San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962 Page: 1 of 8
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f.
I Bt Vregnaa WMhwS ftr«f|k
/ "If then it no (tra(|U, th«r« W
j- to progress. Thow who profess to
favor freedom, and yet deprteiaU
agitation, are men who want eropa
without ploughing up the pound,
t,. Power eoneedei nothing without
ft demand. It nejej did and net#*
wilL".
'•—Frederick Douglaa)
Register
CKy Edition 124
WM
Pet el CKt. in
RIGHT • JUSTICE • PROGRESS
- — <a • —
USE
City Edition 12*
rALU}
the SAN 'ANTONIO anil
SOUTH TEXAS Newj
While It is NEWS. Confi
plete National and World
Wide News Coverage^
HAN ANTONIO. TKX AN, KM I
DVKMKKH .10. IM'2
With napplriMiit. Out *1 City. IX
IT8 YOUR NEWSPAr
-jm
. .
' I
y
ff
CALIFORNIA ELECTS ITS FIRST NEGRO CONGRESSMAN—Augustus F. (One) Hawkine (center),
California's first Negro United States congressman, is shown with two other winners in the Nov. 6, general elec-
tion, Merwwi Dymally, electe<l assemblyman in the 53rd district (left), end the Rev. F. Douglas Ferrell, «"»nihly-
man in the 53rd district. Ilawkius, who defeated Negro Republican Herman T. 8mith, becomcs the fifth Ne-
fro congressman in the nation. Dymally takes Hawkins' seat in the California assembly.
Rev. Ferrell, a native of (Jonsalea, Teias, wail reared in San Antonio, and is a product of the Han An
tonio public schools. He is the brother of Mrs. Georgia Ferrell Thibodeaui, of the Majestic theatre staff, and
nephew of Mrs. Alethia frerrell Iomnn, and of the late George Ferrell. He ie widely known in South Teaas.
—Associated Negro Tress photo
1,100 Negroes
Added to 'Bama
Voting Lists
Montgomery County
Registrars Given 20
Days to Comply
By the Aaaoeiated Negro Trm
HONTUOMKKV. Ala. — A Mrr>l
Judge latf MKk ordered the nim.i of
1,100 Nagroea added to Alaliame'e
permaaeat voter llat, and cut* Mont
comer? comity rrgiitmr* 20 dijre to
««<nply. it >11 the third court ruling
Within two weekn iuvolving Negro vot-
|W rlghte in the state.
The mt recent ruling wna handed
down hy federal Judge Frank H.
JfttiiHHin, Jr., and Involved the Inrfent
nuuher o< Negro applicant* to be
placed •• the Totera llata In Alabama
nine* tk* juatice department launched
Its crackdown againnt eotcr-regUtra
turn blaa.
Joknaon. If. 8. Middle diatrlct judge,
alao ordered the jaiiltr* department to
provide a lift oI three qualified per-
aona who could Bert e a. federal ref-
erees la the evcat the Montgomery
eoaaty reglatrara failed to obey hia
inatructiona.
The Juatice department accused Heg-
Istrara tieorge W. Pentoa and B. P.
Willie with dlacrimlnatlng against
Negroes in August, 1001. A hearing
waa kald last year on the case, and
Jadge Jakaaaa kaa been studying the
evidence foe more than nine moaths.
Last week, Johnaon ordered the reg-
latrara tn atop "engajrin* ia aay act
or practice whlek laeolvca or reaulta
la dlstinctlooa baaed oa race between
Negro ritlarna and other citisens" la
tryiag ta register to rote.
He aaid tke registrars could not
aae more atrlngent tests for Negro
applicants aad they must notify all
applicanta within 10 daya whether
they bare been registered.
Two weeks ago, a federal judge In
Mobile enjoined tke l'erry county
beard of registrars from diacrimiaat-
iag against Negro voter applicanta.
