Memphis World Memphis World Publishing Co. 1960-09-14 Stanley S. Scott MEMPHIS WORLD Stanley S. Scott The Court Further Clarifies The School Issue A three-judge federal court in New Orleans has removed all doubt and ambiguity from the issue of school desegregation. It should now be crystal clear to alt who would see that subterfuges and evasions, legal minipulations with the state laws, nor any other means, can be successfully used to thwart the 1954 decision of the United States Supreme Court that segregation in the public schools is unconstitutional. The New Orleans tribunal even went further to declare that the schools cannot even be closed for the purpose of preventing the entrance of Negro children. Louisiana, which had tried every conceivable scheme to prevent school integration is now faced with the fact of having to change its bi-racial system without plan or preparation. But the New Orleans School System must how go ahead, the courts have so ordered, the federal constitution is the highest law of the land and must be obeyed. Other politicians have schemed and planned along the lines of Louisiana with school closing laws on the books. The Atlanta Board of Education is already under orders from Federal District judge Frank Hooper to integrate. The state has been given a breathing spell in order to change the school closing laws. The turmoil and chaos experienced in other states should not be necessary here, when the plain and open fact is that the schools will and must abolish segregation. The Louisiana decision ruled invalid the laws which Georgia has been relying on to "save segregation." These include state laws which give the governor the right to close any single school ordered integrated; give the governor the right to close all the schools in the state if one is Integrated; give him the power to close any school "threatened with violence or disorder"; cut off funds from integrated schools, or empower the legislature to judge which schools should be integrated. Many of the Louisiana laws are similar to those enacted in Georgia in an attempt to prevent desegregation. So through years of legal proceedings, state manipulations and further law suits, the issue is now drawn at last to a fine point. Georgia and the South may as well now face it with grace and wisdom and the state, county, and local school systems should plan accordingly. To do otherwise merely hampers the education of children in a section of the nation already far behind the educational level of those in other regions, and at the same time can only end up by finally obeying the decision of the Supreme Court. Wise educational administrators, and wise politicians, will start now to plan for desegregaton of their schools. Segregation in the schools is the keystone of the whole segregation system. When the schools are desegregated other forms of segregation will disappear as a matter of course. Priority should be given to this issue and we should work for the most harmonious relations between the races to reduce to a minimum the effect from the impact of school desegregation. The truth of the fact of the saying that the limbs will fall with the tree applies in this segregation question. We hope our leaders will thoughtfully consider this and not be a party to raising relatively unimportant issues that create unnecessary racial tensions and muddy the waters. Divine Intelligence and the Race Into Space In the "race for space" an exciting marathon has been going on between the United States and Russia. The ultimate winner will be the one which eventually stages a landing upon some distant planet in the universe and sends back the answer to one of man's greatest quests for knowledge: Is there life somewhere else in the universe other than on this earth of ours? Did God create man in His own image from the dust of this earth and confine him to rule his destiny here alone, or did He breathe His breath of life into human forms on other stars out in the infinity of space? God did give man the ability to think and to create. And the thinking scientists of the United States and Soviet Russia are trying to outdo one another in solving the mysteries of the universe. In the race for space, the U.S. is ahead in the number of space missiles sent into orbit to date, and in the number that remain aloft, circling the globe and automatically radioing back scientific information. Russia is ahead in the size of their space rockets, theirs weighing tons, while ours weigh pounds. Russia's space vehicles already are large enough to accommodate human beings, and their latest triumph is conceded to be the greatest space achievement to date: The safe return of the dogs Belka and Strelka, along with an assortment of other animals, presages an attempt to place a man in space in the very near future. An official Soviet weekly magazine said last week, "No matter where cosmic (space) travelers may voyage–to the Moon, Mars or Venus, or to a permanent space station–the most difficult problem is the return through the earth's atmosphere. Soviet scientists have finally solved it." Political observers familiar with the Communist technique of propaganda point out that the Russians usually attempt to stage some highly dramatic event to prove their power just prior to going into peace negotiants and conferences with the other nations of the world. Premier Nikita Khrushchev has announced that he personally will come to the United Nations session this Fall to lead the Russian delegation in the talks. Can this mean that the Russian scientists will rocket a man around the world in a Soviet counterpart of our Echo satellite? If so, it cannot be regarded as a Russian triumph any more than our Echo and other achievements can be said to be solely American victories. The long background of knowledge that necessarily preceded the space rockets belongs to no one notion, though military strategists would want it