Memphis World Memphis World Publishing Co. 1966-05-28 J. A. Beauchamp L. J. Andolsek, commissioner of U. S. Civil Service Commission, will speak to over 1.000 Federal employees at a Human Relations Clinic et the Atlanta Biltmore Hotel, Wednesday, May 23, according to William J. Bookholt, chairman of the Federal Executive Board, sponsorer of the meeting. In addition to this speaker, the vocational technical and adult education division of the Atlanta Public Schools, headed by John F. Standridge, will make topical oresentations an understanding yourself and others, personalities, attitudes, and communications. "Experts in education, business and industry, communications, and psychology will make the presentations, Bookholt find. "It is expected that education authorities will point out opportunities which exist in the Atlanta area for adult education on both a formal and informal basis. It is lipped that many Federal employees will be stimulated to enroll, in such adult education and continue to develop their careers," he stated. Authorities who are scheduled to participate in the Clinic arc: Dr. John W. Lotson, superintendent of Atlanta Public School?; Dr. Judson c. Ward, vice president, of Emory University; A. GO. Strickland, Zero Defects Administrator of Lockheed - Georgia Company: Mrs. Evelyn Sutton, human relations consultant; Mrs. Peggie Stux, public relations, Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Company; Dr. Robert V. Ozment, pastor, First Methodist Church, Atlanta; and Mr. Don Mitcham, marketing instructor. Georgia Stale College, Bookholt quoted a member of the President's Cabinet in further deScrbing the basic purpose of the Clinic: "The greatest living absurdity is the stubborn or lazy assumption that we learn enough during an early 12 or 16 years of our lives to carry us through another 50 during which quite a bit of what we learned turns cut to be wrong, and most of the rest irrelevant." Named Assistants To U. S. Commission To Civil Rights A group Of outstanding educators and students of American society was named recently to assist the U. S., Commission on Civil Rights with its Study of racial isolation in the Nation's public schools. Dr. Joan A. Hannah, chairman of the Commission and President of Michigan State University announced that Dr. Thomas B. Pettigrew, associate professor of social psychology at Harvard University, will up chief consultant for the project and chairman of the ad visory committee to the Commission's Study of Race and Education. "The Advisory Committee is well equipped to assist the Commission in gathering and presenting to the Nation the facts on racial isolation in the schools of the North and the South," Hannah said, "The Commission is pleased that this distinguished group of scholars, representing many disciplincs, has agreed to help us with an analysis of the problem and recommendations for action. Members of the Advisory ComMittee, in addition to Pettigrew. Are: Samuel Brownell. Superintendent Of schools, Detroll, Michigan. Benjamin E. Carchael, superintendent of schools. Chattanooga. Tennessee; Kenneth B. Clark, Direotor, social dynamics research institute. City College, New York City; James Coleman professor. Department of social relations, The Johns Hopkins University, BaltiMore, Maryland; Rashi Fein. Economist, Brookings Institution, Washington, D. C. John H. Fisher, president, TeaChers College, Columbia UniversiTy. New York City. Philip M. Hauser Director Population research and training cenTer, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois. Vivian Henderson. President. Clark Callege, Atlanta, Georgia. Petor Rossi, Dircetor National Opinion Research Center, ChicaGo, Illinois; Judson Shaplen, dean, graduate school of education, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri; Neil V. Sullivan, Superintendent of schools, Berkeloy, California; John A. Wheeler, president, MeChanics and Farmers Bank, Durham, North Carolina. Robin Williams professor of Sociology, Cornell University Ithaca, New York; William L. Taylor, staff director Of the commission, said that Pettigrew, as chief consultant for the project will have overall responsibility for developing the study design and maintaining general supervision of the project. David K. Cohen. former professor of history at Case Institute in Cleveland, Ohio, will supervise the work of the Commission staff as signed to the project, Taylor added. The Commission Study of Race and Education was undertaken at the request of President Johnson. The request came during remarks by President Johnson on the eve of the November 1965 Planning Session of the While House Conference on Civil Rights when he said: "I will ask the Commission on Civil Rights to turn its careful attention to the problems of race and education in all pens of this country. I am asking them to develop a firm foundation of facts on which local and Slate Government can