The injunction wna issued against
tke state of Alabama and tke Terry
county rvfistrara. Neely B. Mayton,
Allen Blackbnrn and Kloyd Bambery.
lu another ruling, Uiatrict Judge
Daniel M. 'Hiomss ordered Dallaa
county reglatrara to permit rejected
voter applicanta to re-apply for reg-
istration after a 80-dsjr waiting pe-
riod.
Judge Thomas said that be had
fouad no fault with the present Del-
ia, board except for ita refusal to
(Sea *1,100, Page I.)
MRS. G BO RUE WILLIAMS
BABY BY FLASHLIGHT—A girl
waa born prematurely,to Mr*. Oeorge
Williams, at tke Robert 8. Green
hoapital, early Tueadajt morning, at
the height of a severe electrical atom
that bad knocked out tbe power at
the hoepital. The baby, weighing one
pound, two ouneee, waa delivered by
flaahligkt. It auccumbed, Wednesday
night.
Home addreas of Mrs. William". 19,
waa listed aa 14M North EJmeudorf.
» .
Rejected Lover
Kills Ex-Girl,
Bridegroom, Self
By the Associated Negro Trena
ItAL/nilORIS—A 28-year-old re-
jected lover interrupted the four-day-
old honeymoon of hia former sweet-
heart last week, killing her and her
bridegroom aa they lay in bed, then
killed himself as tho bride's daughter
looked on in horror..
Three montha ago when his sweet-
heart decided to end their stormy ro-
mance, Charles Moore, 28, a laborer,
told her: "11 I can't hgvt you, no-
body else will.*
Last week, upon learning of the
marriage of Mrs. Blanche A. Clark,
an attractive divorcee aad mother of
two children, to Barnard Clark, 40,
Moore returned to carry out the
threat. But first he made a second
(So* LOVBR, Pago I.)
AFL-riO Letter to NAACP
Seen as Peace Offering
By the Aaan a led Negro Press
IV/AbnUiOTGw—A letter interpreted as "an olive branch"
W wa* sent to Boy W liking, executive secretary cI the JTAACP,
bit week by George Meany, president of the ATL-CIO, who had
Mrlisr charged ho was breaking off relations with the HAA0P
and accused it of being anti-labor,
In tic letter, Meany stated it was authorised by the exeou-
U.t council ef the labor federation which concluded meetings
Woman Who Slew
Man's Mom, Kills
*•1
Him 21 Years Later
Court Lenient in
Second Murder, Gives
Suspended Sentence
By the Associated Negro Press
RICHMOND, Va.—A 63-year-old
woman was found guilty here lant
week of the butcher knife slaving of
a man whose mother ahe had killed in
the same manner 21 years ago. A le-
nient court suspended sentence, last
week, however.
Mrs. Alberta A. Wyatt completed
the 21-year span of her association
with Mrs. Ida Cooper and her son,
Alvin A. Lewis, by stabbing to death
the latter in the home they shared
Inst Aug. 18.
Mrs. Wystt had alain Lewis' moth-
er, then 42. also with a butcher
knife, on Oct. 10, 1941. She was con-
sisted of second-degree murder for
that killing and was given a 20-year
prison term, part of which she serv-
She testified last week that she
kMfd Mrs. Cooper's son in self de-
fence when he threatened to kill her
fori having killed, his mother.
Somehow in tf»e intervening years,
tbe dead womsffs son snd Mrs. Wy-
att had gotten together. She said he
had "moved,In on her."
But two days before she killed Lew-
is, Mrs. Wystt said the man. atill
bearing he grudge over his mother's
slaying, chased her out the house with
• hatchet, sayinp:
'I'm going to kill you unless my
dead mother comes out of her grave
and atops me. If I don't do it. there's
no fiod in Heaven. I've got the date
set for you to die, but this is not the
date/'
Aa It turned out, Lewis decided
upon the wroug date. For on Aug. 13
when he again picked up the hatchet
and told Mrs. Wyatt. ". . . this is
it," she grabbed a butcher knife and
stabbed him to death.