so. The German scientists had first to develop the rocket weapons during World War II before we could have rockets to propel missiles and ships into space. Indeed, man had to have the Italians, Galileo and Da Vinci, to study the ways of gravity long before man could dream of overcoming the age-old law that what goes up must come-down." So, let the Russians get their man into space; we most assuredly will do the same. Their knowledge and our knowledge will only serve to make a sum total of man's limited knowledge of the universe. And though they would not concede it from their atheistic base-we know that all of this knowledge comes at will from the Divine Mind. When man finally is able to explore the for reaches of outer space, to visit the moon and other stars, it will be God's Divine Mind working through man to whom gave the intelligence and ability to think and create. LETTERS TO THE Editor Dr. J. B. Boyd and family wish to use this method in an effort to express their sincere thanks to each and everyone for hugh gifts of beautiful flowers and the much needed and appreciated cards, letters, telegrams and cablegrams of sympathy received following the recent and sudden passing of their devoted companion, the late Mrs. Etta D. Boyd. We wish also to thank the following participants on the program, at the last rites for timely and consoling remarks: (Bishop B. Julian Smith, Bishop B. W. Doyle, Bishop Luther Stewart, Bishop Arthur W. Womack, Rev. D. Warner Browning, pastor of Mt. Pisgah Church, Rev. C. A. Kirkendall, Rev. J. L. Tolbert, Rev. J. M. Hill, Rev. D. S. Cunningham, Rev. G. H. Carter, Rev. L. A. Story, Mrs. P. Cash, Mrs. G. Small, Mr. R. Suttles, Mr. Eddie Davis, Rev. H. C. Bunton, Rev. N. T. Walker, Rev. D. T. Alcorn, Prof. L. B. Hobson, Rev. C. D. Coleman and Rev. T. M. Davis. In addition, we thank members of the B. R. Danner Club, the Felix Avenue Neighborhood Club, General Officers, C.M.E. Church; Phyllis Wheatley Club, Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Manassas Faculty, Retired Teacher's Council, YMCA Administrative Committee, S. W. Quails and Co., Active and Honorary Pallbearers and other participating friends. Dr. J. B. Boyd Thanks Friends Dr. J. B. Boyd and family wish to use this method in an effort to express their sincere thanks to each and everyone for hugh gifts of beautiful flowers and the much needed and appreciated cards, letters, telegrams and cablegrams of sympathy received following the recent and sudden passing of their devoted companion, the late Mrs. Etta D. Boyd. We wish also to thank the following participants on the program, at the last rites for timely and consoling remarks: (Bishop B. Julian Smith, Bishop B. W. Doyle, Bishop Luther Stewart, Bishop Arthur W. Womack, Rev. D. Warner Browning, pastor of Mt. Pisgah Church, Rev. C. A. Kirkendall, Rev. J. L. Tolbert, Rev. J. M. Hill, Rev. D. S. Cunningham, Rev. G. H. Carter, Rev. L. A. Story, Mrs. P. Cash, Mrs. G. Small, Mr. R. Suttles, Mr. Eddie Davis, Rev. H. C. Bunton, Rev. N. T. Walker, Rev. D. T. Alcorn, Prof. L. B. Hobson, Rev. C. D. Coleman and Rev. T. M. Davis. In addition, we thank members of the B. R. Danner Club, the Felix Avenue Neighborhood Club, General Officers, C.M.E. Church; Phyllis Wheatley Club, Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Manassas Faculty, Retired Teacher's Council, YMCA Administrative Committee, S. W. Quails and Co., Active and Honorary Pallbearers and other participating friends. Taylor Defeats the Taylor faction had been contending. A motion that Taylor's election be made unanimous prevailed. In accepting election Dr. Taylor called for a closing of ranks. He promised to keep faith with Baptist dreams and deal fairly and honestly with members of the Convention. The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., moved the election of a slate of officers, including one vice president at large and four regional vice presidents and a recording secretary. The Taylor faction elected the Rev. Edward Billoups of Baton Rouge, La., and the Rev. Charles H. Hampton of Sacramento, Calif., both of whom are vice presidents under Dr. Jackson. Also elected regional vice presidents were the Rev. A. E. Campbell of Tennessee and the Rev. C. V. Johnson of Chicago. Campbell is president of the Tennessee Baptist Convention and Johnson is president of the Illinois Baptist Convention. As such they would be vice presidents. Each persident of a State Baptist convention is also a vice president of the National Baptist Convention. The Rev. D. E. King of Louisville, Ky., was elected recording secretary by the Taylor faction. He would succeed Dr. Jemison. The Taylor supporters then voted to instruct the newly elected of ficers to proceed with the business of the 80th annual session of the National Baptist Convention. The Taylor supporters also voted that all members of the Convention who were thrown out of the Convention for exercising their rights be now restored to full membership in the Convention. The effect of this vote, if the legality of the actions of the Taylor supporters should be upheld in the courts, would be to restore to membership nine of the 10 ministers who sued in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia to oust Dr. Jackson from the presidency of the Convention. The court upheld the title of Dr. Jackson to the office, and the 1958 session voted to give the ministers who had sued a year to apologize to the Convention for instituting suit. Only one of them, the Rev. Roland Smith of Little Rock, Ark., apologized. Dr. Smith was restored to membership and he was one of the leaders in the fight against Dr. Jackson at this convention. The others are still out of the Convention, but the Rev. Marshall L. Shepard, pastor of Mt. Olivet Baptist Church here and a member of the Philadelphia City Council, was also active in the fight against Dr. Jackson. The Taylor supporters adjourned their session