build a school system that is color - blind. In a November 17, 1965, letter to Hannah, President Johnson observed that despite substantial progress in ending formal segregation of the schools " racial isolation in the schools persists - both in the North and the South — because of housing patterns, school districting, economic stratification and population movements." Such isolation President Johnson wrote, presents serious barriers to quality education" and he asked the Commission to "gather the facts and make them available to the Nation as rapidly as possible." Last week the Congress appropriated $399,000 in supplemental fands for the Commission's Race and Education study for the fiscal year ending June 30. An additional $568,000 has been requested for the study in the Commission's budget for fiscal 1907. The study, according to Hannah, will inquire into the extent of racial isolation in the schools and its effect on children. It also will examine the structural pattern of racial isolation in the schools and its relationship to inequities in housing and employment. It will evaluate educational policies and practices Which influence educational opportunity. The research also will examine legal questions arising from patterns of racial separation in the schools and the impact of Governmental programs and policies upon equal educational opportunity. The U. S. Commission on Civil Rights is an independent bipartiSan agency created by Congress in 1957. Among other duties, it is charged with the responsibility of investigating complaints that certain citizens are being deprived of their right to vote by reason of their color, race, religion or naticnal origin, and of studying legal developments constituting a denial of equal protection of the laws under the Constitution. The Commission also serves as a national clearingnouse for civil rights information. EVEN MINOR BURNS HURT! Relieve pain and itching, soothe quick! Switch to super-refined hospital quality White Petroleum Jelly Twice as much for 27¢ Made to sell for $1.00.00 up. 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TV CAMEOS; He's Had His Fill of Indians BIG ED AMES (he's sixfoot-four) is an amiable, easygoing guy. He stays that way when you meet him until mention is made of his current role of Mingo, an Oxford-educated Cherokee Indian, in NBC-TV's Daniel Boone series. Then he becomes factually serious. "This will be the last time I'll play an Indian," he said recently at NBC headquarters in New York. "I played one on Broadway in , a production which starred Kirk Douglas. I also played one in a segment on the TV series,, and now I'm going into my third season as Mingo when we start shooting again this month on the West Coast. "I don't want to give the impression that Mingo is a poor part. It isn't—it's a good part because he is different from the usual Indian seen on TV. He's not an 'Ugh! Ugh!' character, but is dignified and intelligent. But I don't want to be wedded to this Mingo image. I don't want Mingo to become Better known than Ames, I keep getting the impression that this is the third strike—so Indians are out," AS FAR as goes, Ames said he felt the series was purely entertainment. "It is clean adventure for kids," he said, "dealing with a period in American history which they try to keep as authentic as possible. It's not Death of a but it's a good show." Despite the fact that has kept him busy for many months, Ed still finds time to take on other show business chores. He's just completed his fourth record album for RCA, turns up every so often on The , performs in "night clubs, played Sky Masterson in Guys and for two weeks last summer, and before that costarred in with Anna Maria Alberghetti at the Valley Music Theater on the West Coast. "I WORKED all day on the TV series," he explained, "and then at night played the role of the Puppeteer in the musical. I may sound like I'm pushing, but I'm not. Show business is my life, and I believe the secret in this business is never to take it easy. There are a lot of things I want to do—motion pictures, more shows on Broadway, concerts—but I'll never be able to do them unless I keep working and developing." AMES, who is in his midthirties, was born in Boston, the youngest of nine children whose parents who had migrated from Russia. At home, there was a family orchestra and a steady diet of classical music. When he was 16, he and three of his brothers formed a quartet and went into show business. In time, they became one of the top vocal groups in the country. They played posh clubs and hotels and appeared on popular TV variety shows. Their record sales went above The 25 million mark. They were so successful, that Ed's takehome pay alone was reported to have been in the $100,000 a year bracket. At the height of their popuarlity, Ed decided to quit the quartet because "the money was bringing me no happiness. We as the Ames Brothers, had