At the trial, 13 turned out to be
a lucky number for Mrs. Wyatt. That
waa the number of persons who testi-
fied as to her good character. They
aaid Lewla kept her in feur of her
life.
After hearing the testimony. Judge
W. Moscoe Huntley reduced Mrs. Wy-
att's charge from murder to volun-
tary manslaughter and suspended'the
imposition of the sentence.
* W*. <■ f ~ ' ' »
Round Baby Born in Blackout Dies
There's "Fine Print"
Jn Housing Order
> „ By ADOLPH J. SLAUGHTER
AHMmiutril Negro l'rcua Washington bureau
WASHINGTON—The President of tbe United States in an his-
toric televised press conference last week announced tbe
signing of an order banning discrimination in housing.
But before Negroes and advocatw of open occupancy be-
come too joyous, they had better read the fine print.
Already audible is the charge that Vie President did not
go far enough with his order, and tb*t tbe order—as it now
stiiQfls—«ivilli4ta <iill|p to elimiuate dis-
crimination in pxisting hotiMina.
- In terms of what the order actually
mentis foE.ti* >tegro who lias juMt hron
(old he cau't buy ji houne in a new,
Hly-white suburban development, there
is not.,much <Uo)fe><lM<t his problem will
he solved without eiHilcxs days, mouths
and maybe years of litigation.
Ttye^rgisoa*for this, apparently, Is
tTiitl The administration does not yet j
(mow the full lf£al ramifications of
its act. jierhaps more important I
Mm the ndminiMtrntiou's point of I
n
view, it want, *'to go step by step."
Kxsentially what th* order does !*
to mailt it Voarly impossible, or at
len»t f>ro?Ml»' ' u I most imponderable
stumhling b'»»ek», for any future de-
velops or selb r ,»f homes, insured
by any onf of several federal guaran-
tor agencies fo <li*tcriminate against
a potential buy♦■r on the groumh of
race.
Hot of more 'vimediate eon-
* home owner now who
(*«• FINK. I'age ft.)
More Than 1,200 at Rites
For Archie H. Jofasson. Sr.
MORS than 1,260 persons—of many racte and creeds, and
from every walk of life—jammed Haunt Zion First Baptist
church to capacity, Saturday afternoon, ni simple, but beau-
tifully impressive, funeral rites were boaducted for Archie
toward Johnson, Sr., 62, who succumtM Thursday afternoon,
Nov. 22, at 1:46, in Santa Bosa Medici center.
Congressman Pallbtker
AftivA pallbearers Included United cratic pouii< activities. wa< equally
ARCH IK llt»\\ AKI) JOHNSON, ttR.
QMB0UE8 M * I I» - Kuner.il
services were held Saturday afternoon
tot Archie Howard Johnson, 8r.,
widel)-known San Autouian. promi-
nent. in religious, labor, civic, and
social circles, and west and ea*t side
Itolitical leader, lie died Thursday aft-
rrnoon, in Santa R«Hta Medical center.
UttrfWr-fWllrfrflPtTl^tl Ilenry B. (Jon
rale*, and Hetar County Sheriff Bill
llauck. Other i»alll>enren» were Valmo
C. Bellinger, O. C. Booker, H. 1>.
Kane, .lohnnie Johns, Alex Jones, and
J. It. Cavines*.
Honorary pallbearers included relig-
ious leaders, professional persons,
busiuf ssmen, edneators, and politH»sl
leaders, na well m the trustees of
Mount Zion First Baptist church. Van
Conrtlaudt Social ilub, and Pullman
The eulo^jr—• beautiful and mni-
(erfuf tribute td the work of the dece-
dent—waa delivered hy the Rev. C.
W. Black, Jr.
' Button and Sutton Funeral home
wot-In chftrga of arrangements. In-
terment wal In • Enatview cemetery.