until evening, but when evening came, neither group could resume, and a sit-in was re sorted to. The election of Dr. Jackson' was recommended by the nominatiny committee, headed by the Rev. E. A. Freeman of Kansas City, Kan. Dr. Jackson appointed the committee Wednesday. The committee reported that there were two candidates for the presidency — Dr. Jackson and Dr. Taylor. Alter discussing the background of the two men, the committee recommended that Dr. Jackson be reelected unanimously. Adoption of the report was considered reelection of him. During all of the proceedings the convention was in disorder. A demonstration for Dr. Jackson began when he entered the hall. The Taylor team staged a counter demonstration. The Taylor team paraded through the aisles of the hall to the boom boom of two bass drums. Both Taylor and Jackson supporters carried placards. Finally, Dr. Jackson arose to deliver his annual report. The microphone was cut off and the delegates could not hear him. Adoption of the nominating committee report supposedly occurred when he sat down None of the proceedings could be heard above the uproar. Earlier the convention had voted to "qualify the house" — separate the voters from the non-voters — and to vote by states. This motwion was ignored. The convention was adjourned. The Taylor supporters remained in the hall and started a rump session with the Rev. C. V. Johnson, of Chicago, a vice president, presiding. NAMED JACKSON the Taylor faction had been contending. A motion that Taylor's election be made unanimous prevailed. In accepting election Dr. Taylor called for a closing of ranks. He promised to keep faith with Baptist dreams and deal fairly and honestly with members of the Convention. The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., moved the election of a slate of officers, including one vice president at large and four regional vice presidents and a recording secretary. The Taylor faction elected the Rev. Edward Billoups of Baton Rouge, La., and the Rev. Charles H. Hampton of Sacramento, Calif., both of whom are vice presidents under Dr. Jackson. Also elected regional vice presidents were the Rev. A. E. Campbell of Tennessee and the Rev. C. V. Johnson of Chicago. Campbell is president of the Tennessee Baptist Convention and Johnson is president of the Illinois Baptist Convention. As such they would be vice presidents. Each persident of a State Baptist convention is also a vice president of the National Baptist Convention. The Rev. D. E. King of Louisville, Ky., was elected recording secretary by the Taylor faction. He would succeed Dr. Jemison. The Taylor supporters then voted to instruct the newly elected of ficers to proceed with the business of the 80th annual session of the National Baptist Convention. The Taylor supporters also voted that all members of the Convention who were thrown out of the Convention for exercising their rights be now restored to full membership in the Convention. The effect of this vote, if the legality of the actions of the Taylor supporters should be upheld in the courts, would be to restore to membership nine of the 10 ministers who sued in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia to oust Dr. Jackson from the presidency of the Convention. The court upheld the title of Dr. Jackson to the office, and the 1958 session voted to give the ministers who had sued a year to apologize to the Convention for instituting suit. Only one of them, the Rev. Roland Smith of Little Rock, Ark., apologized. Dr. Smith was restored to membership and he was one of the leaders in the fight against Dr. Jackson at this convention. The others are still out of the Convention, but the Rev. Marshall L. Shepard, pastor of Mt. Olivet Baptist Church here and a member of the Philadelphia City Council, was also active in the fight against Dr. Jackson. The Taylor supporters adjourned their session until evening, but when evening came, neither group could resume, and a sit-in was re sorted to. The election of Dr. Jackson' was recommended by the nominatiny committee, headed by the Rev. E. A. Freeman of Kansas City, Kan. Dr. Jackson appointed the committee Wednesday. The committee reported that there were two candidates for the presidency — Dr. Jackson and Dr. Taylor. Alter discussing the background of the two men, the committee recommended that Dr. Jackson be reelected unanimously. Adoption of the report was considered reelection of him. During all of the proceedings the convention was in disorder. A demonstration for Dr. Jackson began when he entered the hall. The Taylor team staged a counter demonstration. The Taylor team paraded through the aisles of the hall to the boom boom of two bass drums. Both Taylor and Jackson supporters carried placards. Finally, Dr. Jackson arose to deliver his annual report. The microphone was cut off and the delegates could not hear him. Adoption of the nominating committee report supposedly occurred when he sat down None of the proceedings could be heard above the uproar. Earlier the convention had voted to "qualify the house" — separate the voters from the non-voters — and to vote by states. This motwion was ignored. The convention was adjourned. The Taylor supporters remained in the hall and started a rump session with the Rev. C. V. Johnson, of Chicago, a vice president, presiding. UPSET SKIN? Pimples, Rashes, Eczema, Totter Making Your Life Miserable? SEND ANOTHER HEARSE MY PHONE rang and I picked it up. "Mr. Jordan?" The voice was breathless. "Speaking," I said. "This is Mrs. Wallace—Lorna Wallace, remember?" "Of course, Kate's mother." "Yes. I promised to call you if I heard from Kate. Well, I got a telegram just a little while ago. Kate says she's fine and I'm not to worry and she's writing me a long letter to tell me all about it." "That's fine, Mrs. Wallace. I said you'd hear from her." "Yes, you did. And you were right." "Where did the wire originate