reached the zenith of what we could do. There was no place to go. At the same time, I found myself so wedded into the image of a group that people hardly regarded me as a person, — more a fraction of a person, instead." After the break-up, Ed enrolled at the Herbert Berghoff Studio in New York to study dramatics. "If you think I'm busy now when I'm working," he smiled, "you should have seen me when I was unemployed. I took six classes at once and monitored others." IT PAID off, for in April, 1961, he won good notices when he appeared in the off-Broadway Arthur Miller play . He followed this by a run in the satirical hit The , and then went on to co-star on Broadway in When he isn't working, Ed spends most of his time with his wife, his 13-year-old son, and his daughters, 10 and 16, at their home in the San Fernando Valley. A physical-fitness enthusiast, he related with rueful pride an incident with son Ronnie, "I thought I was in excellent shape until some weeks ago," he smiled. "We were racing to the end of the pool and back and I thought I was doing pretty good until I approached the end of the pool and met him on the way back." Distributed by King Features Syndicate W. J. Leonard Heads Howard Univ. Law School Group The Student Forum on Interimtional Older and World Peace met recently on the campus of Columbia University to outline plans for projects it wishes and intends to initiate this summer and the ensuing academic year. The main concern and purpose of this organization to define the real issues and areas of conflict between the world communities and to promote seminars and working conferences involving students throughout the country who are interested in the role, or potential role, the worlds student population must assume in working to effectuate world peacethrough adherence to the rule oflaw. In order to provide guidance for the organization, an executive committee, consisting of fifteen members was fleeted, with Walter J. Lecuard, a student at Howard University School of Law as general chairman. Four vice chairmen, who will serve as committee heads include: Josephine Spencer, Sarah Lawrence College, Committee on Finance; Gerald Sumida, Princeton University, Committee on General Conferences, Alfred Jones, III, Columbia University Public Relations and Robert Foyer, Princeton University, Committee on Regional Seminars. This organization outgrowth Of the Sarah Lawrence College Student Conference on War Prevention and World Peace, originally sponsored by the International Relations Club at Sarah Lawrence College The organization's memBers give much of the credit, pertaining to its formation to Mr. Harry B. Hollins, The World Law Fund and Mr. and Mrs. Duncan M. Spencer of New York. Both Mr. Hollins and Mrs. Spencer arc directors of the World Law Fund. Leonard relates that some of the many questions and issues with which the forum will deal in both its regional seminars and general conferences are: 1. "Whether the threat to human survival is real enough or imminent enough to considering avenues for a workable solution to the problems of aments? 2. Whether there is a willingness on the part of loaders, elected and otherwise, to submit to an international or world system of justice and law enforcement? 3 Do nations really want to disarm? 4. Do government reflect the mood, desires, or peaceful aims of their people? 5. How strongly is the economic force of various countries militating against an end to the stockpiling of weapons and armaments? 6. Should countries elect, through the regular electoral process, their U. N. delegate, nuking him answerable to the people on matters of peace keeping or war making? 7. Should governments be required and forced to give and to assue to each of their citizens, that citizen's inherent human right in justice and freedom, to develop to his fullest capability and to live and die without the incessant threat of annihilation by war or international disorder? 8. Will the nations of the world subscribe to the notion of giving up some of their national sovereignty to promote a maximization of peace and world security?" "It is necessary to realize, we believe, that while these problems are individual, and may be different in each world community, the difference is in degree only, so we must at the same time recognize that they, are intrinsicaty interwoven an must be dealt with as if they were companion, and capable of being examined in a matrix designed to eventuate a workable and enforceable rule of law applicable beyond national boundaries to which the world states must submit and actively support." The Forum will inquire into the intricacy of these problems, using as resource personnel, representatives of the Untied Nations, professors in the area of host schools and representatives from ether organizations. The other members elected to the executive committee are: Caroline Stevens, Sarah Lawrence College; Travis