Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, June 12, 1973 SINCE MEDGAR EVERS' SLAYING Mississippi By BILL CRIDER Associated Press Writer JACKSON, Miss. - In the be- ginning, when the word was "Never," a man armed with a .30-06 caliber rifle hid in a clump of bushes on a vacant lot here and tried to kill a crusade witht a bullet. Fired 10 years ago, that futile shot still echoes in Mississippi politics. IT MADE A civil rights mar- tyr out of black leader Medgar Evers, whose death will be mark- ed by a memorial festival at the coliseum here tonight. It helped make a governor out of William Waller, who was an MARTYR BROT ambitious 37-year-old district at- Evers. After Med torney in Jackson at the time gave up his racy Evers was slain. and went south b And it recalled to Mississippi, rights movement. has changed Medgar's big brother, Charles, but traditio Evers, a burly six-footer with a governor. H tough-looking face, shrewd eyes and also stat and a talent for making money ic committ and politics. nowadays fl HE HAD GONE to Chicago to shopping ce set up a stable of prostitutes, taurant. operate a policy gambling game, "MEDGAJ sell bootleg whisky, teach school me," said E - and just about anything else The same that would make a buck. Mississippi. Switched from rackets to race, he assassi Charles Evers was the r i g h t baricby Pre S man in the right place. was one of, He refined the boycott into a which wroun weapon that made strict mainten- the state du ance of racial segregation a IT HAPP losing proposition for Mississippi midnight on ER, Charles business, worked up to a first feverish yes 's death, he name basis with many of the na- It was a t s in Chicago tion's political great and near- "Freedom1 oin the civil great; won a race for mayor of versity of M Fayette, pop., 1,750; yost a brash black studer in n-smashingi te is still te national D eeman. His lows from a nter, motel R'S DEATH vers. might be sa ination, ter sident JohnF the traumat ght deep ch ring the past ENED shor June 12, 1 ar here. time of "sit- Riders." T ississippi had nt, James I dga ket to j4 l r EVERY WATER POLLUTER IN TIIIS COUNTRY IIAS A PRICE ON HIS HEAD!! 10 years race for guarded day and night by U.S. mayor - marshals and soldiers. Protest emocrat- marches were frequent. income Medgar Evers, state field sec- Fayette retary for the National Assoca- and res- tion for the Advancement of Col- ored People, drove home from changed such a rally and stepped from his car... aid about "THERE WAS the sound of a car door closing and then there ned bar- was this loud blast," recalled Kennedy, Mrs. Myrlie Evers, who was in ic events the living room. "After that, a ange in terrible silence." t decade. Medgar Evers died before they tly after could get him to a hospital. He 963 - a was 37. In Chicago, a stunned Charles ins" and Evers dropped his rackets a n d he Uni- flew home to beat down opposi- d its first tion from NAACP leaders and Meredith, take over Medgar's job as state --field secretary. ELEVEN DAYS after the shoot- ing, the FBI arrested Byron De La Beckwith, a daner 42-vear-old fertilizer salesman who lived in Gr wood, Miss. He was brought to Jkson, charged with murder. Cvnics, enecislly black ones, wc astonished by the trial. Disdining the annarent noliti al temoer of the times, Dist. Atto. Waler nrosected Beck- with to the hilt-twice. BOTH TRALS ended with hbng J-res. The mistrials came as a shok to those who expected aconittal. "I'd say we won a conviction," said Gov. Waler, looking back at his most famous court case dur- ing a conversation in his big Capitol office, a comfortable beige room enriched by leather upholstery, gleaming silver and golden drapes. There were those who agreed, though the case against Beck- with wond up remanded to the file, where it remains in limbo. BECKWITH is still a salesman, having switched from fertilizer to hoats. Though he didn't attend the trials, Charles Eers remembers them well. "What Waller did was very un- usal for that time," he said. "THAT'S WHY I guess that deep down inside I will always have a tender feeling for Waller, no matter how bad he beat me in the governor's race." Change - outward change, at least - is on every side. Evers, whose paneled office is hung with big blowup photo- graphs of his campaigns, s a i d the mere fact that Waller is now governor shows how much white attitudes had changed. "HERE'S A MAN who tried to convict a white man charged with kiling the state's most hated black man," he said. "Then he can turn around less than 10 years later and run for gover- nor and win." The scene now includes dese- gregated schools, black patrons in "white" restaurants, 300,000 black voters . . One of Mayor Evers' bitter me- mories is that election arithmetic showed that a third of those black voters cast their ballots for the white candidate when Evers, running as an Independent, -lost to Waller in the 1971 gubernator- ial race. BUT THERE are a growing number of elected black officials. Two more black mayors were elected last week, relieving Evers of his newspaper title of The Only Blac Mayor of a Bi- racial Town in Mississippi. To Evers, a veteran of days when civil rights workers faced danger, the most fundamental and revealing change is that no one appears interested in killing him these days. HE IS NO LONGER worried about keeping a gun handy on all occasions. "I feel safer going all over the state. of Mississipitan Ieelt walking down any avenue in New York, Chicago, Detroit or New Orleans," he said. "This state has changed enough to where I'd rather live in Mississippi than walk in New - York one night." BUT THE LAW THAT PROVIDES FOR REWARD HAS GONE ALMOST UNNOTICED TU1E WATER ACT of 1899 made it unlawful "to throw, discharge, or deposit any refuse matter of any kind or description whatever into any navigable water of the United States." The only exception is when a permit to pollute is obtained from the Army Corps of Engi- neers. kJ 0 TO 0 ADAY $ 59O The law makes every individual and corporate polluter subject to a fine of 500 to 2,500 dollars for each day of the violation. And whoever catches the polluter can get half the fine as a reward. There are over 40,000 industrial polluting plants in this country operating outside the law. If you want to know how to catch them write for The Bounty Hunters' Guide on Water Pollution, The Project on Clean Water, Natural Resources Defense Council, 36 West 44th Street, New York, N.Y. 10036. The best way to fight water pollution is to make your own waves, Prepared by thi Stern Concern. Space contributed by The Michigan Daily