from, Mrs. Wallace?" "Just a moment." I could hear the faint rustle of paper and then her voice again. "Kate's in Mexico. A place called Aca ... Acapulco." She pronounced it slowly. "I hope I'm doing the right thing. Nothing's going to happen to Kate, is it, Mr. Jordan?" Kate would suffer a little. That couldn't be helped. But the human spirit is resident and a broken heart readily heals. "Kate's going to be fine," I said. "You did the right thing, Mrs. Wallace. And thank you for calling." We hung up. So Dan Varney was in Mexico. No wonder Max Turner had found no record of any passport None is needed to cross the border. I got through to Max at the hospital. He was irritated and resentful at his enforced confinement. "How do you feel, Max?" I asked him. "Well enough," he grumbled. "Except for a headache. If I could find my clothes I'd sneak out of here." "They're discharging you tomorrow. Think you can travel?" "Sure. Where?" "Mexico." "What's up, Counselor?" "There's a good chance we've located Dan Varney. I think he's Doled up in Acapulco. I want you to fly down there first thing in the morning." "And if I find aim?" "Let me know at once. I'll start the wheels rolling on extradition proceedings at this end. Have you got that?" "Yes, sir." "I'll make a plane reservation. A ticket will be waiting for you at Idlewild. I'll have them notify you of the exact time and flight number." "They can reach me here all night." "Take-care, Max. And don't stop any bullets." I hung up and reached for the telephone directory. I found the LeMat Studios and dialed their number. They were still working, a voice told me, and Barbara Coleman was on camera at the moment, would I care to wait. I said no, and please give her a message—Mr. Jordan would pick her up there within the hour. I left the office and headed uptown. Fred Duncan had lived in a modest walk-up on the third floor. The key Ruth Duncan had given me opened his door. Naturally, the police had been there before me. But they were shooting in the dark, not sure what to look for. Duncan, apparently, had been a neat, methodical man. No clothes were strewn haphazardly about. So I checked the garments in his closet. In a pair of serge trousers I found a penknife, a cigar trimmer, a clipping from one of the newspapers about Zenith Films tentative plans for the casting of , and a slip of paper with two telephone numbers —Butterfield 8-0010 and Circle 3-8624. The first looked vaguely familiar, the second I recognized at once. It was my own. The room was close and musty. I opened one of the windows and sat on a hard-backed chair to concentrate. The naked globe cast its niggardly illumination over a round cloth-covered table. Ideas digested in my head, disconnected theories. I nourished them with fresh revelations, and out of the jigsaw a picture began to focus. A picture I did not like. And I liked it even less on closer inspection. Finally I stood up, turned out the light and left Fred Duncan's quarters, locking the door behind me. A deep-throated ominous rumble of thunder brought Barbara Coleman closer to my side in the cab. By the time we got out, it was raining. Victoria Dodd opened the door. "I was getting worried. Come on in." She took our coats. Gil Dodd was at the cellaret, mixing martinis. Apparently he'd been testing the concoction. There was a rosy flush to his square brown face. He filled some glasses and dropped in a twist of lemon peel. Victoria refused a drink. She warned an immediate council of war, asking about Adam. "He's hearing up," I told her. "Do they treat him decently?" "Well, it's not the Waldorf. Neither is it a concentration camp." "How about bail?" "I spoke to the District Attorney. He refuted to cooperate. But the picture isn't all black. There's good news too." Barbara steed, suddenly alert. "Well, tell us." I think we've found Don Varney." Questions flew. They all jebbered simultaneously. I told them about Kate Wallace, and about my upstate visit to her mother. I told them about the telegram, and my assumption that Kate had gone to join Varney in Mexico. "What do we do now?" Barbara demanded. "It's already done," I said. "I have a man flying down there tomorrow morning. We'll naul Varney back oh extradition proceedings. I doubt if he's spent too much of that fifty thousand dollars. We're nailing him too soon. So most of the loot will be recovered. Enough, anyway, to clean up the Duncan lawsuit." Barbara clapped her hands rhapsodically. Gil Dodd glowed. "That's capital news. I'm delighted, Jordan." But Victoria brought them down to earth. "What are we crowing about? It doesn't help Adam on that murder charge, does it?" "No," I said. "But there's other evidence piling up all the time. New elements have come to light. I think we can offer the District Attorney a much better candidate than Adam." "Who?" demanded Dodd. 'That police sergeant? Erzie Strobe?" I shook my head. "Not him." "Well, who then?" Barbara's voice rose impatiently. "The same person who shot Cassidy." "But I thought you were sure Strobe did it, that he meant you to be the victim, that he shot Cassidy by mistake." "The mistake was mine," I said. "I was never the intended victim. That bullet was meant for Cassidy and she died as planned." CHAPTER 28 MY PHONE rang and I picked it up. "Mr. Jordan?" The voice was breathless. "Speaking," I said. "This is Mrs. Wallace—Lorna Wallace, remember?" "Of course, Kate's mother." "Yes. I promised to call you if I heard from Kate. Well, I got a telegram just a little while ago. Kate says she's fine and I'm not to worry and she's writing me a long letter to tell me all about it." "That's fine, Mrs. Wallace. I said you'd hear from her." "Yes, you did. And you were right." "Where did the wire originate from, Mrs. Wallace?" "Just a moment." I could hear the faint rustle of paper and then her voice again. "Kate's in Mexico. A place called Aca ... Acapulco." She pronounced it