San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, August 2, 1963 Page: 3 of 8
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■MIfAT. *tot8T «■ '»»
•AN ANTONIO
— - - -
RKUIHT—
PAOKTI
<* I«lr.
i *
C1IA1RS MALIC ARTISTS HAIR STYLE SHOW—Henri Jiidon, not-
w) hair atyllat and chairman of the National Beaut? Culturiata league
f ratability group, and Mr a. Cordelia Jennings axecutlva a«Tctnry of the
orgaslaatlon, (Hupler tha tentative program (or the firat male arlmta hair-
•tyle ahow at the 44th annual convention of the National Iteauty Oulturlata
league at the Sherman hotel la Chicago. Ill- Annul* 4-M.
Negro Lawyers
Picked for Top
Criminal Cases
Bj GARFIELD U SMITH. JR.
For the Aeeoclated Negro I'reea
CLEVELAND — The two top-
,reeking atorlea here, list week, re-
flect democracy In action. Even
hough U>th account! are flavored
»lth a criminal element, the fact re-
naina that twa top flight Negro law-
yera are defending two different
white cllenta.
Atty. Jamea R. WllUa la the trial
lawyer for Alei (Shondor) Blrna.
often arreated. but aeldom convicted,
reputed king of the Cleveland racket
eera. who waa aubject «f • wide hunt
in the recent warder of Marvin L.
'Cold.
Gold, mlaalng for two daya, waa
found ahot four ttmea and garroted.
He waa Is the trunk of hia car wrap-
in t red blnnVft iim! oiif MIIMC
1 IbrerH hl«
Ironically. Willie waa the lawyer
111 the Gold aaee. Gold la the former
taxi driver who parlayed hia knowl-
edge of finance Into etaggeringpr^
portion*, aad wto wee left holding
the bag l« a ee»e Involving etolen
Canadian bonda.
He raa afoul of the l»w when he
and eight efbere allegedly were In-
volved la a 4UKMW0 ewlnjlle co»-
, cernlnf the V. 8. Small Bnalneae ad-
^ ailnletretioa.
- (J. g. Atty. Merle M. MrCnrdy an-
aounced that the daaU rfGoW would
naming Blraa" «a th»_ aoarce
which he got
Normii *•
one of fHveland'e
tera," la defendlnt .
Cuyahoga eounty raeonler. who wa»
Indicted by the fenr «• 8*
cunta of forging paM»ll * ^
lng the forged checha. receiving money
fraudulently from *a ejnnty pajf*.
and certifying a fraudulent county
""nal' poeted • *2.000 pereonal bond
•Dd went back on the Job.
OB the aubject of reelgn.ng. Minor
keenme the spokesman and eeid . I
"He (Day) eeea no reaaon why ne I
An'ld reaign beaiuae of faUa aocuaa-
fmna apreadlng from political ambi-
tiona. He Intended to defraud no
hody and reaH«d »<* ■
any of the tranaactione complained
©f.H
Arch Racist
Named to ISippi
Supreme Court
By the Aeaoclateg Negro Preaa
JAOKSON, Mlaa. —
Gov. Hon. Barnett ha. Mined one of
the natlon'a moat maledictory «*re-
ntionlstf. Circuit Judge Tom jr.
Brady, to the poet of aaeociate Jnetlce
of the Mtolaalppl aupre'ye wurt.
Brady la the author ol
dav " publlahed In 1056. by the White
Citleena eoonclla. In the book Brady
£55 the Unite*'. StaUa Supreme
court deelalon calling for public
■ehool deaegregation uncouatitutionnl.
Brady la generally considered the
., figure In the conception of the
'hite Cltiaena councils.
arttssataSSS
••The lovelleet creature and the pur
•at of God'a erenturee, the ne*'"1
Sjng to an angelic belt* that tteajJ*
thla tetreetl»l ball.- '*
the well-brad «iltui
na a result of her having be*n hired
by a Paris fnnhlnn designer 12 yenra
ago to modol hia elothea. She hns
since beea in great demand and now
operatea a chnrm school for teen-age
girla. She ia the ni«ter of concert pian-
ist Lois iWlea of Hnn Franeiaoo and
the niece of Dr. II. H. Towlea of I Am
Angelea.
Church, a graduate of Howard aud
Georgetown universities, Washington,
ia an attorney for the justice depart-
ment's immigration and naturalisa-
tion division.
It was the aeeond marriage for Mra.
Church; the firat for the groom.
♦
Gregory's Rights
Activities Don't
Hurt Popularity
irinob conaldered aa
nd'a <Wiiuoat bajrria-
tera." la defending Prank S
By the Aaaociated Negro l'reaa
CHICAGO—Comedian Dick Greg-
ory, back from the Integration front,
laat week had patrone virtually apllt-
ting their aidea with laughter at hia
aatire of topical eubjecta in hia firat
appearance In the l'almer Houae ho-
tel Empire room here.
Hie appearance at the awank boe-
telry eeotched a rumor that Gregory a
engagement there had been canceled
because of hia integration ectivitiee.
