San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, June 5, 1964 Page: 4 of 8
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BAN ANTONIO REGISTER
A Publication Dedicated to Bight, initio* tad Profits
Ul AMTOVIO 6, TEXAS
pvBi.itiir.u fsib.ti •» «ac» irm m
THE REGISTER PUBLISHING COMPANY
ovnci Ml NKRin ItNTBB STRICT
mom t *p>i»i i-tTii _ r. o. dkawkb mm
Steond rtAM postage paid it Han Antoafot Tuaa. Advertlatni rates furnished
m request Subscription rates, ons yes/, IS. 10; six months, |10«, three months,
fl.lt (Includss stats sales tax); sloe* >py. II esats.
Nations! advertising rvprsssnutivsa. Amalgamated Publishers, Inc.,
119 Madison avsnus, Nsw York 17, N. T. — Telephone MUrray H1U I 5461
All m aerial submitted for publication must be rscelved by Tuesday, noon, ta
appear In ths leene of that week. Submitted material must bs typewritten or
plainly written on only oris aide of paper. Ths right to condsnss mat tar to
■msC Register's editorial requirement! ta reserved without quallflcatlOQS
Register duea not guarantee tlie use or return of unsolicited material.
Let Us Not Delay the Day
DACISM on the part of the Negro is no less deplor-
able than it is on the part of whites.
Racism is the monster that responsible Negro
leaders, organizations, and politicians have been wag-
ing a titanic struggle against for years. In this strug-
gle, they have been joined by intelligent, liberty-
loving non-Negroes, and this support has had terrific
impact in the forward struggle against negrophobia
and hatred.
The anti-whit es-because-they-are-whites explo-
sion in Harlem, a'though understandable, is not ex-
cusable. Tho e to the situation feel that it was
triggered by police Ineptitude followed by police bru-
tality in a minor incident.
But ex tremist - in both groups must be denounc-
ed, controlled, and stopped.
Irrational acf!vities and violence intensify and
drovoke racial ar'irro?ity, and remedy nothing. They
nurt the cau?e «f civil rights. They provide propa-
ganda ammunition to the foes of Negro equality.
The Nepro i^ in sight of some of his goals. Let
him do nothing that will delay the day of ultimate
fulfillment.
What President Lvndon B. Johnson recently
'*! a group, is prophetic:
'There is only one road wise men can follow
today. The nation is on a course that leads to
freedom for every man, whatever his race or
religion; to full dignity for every citizen, what-
ever his station in life, and to equal opportunity
for every American, whatever his color or creed.
'Tho<e who follow that course—and serve the
can-.e—are on the side of history. Those who seek
to frustrate that course—and subvert that cause
—will one day be left behind. For they struggle
against the rising conscience of mankind, and
they struggle in vain."
J
li
St. Petersburg
Girl Wins Bryn
Mawr Scholarship
Bf ths A»ftociate4 Negro Prns
PF.TKRHBl R<». Fla—The
17-year-eld daughter of t
lees' sekwol teacher* has bermne
the first mother of her race,
frsai ttts area. Is receive a srh
s*.
Meanwhile. N^gro lawyer Henry L.
M lr-li. Ill <tt Richmond. said he was
disappoints that ths high court let
stand a \ irgiaia law allowing gran's
to famiU<»a to pay priests school tui-
tion or trnnMtmrtation tr» other school*.
He had a«ke<l the court in a nult to
declare the tuition grants for stu
dents lsralii.
June —
» study at
Mawr college near Philadelphia.
Pa
the is huther Jacqueline Wll
llama, daughter of Mr. snd Mrs.
I'etsr C. Williams. Her father
Is s chemistry t*a?her at lith
Htrnet Junior high erfcool.
\iiw*K top sewers on the Flori-
da rtat* wide high school senior
test. >11** Williams will receive
s I2..JOO grant from the flerard
and Mary Hill Swop* loan fund
for sa long aa ah* maintain* high
wholamhip at Bryn Mawr. !She.
la g meniW of the WflU^'i Hen-
ate and the Ht. Cecelia choir ar '
i.lhhs high arhool Is St. Peters-
burg.
Sin
«er —
(Continued from Page 1 )
moned to the scene, was working fran-
tically in a rain attempt to wave him.
Mrs. Lewis said she la*t apoke to b»-r
•on on Mother's day.
The last person known to hav-
apoki'o to him was Buddy Nolan, au
afwiatant at the Apollo thsatr«\ w1j »
soiii hs spent 'he night at ths party
with Lewis and shook hands with him |
aa they parted.