slowly. "I hope I'm doing the right thing. Nothing's going to happen to Kate, is it, Mr. Jordan?" Kate would suffer a little. That couldn't be helped. But the human spirit is resident and a broken heart readily heals. "Kate's going to be fine," I said. "You did the right thing, Mrs. Wallace. And thank you for calling." We hung up. So Dan Varney was in Mexico. No wonder Max Turner had found no record of any passport None is needed to cross the border. I got through to Max at the hospital. He was irritated and resentful at his enforced confinement. "How do you feel, Max?" I asked him. "Well enough," he grumbled. "Except for a headache. If I could find my clothes I'd sneak out of here." "They're discharging you tomorrow. Think you can travel?" "Sure. Where?" "Mexico." "What's up, Counselor?" "There's a good chance we've located Dan Varney. I think he's Doled up in Acapulco. I want you to fly down there first thing in the morning." "And if I find aim?" "Let me know at once. I'll start the wheels rolling on extradition proceedings at this end. Have you got that?" "Yes, sir." "I'll make a plane reservation. A ticket will be waiting for you at Idlewild. I'll have them notify you of the exact time and flight number." "They can reach me here all night." "Take-care, Max. And don't stop any bullets." I hung up and reached for the telephone directory. I found the LeMat Studios and dialed their number. They were still working, a voice told me, and Barbara Coleman was on camera at the moment, would I care to wait. I said no, and please give her a message—Mr. Jordan would pick her up there within the hour. I left the office and headed uptown. Fred Duncan had lived in a modest walk-up on the third floor. The key Ruth Duncan had given me opened his door. Naturally, the police had been there before me. But they were shooting in the dark, not sure what to look for. Duncan, apparently, had been a neat, methodical man. No clothes were strewn haphazardly about. So I checked the garments in his closet. In a pair of serge trousers I found a penknife, a cigar trimmer, a clipping from one of the newspapers about Zenith Films tentative plans for the casting of , and a slip of paper with two telephone numbers —Butterfield 8-0010 and Circle 3-8624. The first looked vaguely familiar, the second I recognized at once. It was my own. The room was close and musty. I opened one of the windows and sat on a hard-backed chair to concentrate. The naked globe cast its niggardly illumination over a round cloth-covered table. Ideas digested in my head, disconnected theories. I nourished them with fresh revelations, and out of the jigsaw a picture began to focus. A picture I did not like. And I liked it even less on closer inspection. Finally I stood up, turned out the light and left Fred Duncan's quarters, locking the door behind me. A deep-throated ominous rumble of thunder brought Barbara Coleman closer to my side in the cab. By the time we got out, it was raining. Victoria Dodd opened the door. "I was getting worried. Come on in." She took our coats. Gil Dodd was at the cellaret, mixing martinis. Apparently he'd been testing the concoction. There was a rosy flush to his square brown face. He filled some glasses and dropped in a twist of lemon peel. Victoria refused a drink. She warned an immediate council of war, asking about Adam. "He's hearing up," I told her. "Do they treat him decently?" "Well, it's not the Waldorf. Neither is it a concentration camp." "How about bail?" "I spoke to the District Attorney. He refuted to cooperate. But the picture isn't all black. There's good news too." Barbara steed, suddenly alert. "Well, tell us." I think we've found Don Varney." Questions flew. They all jebbered simultaneously. I told them about Kate Wallace, and about my upstate visit to her mother. I told them about the telegram, and my assumption that Kate had gone to join Varney in Mexico. "What do we do now?" Barbara demanded. "It's already done," I said. "I have a man flying down there tomorrow morning. We'll naul Varney back oh extradition proceedings. I doubt if he's spent too much of that fifty thousand dollars. We're nailing him too soon. So most of the loot will be recovered. Enough, anyway, to clean up the Duncan lawsuit." Barbara clapped her hands rhapsodically. Gil Dodd glowed. "That's capital news. I'm delighted, Jordan." But Victoria brought them down to earth. "What are we crowing about? It doesn't help Adam on that murder charge, does it?" "No," I said. "But there's other evidence piling up all the time. New elements have come to light. I think we can offer the District Attorney a much better candidate than Adam." "Who?" demanded Dodd. 'That police sergeant? Erzie Strobe?" I shook my head. "Not him." "Well, who then?" Barbara's voice rose impatiently. "The same person who shot Cassidy." "But I thought you were sure Strobe did it, that he meant you to be the victim, that he shot Cassidy by mistake." "The mistake was mine," I said. "I was never the intended victim. That bullet was meant for Cassidy and she died as planned." U. N. Reports cease-fire A. U. N. spokesman in Elisabethville, the capital of Katanga, confirmed that Congolese forces which had entere the province from neighboring Kivu province had withdrawn across the frontier. Lumumba, in a statement at his residence, denounced the U. N. in general and Hammarskjold in particular and fired off a cable to all U. N. members demanding that the council cease passing resolutions about the Congo. He charged again there has been "flagrant interfence' 'in Congolese internal affairs by the world organization, and asked the council to "restrain" Hammarskjold. His army commander, Gen. Victor Lundulu, who had been a sergeant-major until Lumumba promoted him to four-star rank, also protested vehemently against what he said was interference in Congolese army affairs. He said the U. N. did not want to cooperate with the