MerrM Abbott, producer of Palmer
Houae ahowa, vigorously denied that
anyone tried to cancel Dick a book-
Gregory'e wlttldame were directed
at polltlclane, churchmen. _lntyra-
tlonlata and aegregationlata. He drew
loud laughter when he commented on
a poaalhle atomic attock by aaylng:
"Iatarted la '
Two Negroes
On Oklahoma
Rights Commission
By the Aaaociated Nfiiro Prena
0UI.AIIOMA CITV-Twe Ne-
greea were named hy Okla-
homa Governor Henry lleltaion
to the new nine-man Oklahoma
Human Rights commission. The
governor named T. W. flarila.
Tulaa pharmacist; and retired
army Major William Rose. Rose
la the governor's choice for direc-
tor of the commlaelon.
The commission tsas created
during the last session of the tthla-
homa legislature.
The aiiproprlatlon amounts to
tMl.mxi for a two-year period.
The director's salary la
annually.
Integrated B'ham
Audience to See
Integrated Show
fly the Associated Negro Pn-s
NBW YORK—History vill be
mnde in Birmingham, Ala., Aus.
when the clty'a first Integrated kIiow
will he presented to an integrated
nuillenee in the dly-owned Civic
auditorium there under the ausplcea
of the American Guild of \ arlety
Artists.
The show will feature some of the
nation's top stage stars, Including
singer Kay Charles.
l'roceeda from the one-night per-
formance, expected to reach $l!.i.OOO,
will be donated to ciill rights organ-
izations to aid the continued fight for
equal righte for Negroes.
The show lias the blesxines of Kir
mingham city officials, according to
A<iVA president, Joey Adams, mid
Ihc Itev. A. D. King, brother "(
southern liitegrationist lender. Dr.
Martin 1-tither King. Jr.
Birmingham recently waa the scene
of ma»si»e civil rights demonstrations
by Negroes against racial segrega-
tion.
llev. A. D. King expressed the hope
that the event »ill mark the begin-
ning of integrated audiences in other
southern cities. He said:
•'Birmingham has a long history of
segregation. If we break it there, it
will have meaning for other southern
dties."
President's Job
Committee Saves
Chicagoan's Job
(Fpednl to San Antonio Regular)
WASHINGTON, P. C—A Chlca-
so Negro *ho became the innocent
victim of a union atfiinhMa haa hia
j«>b hack —at a higher salary—thanka
to quirk action hv the l'reaident'a
Committee on Kqual Employment Op-
portunity.
Instead of his old Job a« a $2 0S-
nn-li<»ur apprentice, Wynnand N'or-
maiul. 22, Chicago, is ihi the Job aa
a full-fledged Journey man *heet metal
worker on the new federal office
building project In Chicago. And he a
mnVing $4.03 an hour.
Normand had received excellent
training as a she^t mcfal worker dur-
ing six yeara lie workefl for his father
in the field."
When the Irsay Hheet Metal com-
pany of Chicago offered him a Job
as a third year apprentice at $3 an
hour, he quit hi-* non-union job for
the chance to join the Chicago local
of the Sheet Metal Workers union
nnd go to work on the .'10-story multl-
million-dollar federal office project.
He went to work on .Tulv l.*». The
contractor, however, started him at
the low apprentice rale of 12.08 nu
hour. Instead of the promised.
Then the local sheet metal workers
uuion atepped 'n and insisted that
Normand was not properly indentured
nnd would have to be laid off. On
July '£1, the Irsay firm compiled with
the request ami Normand was out
of a job. But not for long.
I»ominic Tesauro, regional admin-
istrator for the (general Services ad-
ministration, which is in charge of
the project, called in the President s
Committee on Equal Employment Op-
portunity.
Chicago labor figure*, including
Daniel Healey, a vice president of the
AFL in Chicago, were called in to
help. The sheet metal workers union
final!v said that it wa* mainly a
matter of the failure of Norma ml to
RFD Explodes
Charge Rights
Leaders 'Red'
By the Associated Nagro
WASHINGTON' _ Attornej Gen-
eral Ilobert K. Kennedy declared
Thursday that the Juki Ice department
has no evidence that any of the top
leaders of the major civil rights
'Sippl Vote
Regiatrar Guilty
Of Diacrimination
By tlM Aaaorlatad Negro Tresa
\JBW ORLEANS—Titer on C
Idjrnd. Mississippi voter regia-
trar, in convicted last week In
tha United States Court of Ap-
* i ln Orleans, for dla-
■Han against Negroes. '
court ordered him Jailed If ....... — — —.
he iaes not comply with court J groupa are Communista or Comma-
#tratllteii for an end of racial t nint controll<>d.
He said his statement waa based
on "all available information from
the Federal Bureau of Inveatigation
and other aourcea." The attorney
general'* atatement was made in a
letter to Pen. A. H. Mike Monroney
(I)., Okla.).
Monroney read Kennedy's letter
at a commerce Cf»mmittee hearing on
that portion of the civil rights pack-
age which would bar dincrimination
in public placea.