So far aa could be immediately as-
certained. the ritea'marked the first
time a'TTftittd Btatea.congressman had
been an active pallbearer at the fu-
ueral of a fttgro in the modern Houth.
Johnson, for naanf years one of the
eky's most important and inflnential
leaders in west and east side Deuo-
prominent in Church, civic, Isbor, and
xocial circles,
intermittently.ill for
hia being in and out
He had
some ti
of the hoapl
A nsHVe
born Sepl
snd Mr*..Jt»litf
roU. Johnwm waa
I. a M flewr*
,n»
Brought 1» ftan Antonio at an earfjr
age, he att^ndH local public schools.
and graduated from Douglass high
school. ,
He and -Miss Mable fSreen were
married la 11124. Two »ons were born
to the union.
He wa* a long-time member of
Mount 8iou First Baptist church
which ho! aerred, as a member sf the
trustee boanl, of the courtcsy com-
mitte*,"nd in many special roles.
Ix»ng l| tbe forefront ia tbe battle
for firat-dnas citiaenship for all Amer«
ienns, JiAnson had been a member of
the loca!T»ranch of the National As-
Ho<-iatU»r - for the Advancement of
Colorw>people f»»r 43 years, bis join-
(Bee RITES. I'sca 4.)
Tot Delivered by f
Flashlight as Storm
Kayoes Hospital Power
THE 19 year-old mother of • one-pound, two-ounce babA*
ilcllvcr«i tm flashlight during Tueeday morning*! nddtt
i to "do real wS," bnt the ttey 13
nigh
girl,
fcere in Wasliln,ton last week.
Mes-ij s(.l«l he was wrilln* la Wll-
klo» "III ntrordsnee with iuslructions
H tW executire rou^ril, In tessrrf to
|U friction rbiih hits devrlopeJ be-
tween jour organisation end the AFL-
«BO."
! irnuy laid he was certain "the »t»-
Keiiy Siren to nifferences of opinion
between the XAACI* anit the KTW
CIO hes been • source ol comfort to
tk.' White Utisen* councils In the
South who oppose both of our organ-
felons with equsl fanaticism."
, lint the Isbor heed sdded, "I do nol
fcoMe«e>*Wa friction kUren the NA-
SWT wul t!.e Al'IcCIO in sny wsjr
Itixtm«» the letcreets of those who
<^s Hie viclims of discriminntian in
taiph^Heat ,ln (he Isbor «nipu». onil
|k IMr Mig Mm ao tciiincut ot the
community in which they lire."
hleany said he felt it would be dif-
ficult for the AKL-CK) and the NA-
ACP to ever agree completrly on
the details of how discrimination can
he fought most eflertiretj aince "you
h*re your own' specific riewpoint
whlek is a aeeeasarily oritical oaf, and
we la tho ASTWIO hare nerer held
that nniaai shoo Id ho regarded aa
bejood tho legitimate rsnge of eriti-
Howerer, he called the attacks on
the AFL-t'lO made hy the NAACP
objectionable and nitlied tliat a distinc-
tion be mnde between legitimate crili-
cism nod "sweeping attacks" against
the union lo'y.
Dlnrsreement Iwtweca the two or- j cnlly,
<S - 1/ (SiX (Sue ftiye i I (See VI BO IN IAN, P»ie i>
Virginian Becomes
36th Negro
U. S. Attorney
, (AXP Washington Bureau) w ,
\Y AHH1SGT(>N*—The first Negro
•te be apjwiv,ted.^5\ ^?v\stnnt Ir. S.
attorney in the state of Virginia - fdu« e
Reconstruction, William T. Mason,
of Norfolk, is' expected to assume; hib4
duties sometime iu January. ,
An attorney who has spent the past
11 yeare mostly in real estate Ihw.
Mason ia e bachelor nt .16, and prac-
ticen out of his father's real estate
office in Norfolk.
