reported Monday.
Seventy-seven persons died
as a result of fire.
I The biggest blaze in Oregon
The department announced j during the year was the Beall
Pipe and Tank Corp. fire at
Portland June 17. Damage
there totaled nearly $5 million.
last week it will start to en.
force the order. Carl said
bakeries outside Portland
will be checked later.
i
a. i
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NEWBERRY'S DOWNTOWN -
Open Friday
Nights
".Vli
Stock Market
Prices Feature
Early Decline
New York-IIIPII-Motors and
aircraft featured an early
decline on the slock market
today.
General Motors and Chrys
ler were off more than a
point each, the former regis
tering Wall Street's disap
pointment with iis failure to
raise the quarterly dividend.
Lower earnings sent Boe
ing off 2 in the aircrafls and
McDonnell and Grum
man dropped similarly, the
latter in the face of an earn
ings rise.
dow jones" aver ages
New York - UTIl - Dow
Jones final stock averages:
30 industrials S93.24. olf
3.14; 20 railroads 120.76, off
1.S0: 15 utilities 116.79. off
0.59. and 65 slocks 205.85.
off 1.37. Sales Monday were
about 3.11 million shares
compared wilh 2.99 million
shares Friday.
Page 2-A
MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1962
oreign Briers
By United Press International . .
Diamond National corpora- j reg lurid I CQITIOn
tion officials said Monday
workers were being hired as :
permanent replacements for
striking International Wood
workers of America Union
employees at .Albeni Falls,
Idaho, and Superior, Mont.
Leonard Luby, Diamond
National official at Coucr
D'Alene, said the strikers
were notified by letter that
replacements would be hired
if they did not return to work
beginning July 2B at Superior NIGER GETS ECONOMIC AID FROM U.S.
and Monday at Albeni Falls. I Niamey, Niger-iliPli-The United Stales has given lhis form
Some 600 to 700 1WA men er French African colony $2.8 million in economic aid in
went on strike against Dia-! ine year, according lo an official here.
mond National at Couer j Lucien Bayle, a Frenchman in charge of Niger's three
D'Alene, Albeni Falls and Su-! year economic development plan, said mosf of lhe aid came
pcrior July 2. but pickets as gifll or loanI al nominai interest rates.
were withdrawn and opera- !
tions resumed at C o u e r j BRITISH AIRLINE PASSENGERS SHAKEN BY STORM
sons who paid $25 a plate to
hear him Monday night at the
meeting's major fund-raising
banquet.
Sorensen admitted criticism
of the President has increased
in recent months but he said
"President Kennedy is not
concerned about his critics
but about his country."
Sorensen added "all of our
greatest presidents in their
time were bitterly abused and
hated and reelected." He said
the administration has been a
success in spite of recent re
verses in Congress.
n ii itiaj
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4
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SNOWBALLS IN AUGUST
Milwaukee, Wis. - lUPll - The
police Youth Aid Bureau rec
ommended Monday that the
parents of I wo 14-ycar-old
hoys discipline them for
throwing snowballs at a school
bus. The snowballs had been
stored in a food freezer since
last winter,
TO VISIT FAR EAST
Washington - lUPU - Peace
Corps Director Sargent Shri
ver will leave Wednesday for
a 25-day tour of corps projects
in the Far East. The trip wilt
take him to the Philippines,
Thailand, Malaya, North Bor
neo and Sarawak.
London-lPli-Fifty-seven passengers aboard a British Unit
ed Airways plane were severely jolted during a storm over
France Monday night on a High? from Milan to London.
Authorities said one woman vas knocked unconscious
and later was hospitized for head injuries. They said the
other passengers, nearly all them British tourists, were
shaken up.
ENVOY TO CONFER ON KATANGA SITUATION
Brussels-UiPH-The Belgian ambassador to the Congo, Count
de Kerck-Hove de Denlerghem, arrived in Brussels Monday
for consultations wilh the foreign ministry on the Katanga
situation.
Informed sources said the talks would deal with United
Nations plans lo bring economic pressure against Katanga
province in an effort to end its secession.
PRESIDENT TAKES OFFICE IN COLOMBIA
Bogota. Colombia-ttTli-GuiUermo L. Alencia, a conserva
tive backed by major factions of both the conservative and
liberal parties, takes office as president of Colombia today.
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