It was before this committee that
Gov. Roes It. Barnett of Mississippi
and Got. George C. Wallace of Ala-
bama had raised the Communist
charge.
iHackley never commented about eon-
ditiona in Viet Nam.
"An a Bpeeia! officer, he had to be
careful ahoat what he wrote." his
father aaid. *He told aa wa knew
more about what waa going on In
Viet Nam by reading the papera than
he did by being there."
•ireeiive* tor an rna oi racial
tfiarrlmlnatlnn within to daya. If
Jailed nnder the civil contempt
charge, he could be held nntil he
eompU".
Ijjmi. of llattiesburg. Mis*..
la circuit clerk and voter regis-
tear for Forrest county In south-
cm sippi.
Wilkins
and It'll he Juat mjr luck when the
A-botnha start to fall I'll he working
in a awank penthouse aupper club
somewhere.*'
lle hit the nation's space program
with a racial barh this way: "first
let'a hare a Jet pilot, Krom the hack
of the bus to the moon Is too fast.
Ilia reference waa the naming of the
firat Negro aatronaut recently.
While atarring at the Palmer
Houae. Gregory waa busy with other
humanitarian activitiea. I-aat week
ha and singer Nancy Wilaon heud-
lined a benefit allow aimed at boost-
ing prlaonera' morale at Cook county
Jail hert. He alao headlined a similar
•bow at the Indiana atata peniten-
tiary*
MAKIS^f SKIN
fill out required forma and that It
would pegpM him to return to work
if he did? a«».
Tliia waa accompliahed. Tn the pro-
res«. the »tu«»n decided that Normand
had a legitimate six years of exper-
, ience nnd ahnnld be paid the Journey-
i man hourlv wage.
| A. H. Cruiin. president and busi-
' nevs mattflger of tlie local, said th
union waa not discriminating agninat,
No. tnand or any other Negro. lie re-1
ported them was one journeyman'
worker already at work on the job
aud that there was one apprentice in
training, de -.ite the fact the union**
apprentice board docs not meet dur-
ing the Bitmn.er.
There were reports that demonstra-
tions had been planned nt the lug fed-
eral building project because of the
layoff of Normand.
Ilobart Ta>lor, Jr.. executive vice
rhnirman^'of tlie President's Commit-
tee ou Equal Employment Opportun-
ity, aaid after the incident waa aet-
tled:
"Thla eould have derelone<1 into an
ugly and unnecessary situation. It
came about because of a breakdown
in communications between groups
trying to make a start in an area
i;j Marines —
(Continued from Page 1.)
.100 marines who have eipressed tlieir
willingness to support mass demon-
stration "there are 100 to Krfl white
marines." There is nn estimated <100
Negro nnd 2.000 white military per
sonnet at Cherry Point.
♦
Ambush —
(Continued from Page 1.)
from home ... It would grieve us
just as much if he had died at home."
('apt. Hackley is one of 10 children.
His brother. Dr. Krennie E. Hack-
ley, Jr.. received his Ph.D., from the
University of Delaware in Ift'id. The
captain had been In the army for
(Continued from Pag* LI
which they ahould have had at the
rery beginning of their dtisenship."
The Negro leader passionately and
brilliantly denounced the difference
between America's promisee and per
forman.ea. He spoke of the defiance
hr states of the highest court's edicta
and said this "capped the dialllusion-
ment of millions of Negro cltiiens
and convinced many of them that
little or no faith could be placed in
the usual processes for prompt redress
' of demonstrable grievancea."
Wilkins added: .. . They are not
to be dissuaded, then, bv talk that
they are 'hurting their cause' through
demonatrationa . . ."
When Wilkins was finished with
his seven-page presentation, it was
obvious that perhaps with one excep-
tion—South Carolina's Sen. Strom
Thurmond—each senator in some
wav hail lieen touched by the speech.
lint It was Sen. Philip A. Hart, of
Michigan, who perhaps revealed the
depths of his disgust and distaste for
America's way of segregation.
The senator aaid: "I am proud of
my father, for By father pwofcMli
ray firat merntieralilp for ana la mm
NAACP whea I waa la high acta*
t
Antagonist —
(Continued from Page 1.)
Brooke General hoapital.
Incidental to the caae, the offla*
removed a .22-calibre pi*tol from tM
person of a witness. MeClendon w»
iiama, aud placed it in police cuaf~*"
GlSutlon
Funeral Director
430 N. Cherry St
CApitol 6-7283
If
haa been no real
prog- J nine years.
where ther
recalled
father
ress before
Manufacturers 9! Powt*r'i ItrflMnot/'Th* J* with lh« Slw"
I
1 woman,
Brady wrota, "la
»4 southern white
and her blue-eyed, golden-
haired Mttla itfl." nterf-
IOonal tonrantlon.^
Marriage of Model
Dorothea Towles,
Attorney Revealed
a. tha Aaaociated Kagro Ptaaa
"-sttx.r,rr.
aTa» wwtu laat week.
^ ^ ' a fonr-rear eoort-
iha ample repeated wedding vowa
11
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Andrews, U. J. San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, August 2, 1963, newspaper, August 2, 1963; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth403823/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.