A graduate of Colby college, Wj^r
ville, Maine, Mason is ul«i> a Rratl-
unte of the law school of Howard
university. ,
Appointed hy Attj. Cen. Robert
Kennedy. Mason becomes the 36th
person of his race currently serving
aa nn assistant United .States at
toe—y. There are «0© nation-wide.
John B. lteilly, head of the dogiprtj
BSCTit «f just ire's rzeewtive office of
United Statea attorneys, hare, hi an
a—nilnn tho apftsaUMSl, aaid Ma*
son was recommended to the $S.riOO n
year poat by Vernon Hprutle.c; l'nite«h
States attorney for the Kaetepi ilis-
taict of Virginia.
Although the initiative in Mtaon'H
hiring was reportedly undertaken lo-
Reilly aaid It ia department
Motorists^ Visited
By Car Prowlers
During Week
At least four motor vehicles were
visited by prowlers during the pa»t
week.
Frank Boston. 40. 412-B Bpelman
walk, complained, Wednesday, Nov.
21, that the bsttery wss stolen from
his pickup truck while it was parked
in the 40<> block of Hpelman walk.
A top coat and an overnight bag
were stolen from the automobile of
Wo, B; Harper. 4.'!, 21 & Dobbs, be-
tween 1 and 1 :H0, Thursday morn-
ing, Nov. 22. while the machine was
parked- in the .rear of an 800 block
North New Brennfels avenue address.
A window was smashed for the thieves
fo gain entrance to the machine.
Mrs. Arlene Terry, 32, 222.1-A
Southland, Dallaa, reported Friday,
Nov. 2.'!, a purse, billfold, and leather
coat were stolen from her car while
it was parked «n the 1000 block of
Norefa •Mittniau,
Alvis I lodge Kirk. 22. 426 Belmont,
complained, Saturday, that a .12 cal-
ibre putonintic had been stolen from
his automobile.
In fcitot1»er theft case, J. E. Jef
feraou_nn airman, stationed at Scott
Air Force base, Complained that two
blue United States Air force uniforms,
two pairs of kbnki trutt*era. aud a
black suit were stolen from bis room
at 425 Sherman, during a visit to the
cssy. InsLj-eek. He was scheduled to
return tobisTftntion last Sunday.
Hereli What
JFK housing
Order Covers
Bf the Arsociated Negro Press
WASHINGTON — As outlined
|y President Kennedy at his
i conference last week, his ex-
po order outlawing discrim-
In future housing sided.
I or insured by the federal
applies to:
(ingle family and apartment
with mortgages insured
b .Federal Housing adminis-
©r guaranteed by the
as administration.
£i*ublic housing subsidized by
/tderal government for low
families.
J^n^lng in urban renewal
subsidized by federal
Coprge dormitories and the
mfide'a homes constructed
Vderal
funds.
Drivers Injured
As Waiting Car
Hit by Another
1 '4 * r
An aeciikat, Saturday »>sM,
Culebea avenue asd Uoaideh, left
two [mtsvidm injured.
Iliuyt.iWere Mrs. Olelhia A. J
son,: 47, : 214 l'arh Hill drive, and
.\rflold-~Ufriial Hanchea, 4T, Kilfr
4)>at Ashby■.
Mrs. Johnson said that she was
sto|>t>cd, waiting to make a left turn.
(See DKIVKR-S, Page ».)
Woman Driver
Injured as Her
Car is Demolished
Two Slates Vie
For Eleetion
In Local NAACP
Branch Membership
To Vote for Officers
On December 15
Two slatee of candidates for offices )
in tho Uieui braucb of the National
Aseoaaliuu for the Advuncemeut of
Colorea People have been nominated
to be voted on at the annual branch
election set for Dec. 15 from 2 o'-
clock in the afternoon until 8 in the
evening.
It markk tho first time that two full
efeM Mn bees is the field lor eon-
chapter.
Tlie^Ste p^STai. by the nom-
inating committee ft the regular Ho-
vetnber meetj^jr^ names Harrjr _ V.