Fulton, Brandeis University; N. S. P. Rao, Harvard University; Jan Dial, Sarah Lawrence College; Bobby L. Hill, Howard University; Hillary H. Hosmer. Bryn Hawr College; Barbara Lee Cagan, Sarah Lawrence College; David Fox, Columbia University Law School; Jonathan B. Cook, Harvard University Law School, $6 MILLION OFFERED— A Los Angeles group is offering $6 million for this painting, the "Genevra di Benci," an early work of Leonardo da Vinci. It is owned by Princa Frans Joseph II of Liechtenstein., Canada's National Gallery in Ottawa also seeks the painting. WIGLET HAIR STYLES Some of Seven latest Now shown is Medalo Hair Style Charts! Created for the woman who needs hair at the top neat the crown on her head, looks so natural, no one would ever guess. Combs and fills into too crown of your head. EASY TO SET, ATTACH, RESTYLEI COMES IN REGULAR AND THICKER STYIESI Jet Black Off Black Dark Brown Mixed Grey $3 extra For complete Illustrated Catalog of Medalo Hair Styles. Wigs, Half caps and attachments—Send name and address. It's yours FREE upon reguest, Just Writs. #730 "MISTY" — $8.50 730 Thicker Wight — $12.50 Dr. M. L. King, Jr. On Face The Nation Sunday, May 29 SCLC President Dr, Martin Luther King, Jr., will be interviewed on the CBS News Program, "Face the Nation on Sunday, May 29, at 12:30 PM EDT. A panel of three newsmen, led by CBS news correspondent Martin Agronsky will conduct the interview. Dr. King's organization, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, is now engaged in a get out the vote drive for the Alabama Democratic runoff on May 3l, and is in the crucial secand phase of its first sustainged movement in a northern city, in Chicago. SCLC is the first civil rights organization to attempt to mobilize all factions of a northern urban ghetto into a non-violent move ment. Leontyne Prices Childhood Poem Is Made Public Singer Leontyne Price disclosed her "dreams of honor and praise" in a childhood poem made public today for the first time. Miss Price's poem - in which she vowed to "work harder and harder to do my best" — was published in the current issue of McCall's, just released, along with the childhood poems of other distinguished men and women. Young Leontyne was only 11 years old when she wrote the poem entitled "Laurel," which promised "On my Laurels I'll never rest." It read: I live in a place in the South called Laurel And I wonder what does that name mean? So I ask my mother who reads from a book - A tree, it says .. an evergreen Native to southern Europe, mother also does say. But cultivated here in this modern day. Finally I begin to understand Laurels crowned the victorious in olden days. And my head is filled with dreams of honor and praise. But I know on my Laurels I'll never rest. I'll work harder and harder to do my best. TOOTHACHE Don't suffer agony. Seconds get relief that lasts with DRA-JEL Speed-release formula puts it to work instantly to stop throbbing toothache Pain, so safe doctors recommend it for teething. MAKING MEDICAL HISTORY , Mrs. Raymond G. Wilmer, 47, "reels fine" as she whips up a cake after recovery from a first-of-itskind operation, transplant of an aortic heart valve from a dead person to replace her damaged mitral valve. Heart surgeon Dr. Earle B. Kay (inset) beaded team of surgeons. Beauty Consultant BETTY ANNE WFST says: HERE ARE YOUR BEST BEAUTY BUYS Black and White Golden Amber Hair Dressing gives dull hair a brilliant sheen; holds and control stubborn hair, makes it soft and easy to manage. For men, women, children. Black and White ULTRA-WHITE Hair Dressing, large size 50¢ Use Black and White Bleaching Cream as directed and see your dull, dark skin take on a lighter, brighter, softer, smoother look. Regular size 49¢. Save on large size, 65¢. 1. Remove make-up with Black & White Cleansing Cream. 2. 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She plans to further her education at Oklahoma Christian College. Miss Burge is majoring in Business Administration and her minor is Religion Mr. Rainey, a native of Arkansas received his Bachelor of Science degree from Arkansas A. M. and N. College, College Heights, Arkansas; and the Master of Education degree from Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan He is widely known as the mentor of the Albany State Golden Rams basketball team which won the 1964 SEAC championship, the Visitation Championship, the NAIA District 6 championship and went to the second round in the NAIA national tournament in Kansas City Kansas. Champagne-Drinking Cults ZURICH, Switzerland — UPI — Seven members of a champagne —drinking religious cult were jailed Thursday in the death of a pretty teen-ager, They admitted beating and whipping he "to drive the devil from her." The body of Bernadette Hasler, 16, was found Monday in the village of Wangern. It was pocked, scarred and bruised from extensive flatellation with whips, sticks, bats and belts.