Congolese army. The U. N. said it could not disclose which Congolese officer issued the cease-fire orders to the Congolese troops. Fourteen U. N. officers led by Swedish Col. S. M. Mollersward were leaving Sunday for the ceasefire line. The truce team will set up headquarters in Elisabethville where Saturday, Katanga President Moise Tshombe called for a meeting of all Congelese leaders to discuss confederation of the Congolese province-something Lumumba, an advocate of a strong central government, bitterly opposes. The U. N. said the truce applied to the Bakwanga area where Hammarskjold charged that massacres were occurring in a genocidal war between the Congolese army and Baluba tribesmen fighting for an independent "Mining State." Lumumba has denied this charge. U. N. OFFICERS LEAVE cease-fire A. U. N. spokesman in Elisabethville, the capital of Katanga, confirmed that Congolese forces which had entere the province from neighboring Kivu province had withdrawn across the frontier. Lumumba, in a statement at his residence, denounced the U. N. in general and Hammarskjold in particular and fired off a cable to all U. N. members demanding that the council cease passing resolutions about the Congo. He charged again there has been "flagrant interfence' 'in Congolese internal affairs by the world organization, and asked the council to "restrain" Hammarskjold. His army commander, Gen. Victor Lundulu, who had been a sergeant-major until Lumumba promoted him to four-star rank, also protested vehemently against what he said was interference in Congolese army affairs. He said the U. N. did not want to cooperate with the Congolese army. The U. N. said it could not disclose which Congolese officer issued the cease-fire orders to the Congolese troops. Fourteen U. N. officers led by Swedish Col. S. M. Mollersward were leaving Sunday for the ceasefire line. The truce team will set up headquarters in Elisabethville where Saturday, Katanga President Moise Tshombe called for a meeting of all Congelese leaders to discuss confederation of the Congolese province-something Lumumba, an advocate of a strong central government, bitterly opposes. The U. N. said the truce applied to the Bakwanga area where Hammarskjold charged that massacres were occurring in a genocidal war between the Congolese army and Baluba tribesmen fighting for an independent "Mining State." Lumumba has denied this charge. DID YOU KNOW Six New Arnold who will be on leave studying for a year, and Dr. Sudershanam will be in the education department. The health and physical education department at LeMoyne is being enlarged and Miss Vaughn will be the third faculty member in this unit. Sterlin Adams, a Memphian, will teach mathematics, replacing William Fletcher who is on leave to study for a year, and Harrison Lee comes to LeMoyne from the faculty of Rust College to teach in the social sciences department. A new member of the business office staff is Mrs. Lillie Branscomb of 293 W. Waldorf. All classes at the college will begin Monday morning at 8:30. Britain leads nations in ships being built. A. FOSTER BARGAIN STORE To Restrict Nikita To Manhattan (UPI)— The United States, in the most stringent restriction ever placed on a visiting diplomat. Saturday ordered Nikita S. Khrushchev quarantined to Manhattan Island during his visit to the United Nations General Assembly. It was an obvious slap at the Soviet premier who cancelled President Elsenhower's visit to Russia over the U2 plane incident. The State Department said it was restricting Khrushchev's movements for his own good, because his recent "hostile statements" would make it more difficult to protect him. The restriction applied not only to Khrushchev but also to Hungary's Janos Kadar and Albania's Mehmet Shehu, both outspoken critics of the United States and ripe targets for Hungarian and Albanian refugees in America. Polish Communist leader Wladyslaw Gomulka, Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia, and Czech President Antonin Novotny, heading their delegations to the Sept. 20 assembly opening, were not mentioned and will have wider travel rights. Khushchev can either remain on the Russian ship Baltika now carrying him to New York, go to the Russian delegation building on Park Avenue or put up at a hotel. But if he hopes to visit the Freedomland amusement pary as he wanted to visit Disneyland during his visit to the West Coast a year ago, he will be disappointed. Freedomland is in the Bronx. Also out of bounds are the Statue of Liberty, the Russian diplomatic residence at Glen Cove, and such places of interest as the Brooklyn navy yard. But he can go to Wall Street, if he wishes. Communist diplomats except those from Yugoslavia, Poland and Czechosolvakia normally are restricted to a 25-mile radius around New York in retailation for travel restrictions on American diplomats in Communist lands. The only previous quarantine that came close to being as stringent as that imposed on Khrushchev was in the case of Chinese Communist Gen. Wu who came to the U. N. during Korean War negoti ation. He was allowed only to travel between his midtown Manhattan hotel and suburban Lake Sucess, where the U. N. then was meeting. (UPI) — Vice President Richard M. Nixon returned to his desk Saturday to complete preparations for a hard-hitting 9,000-mile campaign trek which began Monday. The Republican presidential nominee-released late Friday from Walter Reed Hospital showed up at his campaign office about 9 a. m. EDT. He began work on notes for speeches he will make during the intensive week of campaigning. Later he met with Adm. Arthur W. Radford Ret. Radford heads a retired serviremen's committee which is a part of the volunteer organization working for election of Nixon and his running mate, Henry Cabot Lodge. As Nixon and Radford posed for photographers, it was clear that Nixon's left knee, injured in preseason campaigning at GreensboroN. C., in