Burns, ^jcumheut; tot, pifsident; ")V.
B. Miller, first rice president; Otartia
B. 1H1; Jr. »co«!d vice president;
Rev. lx C. OUaeo. third vice presi-
dent; Mrs. Veuln Kdwartls. secretary;
Mrs, Alfroda L. Jame^ assistant sec-
retary« ind Harry 6. Jones, treasurer.
A ticket, put Into nomination by
petition, has, so its candidates. Charles
A. liudepeth, Jr., for president; Jo-
seph V. Luter, first vice president; M.
I>. Wright, Jr* second vice presi-
dent; Louie J. Brown, third vice
president; Mrs. Browning Samples,
secretary, and Mrs. Julia Hoyle,
treasurer.
Candidates for the branch executive
committee will also be voted on.
Nominated for election to tbe com-
mittee, are U. J. Andrews. Mrs. Hat-
tie Briscoe. Louis J. Brown. F. D.
Calm ore. Theodore E. (iilmore, Hil-
ton Hamilton, Mrs. Ethel Hawkins,
Hector Hoyle. Mrs. Julia Hoyle,
Charles A. Hudspeth, Jr.. Mrs. Louise
Hudspeth, Andrew L. Jefferson. Ever-
ett J. Jennings, C. A. Jones, Joseph
furious (torn, continue* to "do nil veil," I
succumbed, Wednesday night at 10:10 o'elock.
Mother of tbe baby girl, born several weeks prematurely, H
Mrs. George Williams, 1416 Horth Zlmendorf. |
Power was knocked out for nearly an hour at the Robert
B. flreen hospital—where Mre. Wil- ■ ■
liams was confined—when s thunder-
ous electrical storm hit the dty in the
early morning hours.
Shortly after 3 :30. two Frio street
transformera that supply electrical
power to the Green, were pnt out of
commission.
When the transformers were knock-
ed out, the hoftpitnl's auxiliary gen-
erating unit started working auto-
matically. but beosme overbested.
started smoking and cut off. The hos-
pital was plunged into darkness, and
smoke rolled through the building.
Ae hospital personnel sssured ps-
tients tbe building waa sot on fire.
the stork, unconcerned about It all,
put in his sppesrance.
Mrs. Williams' baby waa delivered
by the light of flashlights. Tbe child
wss her first.
In leso than 40 minutes, tbe aux-
iliary unit was again functioning.
and full electrical aervice was re-
stored within sn hour.
But the stork had made hie visit
and departed.
(See TWO.
♦
Page S.)
A 2fl#«nr-«.ld woman liriter was
injured a*i lier c-ar demolished in
an aenfrfiij Saturday, at Knit <"om
meiree ,o2 riedinont alrei-l».
Mrt, .lull Smith William*. ft.HI
liriiaent. rtnd Hint no she »p|iroacfced
l'leelaMnl. SriviiiK eai-t on Commerce,
another ■•iliine amtdenly pullnl out
in triit of her.
jilji'd her l*rake(*. »ho ulateil,
au'elerutor Ktuck. and flie
„] „f h,r 1UB.I Metlii n. * ith
t a «l(«'t aixn. opinnins
III.' «treet, and thru travel-
ler yi feet tmckwards, with
iug into 1 -wnll and telephone
• carried to ftanta Rosa Med-
. Her itioCMne was listed as
Vow..'* IkSMt to tbe wall
, to the
$10,
street signt
« *ts
■ i
reports iii^icstcil Mrs. WiU
lidfd the speed limit, had
>('U lament, aud kept jm-
She was bo«»ke4
| w , x . I-J.nl-
V k 1 '■ * w'|
Criticizers of Adam
Powell's Junket
Now on Joy Rides
Bv the Associated Xegro Tress
WASHINGTON — New York's
handsome Adam Powell who got a
uood going over from the press and
some of his congressional colleagues
foe taking off oa a junket several
months ago with two of his pretty
female secretaries is a piker.
ll*»re he is at home while more than
a score* of his fellow lawmakers are
making merry iu the bright s|»otB of
Europe aud elsewhere.