Lewis, whose real name is Charle*
Rudolph Hurrell, Joined ih»» Drifters
In 1060 as the replacement of an-
other famous rock V roll sluger, l>n
K King. Hs was reported to have
bees preparing to quit the group him-
self to launch a career as a single per-
former.
In addition to his singing with ths
Drifters, Lewis, who started ftin^iug
spiritual songs in church at the ag^
sf three, also composed spirituals for
gospel singer Clara Ward.
J*iwia whs credited with being chief-
ly responsible for the Drifters record-
ing of at least eight hit tunas, Includ-
ing "l'p on the Roof," MVaya Con
l>ios.' and "On Broadway." Disc joc-1
key tJeorgie Woods, a fellow l'hlla-
4'Jphiaa, presented him a gold tro-
{hy marking a million sales of the
Up sa ths Roof record, last Feb
Wary. i
In addition to his mother, Lewis Is
rurvivsd by hia step-father, Jsmes 1
ickson; a brother, R«w»eeeelt, and two
•later*, ffrelyn and Joyce.
(Continued from Pa^e 1)
everyone should have a ch**t X-ray
at once a year, and children
Hhoiild bs tuberculiu-tested.
Children under 14 may not be X-
rayed.
Only a nominal donation is a«ked
for tbs cheat X-raying service, and.
in June, ss in every month of the
year, the mobile unit will be sta-
tions] at different localities so that
it will be easy and convenient for
residents of erery srea to be chest X-
rayed.
'Hie June «». Iiedule is as follows:
June 1*—Telephone company, 11 in
th® morning to 6 in the evening.
June 1»)—Telephone company, 9 !u
the morning to 4 in the afternoon.
June 11—'Telephone company, 11
in 'be morning to tt 'n the evening.
June 12— Broadway National bank.
fKJOl Broadwav, 10 in the morning to
in the a Iter noon.
June !•>—lis tidy Andy. No 17, 442
lirndy boulevard (Empire plaxa). 1
iu th» afternoon to 7 in the evening.
June !♦» Alamo Cement company
(plant), <'••mentville. Teias. 10 in
the morning to 4 in the afN-rnoon.
June 17—Alamo Cement company
community house, Ceutentville, Texas.
J2. noon, to 4 in the afternoon.
June 1M—Mosher Hteel company,
1122 Colorado, !» in the morning to
12. noon.
June I*- San Antonio Independent
.School district. Building and Grounds
office, 1110 Austin street, 1 :J0 to
4 .'50 in ths afternoon.
June 1ft—Handy Andy, No. 2T>,
Wonderland center. 1 in ths after-
noon to 7 in the evening.
June —Teg-Son Manufacturing
company, 410 South St. Mary'a ft in
th* morning to 1 in the afternoon.
June 24, 2."—San Antonio Bxpress
and News, Avenue E and Third. 9 Jn
the morning to 4 in the afternoon.
June 2ft— Randolph National bunk,
Pat Boomer road, Cniversal City,
Texas, lo in rtie morning to 5 in the
afternoon.
June 30 Air Traffic Control oeu-
fer, K362 Brotdwar, 9 In the mcrn-
■ ng to 4 in ths afternoon.
Damages
Taxes —
u
'on. limed LLUffl.
lend privata achool^.
flowevar# ol»servera balievs that ths
pressure sf whites of haviof to pay
for the Jim Crow schools sad at the
aiima tins pay etato taxes to anpport
ths publls schools wonld eveatusllv
kill ths boycott snd send whites hsck |
in classrooms with Negroes.
The pro*pe<-t of having to pay the ;
do.iMe toftea waa Mtaring whitea in
tha face, Jevi ite a Matement by Rob-
ert Tsyloi, r irunfee of ths "private
schssT fuundntion that hs dovbted
that reaUents having to
Cfea*«n f rr tiv schools would
MM.- m».. » i«9H*raliwfis great
(Continued from Pigs L)
. indent to the exercise of a para-
mount right of the federal government
in the nstnrs sf a police power . . ."
Both th» srmy snd the university
suatained hesvy damage during the
Oxford riots, the srmy to its equip- j
ment and the university to Its ground* j
aad buildings.
Only
(Csiuiiij^ from Fx. I.)
r«iU to ilwgnillw ha* k«M the
Um W J.Mit fir Nin iMrim la
mm iwirwm Malrlrta.