mid - August still was a bit stiff. Nixon entered Walter Reed twelve days ago. Nixon said the knee is "fine." He said there will be "a little time before the stiffness works out" but there is "no pain to speak of." "According to the medicos," he said, "they have completely checked the infection." Nixon said he plans to resume "full activity .. the only thing I may cut down on will be long receiving lines." The candidate said he will try to favor the knee a bit when he is "moving intensively through crowds." Nixon's press secretary, Herbert G. Klein, told newsmen that Nixon gave first priority on returning to his office to a speech he will deliver Monday at Baltimore's Friendship Airport where President Elsenhower will join in a big GOP kick-off rally. The speech, Klein said, will be brief but will outline the theme of Nixon's first week of campaigning. Lodge and Sen. Thruston B. Morton, Ky., GOP national chairman, will also be at the Friendship rally. One important Sunday engagement was on Nixon's calendar. He was scheduled to appear on a TV panel show NBC-Meet the Press where he was expected to face questions about campaign controversy over the Roman Catholic faith of his Democratic presidential opponent, Sen. John F. Kennedy. In the past, Nixon has insisted the religions issue, should be talked about as little as possible. He will restate and probably expand his views if the question is put to him, it was said. During the first day of his campaign swing, Nixon is scheduled to speak in Indianapolis, Dallas and San Francisco. He will crisscross 12 states. Living Up 'values,' the irersponsible bels of men because of their skin color or the way they worship god," he said, adding: "But we should have begun to realize, by now, that real estate 'values' are made by men — the true values are made in the eyes of God." One of his last acts as Mayor of Pittsburgh, Gov. Lawrence said, was to sign a "strong and effective fair housing act." Since then, he said, he has tried to establish the same standards on a statewide level. He said he ran into a road block in the State Senate during the last session of the legislature, but he promised to continue to encourage such legislation "until the goal of fair housing is achieved for all Pennsylvanians. Gov. Lawrence said the national cannot survive as a people of split personalities, "pretending to believe in equality for men and practicing prejudice against each other. "We cannot endure as a free nation when we deny freedom to minions of our own citizens — the freedom to live where they please, the right to a good education, the liberty of worship, the right to hold the best job for which they are qualified." He said that "For those who have been subjugated as second - class citizens, there must be a new effort to provide the right education, the right housing, and the proper training for employment in a climate of industry and business which will not deny them jobs at first sight." Quoting statistics showing that more than half of all colored workers, in America are employed as either service workers or semi-skilled workers, he said, obviously, many jobs are removed from the grasp of colored people by "outright prejudice and bigotry. Other reasons he gave for such discrimination were lack of experience and lack of education for professional or technical Jobs. He called for the United States to face up to its educational responsibilities. Welcoming the convention to Philadelphia, Mayor Dilworth told the delegates that anyone who seeks employment and is qualified for any vacancy in the city government can get the job. Bishop David H. Sims of the AME Church brought greetings from that denomination. Mayor Dilworth was introduced by the Rev. E. Luther Cunningham, a local minister and a member of the Philadelphia Civil Service Commission. The Rev. J. Quinton Jackson, pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Germantown, introduced Gov. Lawrence. Greetings also were brought by Dr. Eugene Carson Blake of the Presbyterian Church, Dr. V. Carney Hargroves, former president of the American Baptist Convention and a vice pesident of the World Alliance, and the Rev. M. L. Gayton, president of the Philadelphia Baptist Ministers Conference and pastor of Metropolitan Baptist Church. The Rev. S. B. Joubert of New York City responded for the Convention. SAME STANDARDS 'values,' the irersponsible bels of men because of their skin color or the way they worship god," he said, adding: "But we should have begun to realize, by now, that real estate 'values' are made by men — the true values are made in the eyes of God." One of his last acts as Mayor of Pittsburgh, Gov. Lawrence said, was to sign a "strong and effective fair housing act." Since then, he said, he has tried to establish the same standards on a statewide level. He said he ran into a road block in the State Senate during the last session of the legislature, but he promised to continue to encourage such legislation "until the goal of fair housing is achieved for all Pennsylvanians. Gov. Lawrence said the national cannot survive as a people of split personalities, "pretending to believe in equality for men and practicing prejudice against each other. "We cannot endure as a free nation when we deny freedom to minions of our own citizens — the freedom to live where they please, the right to a good education, the liberty of worship, the right to hold the best job for which they are qualified." He said that "For those who have been subjugated as second - class citizens, there must be a new effort to provide the right education, the right housing, and the proper training for employment in a climate of industry and business which will not deny them jobs at first sight." Quoting statistics showing that more than half of all colored workers, in America are employed as either service workers or semi-skilled workers, he said, obviously, many jobs are removed