In fact, if an emergency arose re-
<iuiring their presence iu the capital,
trans-oceanic airlines would be over-
ixed in an effort to get them all back
These joyous jupVets, for which the
homelMMind taxpayer pays, are really
I'lHWt-Pfeetiort mentions though the con-
gressmen have.found other iustifien
tion for charging their bills off to the
government.
Iropically. several of the travelers
are no longer even congressmen hav-
ing lost in their efforts nt re election.
The propensity of thes,» lawmakers
to joy-ride on the taxpayers' bank-
roll explains why in spite of the jour-
nalistic clamor. Powell was not cen-
sored by liis coffeagues. Tbe pot could
ill afford to call the kettle black.
Just for the record, here is a par-
tial list of the junketing lawmakers:
* ■Twv sswstoes and six representa-
tives provided the most apectactilnr
addition to the touring lawmakers
when they turned up in Berliu in the
uniforms they keep carefully press™!
for active duty as army reserve offi-
cers.
Sen. Strom Thurmond (l>em.. S.
C.). reser^-e major general, and Seta,
lialph AV. Ynrburopgh ClVm,, Texas),
a reserv? colonel, as id the group want-
Negro Confirmed
AsAdult Education
Branch Director
Br the AaaoclMae H«n Fraaa
WASUlNtiTO.N — The failed
State# Offkre of Haeatton laat nd
ssssrspite.sv.Jt
Beics so «rector of the Adolt lo-
cation branch. Dtvlaioo ot Coot inning
Education snd Cultural Affaire. I>r.
Brice la a Negro.
Brice. a native el Ilallsboro. N
C., succeeds the late Dr. Ambrose
Caliver. also • Negro, The adult edu-
cation section wne crested fa 19(56 se
s result of Dr. Callver'e work hi tbe
government educatloa field.
The adult educatloa section was ele-
vated to branch atnttts SB April 1,
of thie yesr.
Aa a former aasociate of Dr. Csli-
ver, Dr. Brice came to the office as
a specialist in fundamental Snd liter-
acy education in 1968.
Organized primarily as s coordi-
nating and stimulating unit, the
branch has direct relationships with
and provides adult education services
to etate departments of education in
the 50 states and to a substantial
number of public and private agen-
cies engaged in adult education in this
country and abroad.
Before joining tbe office stsff In
1958, Dr. Brice served in foreign
service assignments for the Vnited
States state department and the In-
ternational Cooperation administra-
tion for a total of eight years.
Among his most Important assign-
ments were: public affaire officer at
the Americ a embassy in Monrovia.
Liberia, later chief educational ad-
viser to the government of Li-
beria ; chief of the education divi-
sion. T'nited States Overseas mission.
Nepal, and chief educational adviser
to tbe government of Nepal.
A former president of Clinton Jun-
ior college. Rock Hill, 8. C.. and dean
and professor of education at South
Carolina State college, Orangeburg.
Man Wounded
By Volley Fired
Into Coffee Shop
Rifleman Stands
Across Street, Shootf
Into Zarzamora Cafe
A 21-year-old Latin-American
shot in the back of hie neck.
Wednesday morning, when a 22-jre
old man reportedly poured a vol
of ahots into a Zarxamora street csf|
from s position across tbe etreet fn
the place.
The rifleman. Wallace Riley, lift
Meuchaca. said that the wonndsl
man. Lawrence Marin, 1129 Aal
Thompson, was one of a trio of ma
who had been "looking for him'* m
day long.
Police reported that the three mat
had allegedly been looking for Hill
all day Tuewday. What they wanto
waa not explained.