HOUSTON
Wrifhl H • u «t o a,
«rb<n n.tnw miulHat* about
ft fitr irmt *1 Nm papaUlloii. aa
«ihi larfh, a **(r«(al«d rltf
irkf. .rh-H.1 <»MtrmiitliMi km
THE ROLLING UP OF SLEEVES.
proceeded at a "very gradual
pace " The city continues to op-
erate. with few exception.*, whit
U basics! I > a dual a) at em of
srhooK with separate geogrsphic
attendance area* for each school
In the racially separate<l systems.
Though Nie Houston school
hoard early In ift.Vi set up ma-
chiner) for stud>ing racial prob-
lems relsted to integration, the
city afterwards followed a policy
of "containment," yielding "only
under the pressure or threat of
litigation."
\fter going up to the 1'nitrd
States Stipre«»e court on appeals
from a court ordered desegregation
plan, the Houston school bond
sought vainly to have the gov-
ernor of the state interpose be-
tween the federal go-.eminent and
the school hoard. The hurdles
which Negro transfer applicants
faced have in< hided, at one time
or another, a medical examina-
tion. a "brother sister" rule
which had the effect ef prevent-
ing admission i a white school sf
a child whoae sibling attended a
Negro school, and a transfer rule
requiring visits to three school
officials in order to secure writ-
ten permisaios for a transfer.
Oilier limitations, Wright notes,
have been the "laek of effective
Negro leadership." and the fart
that the coort approved plan did
wot Made kindergarten wtilrti
win not hs desegregated until
1971.
The "brother-sister" rule was
Im Uidsted by a coort of appeala
ruliag la tail, at which time
the court also questioned the le-
gality of the transfer rule, which
remains In effect.
Negro students ia Housfpa still
suffer from inequities in vers*
tional training. Wright etates.
Of appro vimately I a trade aad
industrial courses open to whites,
he found only four o]»en to Ne-
groes. There were no apprent Ice-
ship programs for Negroes, and
whites had access to three) ear
vocational courses while Negroes
were limited to two-year courses.
I nder a IMS policy, a Nrgro
student from grades 9 through
12 may attend the white \ocs-
tional school if he reaaot ob-
tain the training he waala in a
N<ycro school.
Wright concludes that the "in-
herent inequalities of segregred
education" continue to exist for
mi st of Houston's Negro pupils.
rKH'\KKI> PRIOR TO 19tr. #V4
The Texas report was prepared
on the basis of material collated
prior to the opening of the I
(II school >esr. A partial listing
of school desegregation develop-
ments since that time feUosv*
1. No Negro students have en-
rolled in white srhosla la M.ins-
field*
2. It is reported that 70 school
districts were desegregated for
the first time in September, t
These districts bring the siale-
wide tirfal ts *44 desegregated
school diatricta sat of 119 po»s|.
ble districts with whlta4ind Ne-
gro students.
1 The newly desegregated dis-
tricts include:
longview — desegregated by
eourt order.
Fort Worth—desegregated by
court order.
Oateaville — desegregated by
boards.
S. A Negro parent filed a mo-
tion "for farther relief" iu the
still pending Houston school de-
segregation case. The parent
sought an order requiring local
schools to admit his five-year
old daughter to kindergarten, not
scheduled to desegregate until
1U72. The federal district court
refused to modify the existing or-
der.
Hryan—dessgrsgated kg, court
Pert Arthwr—desagregatsd vel-
aatarily.
Tyler — desegregated valaatarl-
Although the loral sebaal hoard
authorized desegregatiaa of the
first grade In Beaumont. Negroes
did not enroll in that rlasa, but
aonie Negro students attempted
unsuccessfully to enroll in white
high sclio<4s.
4. The "brother-sister" attend-
ance rule, invalidated by order of
the Fifth Circuit Court of Ap-
peals. has been officially dropped
by the Houston and Dallas school
(Continued from Pa?e 1.)
tlioritiea disclosed the name of the
owner. A check of local records re-
vealed that he had resigned from the
police force in March. 11HM. and had
worked a* a bus driver in l.os An-
gelea.
Acting on n tip, police then picked
up Monnn, who «t first refused to
admit complicity in the robbery. He
later admitted his unwitting role, but
since he had already telephoned the
FBI and postal authorities, e.e was
held only for investigation.
The robl»ery occurred at about (»
p in., when Je*s« Mosely, 50, drove
his truck up to the loading dock for
his last pick-up before going to the
maia post office, lie alighted from
the truck and was talking with three
other drivers, when he was approach-
ed hjr a maa who told him ''Give me
the reds," a postal term for special
bags containing registered mail.
Before Muaely could protest, the
robber pulled a gun, told him to put
his hands up "or I'll kill you." Then
Mosely was ordered to remove the
registered mail sacks from the truck.
When he took out only three, the ban-
dit usked, "Where'a the fourth?"