from the grasp of colored people by "outright prejudice and bigotry. Other reasons he gave for such discrimination were lack of experience and lack of education for professional or technical Jobs. He called for the United States to face up to its educational responsibilities. Welcoming the convention to Philadelphia, Mayor Dilworth told the delegates that anyone who seeks employment and is qualified for any vacancy in the city government can get the job. Bishop David H. Sims of the AME Church brought greetings from that denomination. Mayor Dilworth was introduced by the Rev. E. Luther Cunningham, a local minister and a member of the Philadelphia Civil Service Commission. The Rev. J. Quinton Jackson, pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Germantown, introduced Gov. Lawrence. Greetings also were brought by Dr. Eugene Carson Blake of the Presbyterian Church, Dr. V. Carney Hargroves, former president of the American Baptist Convention and a vice pesident of the World Alliance, and the Rev. M. L. Gayton, president of the Philadelphia Baptist Ministers Conference and pastor of Metropolitan Baptist Church. The Rev. S. B. Joubert of New York City responded for the Convention. OTHER REASONS 'values,' the irersponsible bels of men because of their skin color or the way they worship god," he said, adding: "But we should have begun to realize, by now, that real estate 'values' are made by men — the true values are made in the eyes of God." One of his last acts as Mayor of Pittsburgh, Gov. Lawrence said, was to sign a "strong and effective fair housing act." Since then, he said, he has tried to establish the same standards on a statewide level. He said he ran into a road block in the State Senate during the last session of the legislature, but he promised to continue to encourage such legislation "until the goal of fair housing is achieved for all Pennsylvanians. Gov. Lawrence said the national cannot survive as a people of split personalities, "pretending to believe in equality for men and practicing prejudice against each other. "We cannot endure as a free nation when we deny freedom to minions of our own citizens — the freedom to live where they please, the right to a good education, the liberty of worship, the right to hold the best job for which they are qualified." He said that "For those who have been subjugated as second - class citizens, there must be a new effort to provide the right education, the right housing, and the proper training for employment in a climate of industry and business which will not deny them jobs at first sight." Quoting statistics showing that more than half of all colored workers, in America are employed as either service workers or semi-skilled workers, he said, obviously, many jobs are removed from the grasp of colored people by "outright prejudice and bigotry. Other reasons he gave for such discrimination were lack of experience and lack of education for professional or technical Jobs. He called for the United States to face up to its educational responsibilities. Welcoming the convention to Philadelphia, Mayor Dilworth told the delegates that anyone who seeks employment and is qualified for any vacancy in the city government can get the job. Bishop David H. Sims of the AME Church brought greetings from that denomination. Mayor Dilworth was introduced by the Rev. E. Luther Cunningham, a local minister and a member of the Philadelphia Civil Service Commission. The Rev. J. Quinton Jackson, pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Germantown, introduced Gov. Lawrence. Greetings also were brought by Dr. Eugene Carson Blake of the Presbyterian Church, Dr. V. Carney Hargroves, former president of the American Baptist Convention and a vice pesident of the World Alliance, and the Rev. M. L. Gayton, president of the Philadelphia Baptist Ministers Conference and pastor of Metropolitan Baptist Church. The Rev. S. B. Joubert of New York City responded for the Convention. LEARN TO READ BY TV (EVEN PERSONS WHO CAN'T READ SOON LEARN HOW) Puerlo Rico Digs Out Of Storm Debris (UPI) — Puerto Rico dug out from under millions dollars of storm damage on September 7 but faced an epidemic threat in the southeastern coastal region of Humacao. Officials said at least 98 persons were killed in Puerto Rico with another 175 missing in the weekend backlash of hurricane Donna as it raged through the Caribbean. An estimated 20,000 persons were homeless with 4,000 homes destroyed. Damage to personal property alone was placed at more than two million dollars. Gov. Luis Nuno Marin signed emergency relief appropriations for $1 million and said more aid funds would be made available as needed. National Guard doctors and nurses gave typhus shots to as many of the 11,000 residents of Humacao as could be reached. A water shortage in the area spurred the emergency inoculation program. U. S. Navy helicopters flew 86 missions to air-lift 49 women and children out of Carolina, listed by the American Red Cross as one of the 10 Most damaged areas in the country. American pilots said many more could have been moved to high ground but that they refused the seemingly risky helicopter lift and preferred, instead, to stay with their homes and meager possessions. Arrest Of Youth referred. All are to appear in Juvenile Court September 16. The three children were arrested as they traveled to their home in Birmingham from an integrated youth program at Highlander Folk School, Monteagle, Tenn. They were held in jail over night despite the fact that their father secured ball for them on the evening they were arrested. Later Patricia told porters that a police officer slapped her sister and almost choked her brother to death Expect 6,400 to enroll for the 1960-61 school year. This figure win be the third highest enrollment in the history of the University and will represent an increase of 400 students over the 1959-60 student body.