Riley said that ehortly before
o'clock, Wednesday morning, he
in tho Dilworth Coffee shop, 131
North Zs rumor a, when the
•n walked in, aud naked hiai
cpsae eatslde, sa they wsnts4 to 1
tf him. One «f tke men, sccording {
ftUsjr, hod e aaookey wrench stw
1a tho waist oand of
wit/ i
•nt the
fnt h
turned, and.
from the
the place.
Officers resching the scene reporti
that Marin waa aeated
wounded In tbe heck
Cortes smbulsnce carried
Robert B. Green hospital.
Riley wss taken into custody st blf
home, snd booked for ssssuK Is mvifL
ae scene reported
ted In • booths
of tho seek. M
Tied klai to
1
Motorist Beaten
By Four Men
He Gives Lift
A 32-yesr-old Arthur street
was attacked and beaten. Tuet
morning, at North Gevera aad Lan
streets, by a quartet of men he haQ
given s lift.
An officer reached the scene
the beating waa in progress. Two i
the sttsckers were later arrested
booked for aggravated assault.
The attack victim. Odell
32. 419 Arthur, waa treated
Brooke Army hospital for
and laceratione and a cut on the
eye
Norris said that he picked ap tM
four men at Hays and New Btrau|
fels when they asked him fo
to Wheatley courts.
lie aaid that at North Gevers
leamar he wae attacked, and jun
ed o*it of the automobile. The
Norrifc
■ted at
truieet
the leQ
... »p tM
rw Braua.
far a rtdl
►3
(See DIRECTOR, Pa«e S.)
(Sea MOTORIST. Pa«a >.)
Dr. King Says FBI Agents
In South Favor RaeeHaters
V*
B» the Ase<H"l%ted Negro Vrtm
J^'EW YORK—Calling attention to a widely-held view ol N
headers across the nation, Dr. Martin Lather King,
i w* accused agents of the Federal Boreas oi Investigation
Albany, Ga„ of favoring segregationists.
For that reason. Dr. King declared, the FBI b.sj not don*
an effective job in investigating beatings and other intinndal
of Negroes who have been pressing for racial equality
(See RIUK, Pafa S.) I
. . . * /I '•
"sonthwest Georgia .city.
Meanwhile, in Atlauta, I>r. H<»ward
Zinn, a white history professor at
Spelmau college, a predominantly Ne-
gro private school, said a study of
Albany's racial struggle* indicated
that the "national government has
failed to protect the liberties of citi-
zens in the city of Albany."
The justice department in Wn .blag-
ton declined to comment on the 3!V-
year-old integration len«»*r*s remarks.
lb criticizing the FKi's handling «4
the Albany situation. l>r. Kiug threw
light on previous charges mnde by
Negroes that FBI agents in the South
are sympathetic v.Hh white racifts.
These Negro spokesman contend thnt
southern 16£st or regiotml FBI ng»")r<
can't got around their own prejn lJr« ■
enough to ini|Mirar.llj hr.nJ) > «
ol Negrf
. Jr., lad
igalion ia
t don*
datiof
in tM
nst St
which involve injuarieoe against
groes.
Dr. King. Atlanta Baptist minuter,
president of the Southern Christinfl
I^enoership conference, un.1 a leader la
the Albany Movement. msJe the aa>
sertiona during aa inter«*.ev In thd
-ol»ing ro:;m of Riverside church,
where he had juet p-es^hed a ssrmoa*
Some prrsons filled ths a.iscta*
ary sr.'l ovcyflo^td info CM«e chspel
end the arrembiy hal. t» he-»r him
During tbe iatonic. Dr. lvinf
raid:
"One of the grea! probKms %rc fnif
with the FBI In lii- Fou.\ Is that
the rj,«rts t.re *»,ViH» souther***.'* wha
have -been iwfluenc^l ly.. Il.e aoref
of tV ?ommnnity. To nuincam their
ft* «.>
"1" .
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Andrews, U. J. San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962, newspaper, November 30, 1962; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth403984/m1/1/: 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.