When told it was in tlie station, the
bandit lold his t.ccomplice to natch
the men while he went into th* alation
to get the : -saining bag. lie then
clashed open the iMittom of the locked
b,*?;s. trtinsferred the mail into a nan-
vat seek, and the two headed for their
car in which a third man was wait-
ing.
JOSKE'S
E S JUST
RSOLD!
REMEMBER, J
WON T BE U
Day in and day ont. Joske'i price* are m low you will rind in Ban Antonio.
And Joske'i offers yon Ban Antonio's largwl assortment! of merch&ndlie
for yourself, yonr family and your home. Ha tbese and many other Mrvicea
that make your shopping easy: Two houri' ftM parking with purchase, five
easy credit plans, satisfaction guaranteed or.your money refunded, phone
order service (CA 7-4211) weekdays I a, ft aBtil V p. m. We invite yon to
shop with us for all yonr summer needs.
skip Momir no thursoay mots until 9 r. m.:
HAN&y-ANay
Prices In this Ad Effective Thru Saturday, June 6.
FRESH, FULLY DKKSSED IMPERIAL WIIOLB
Fryers 2t
DRAWN AND DRESSED IN OUB OWN POl'LTRV PMNX
IMPERIAL' FRYER PARTS
Breasts lb. 49c Legs lb. 39c
Wings lb. 25c Necks and Backs lb. 12oT
U. S. D. A. GRADED GOOD BABY BEEF!
SWISS or
ROUND STEAK > 69c
CLUB «r
SHOl'LD KK
T-BONE STEAK ... lb. 85« ROUND ROAST U>- 494!
SIRLOIN STEAK .. Ib. 69<s SHORT RIBS Ib. 294
CHUCK ROAST ... lb. 39c CHUCK STEAK lb. 45$
U. 8. D. A. GRADED CHOICE NORTHERN -TENDER AGED" HEAVY REEF
BONELESS BRISKET lb. 59c
FRESH
WHITE BAY SHRIMP lb.«9e
FItKXH. DELICIOUS CALIFORNIA
Strawberries
Pints
19c
CAIJKORNIA PASCAL Slit M'.
CELERY 2 ***' 25"
CALIFORNIA SWEET RED
ONIONS
Ik.
15*
CHAR1JCSTON GRAT IC4.
WATERMELONS 79'
JUICY FIARIDA JUMBO
LIMES "" - • 25*
SNOWDRIFT
Shortening
3-Ib.
Can
45
(IJnR t C»«, Plutr)
MORTON FROZKN
Caw SOc ae.1
Assorted Flavors
CM AM PIES 4^:99°
(Umlf * PVn,
( Additional Pkf». m bl
AU. POPULAR BRANDS, REGULAR «r KING HIZIC
Soda Water
Ctn. of Plus
6 Btls. Dep.
FOI.(,W.S or MARYI.AND CLUB
COFFEE
1 lb. Can
35
69'
(liaiil 2 ll». Yoiir Cbolre, Plrase; Additional l ib. Can< 77« K«.;
Additional 2 1k. Cam SI M Ka.)
PATIO FRO/RN CHEESE is Ol.
ENCHILADAS "" 29e
A l liORA
TISSUE 2Ko""" 25e
KINI.NFIIRD CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS 10 ,b 69e
FONDA »" WHITE PAPER
PLATES Pk* 79e
2 Iks. 1.37
BORDEN
ICE CREAM
CAMPBELL TOMATO
SOUP
WHITE WINGS
FLOUR 8 49*
F and P ElWrla llahe* « Slited Na. :l*S
PEACHES 2 c~ 43®
Hall Gal.
On. gge
No. 1 Can
3 29*
IIAKKII RITE STRAWBERRY jug. iu
Picnic Cake -
69
BAKED RITE U:\ION
CHESS PIE
Rti. etc
^ 59c
You'ro bu> inf Ibt k«at when you buy "Baktd RUe." Only Ike <ln«rt Incrfdirnl* end pur* vafHakta
akorlmini and ar pare rrramrry butler are used ia "Baked Rite" product!.
Baked Rile Butter Nat Rum Kt|. Mf
COFFEE CAWE 54*
WE DON'T MEET PRICES
WE WAKE THEM!
Rlffct Reserved te
Unit Qkaatlllea.
None Soli ia Dealer*
HaNSPANoy
Top Value Stamps
with every 10c
parchaae
We kate
te
■rtWirtfo «f
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Samantha Dodd. San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, June 5, 1964, newspaper, June 5, 1964; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth403737/m1/4/: 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.