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f ' The Chicago Vol. 3, No. 29 Published Weekly Eviction panic hits tenants Star story brings SIOO Invalid finds way to aid youths raided by police vC bed-ridden invalid, moved by a story in The Chicago Star, this week took his place in the j fight for free- H dom of assem- J bly in Chicago j)* -w —and won the praise of tne city's liberals He was Ed ward J. Mc jp Guriy, who IHBHB has been oon- H. B. Ritman *“\ ed f bed at 508 W 78th for years by chronic ill ness. When hie copy of The Star arrived last week, McGurty read with interest an article which told how 13 young Wal lace supporters planned to file suit for more than half a mil lion dollars damages because they had been illegally arrested while holding a Youth for Wal lace meeting in a private home. * * * UNABLE to leave his home and help in the case, McGurty decided that he would take part in his own way. He wrote a letter to H. B. Ritman, chair man of a committee of lawyers in charge of the case. This is what he wrote: "Dear Mr. Ritman: "Having read in The Chicago Star this morning of the legal move to recover for unwarrant able arrest of a group at 5511 Kenwood, I am sending you. unsolicited, a check for SIOO to aid in legal expenses. "X am permanently confined Plan 'Dems for Wallace' See Page 3 Chicago, July 17.1948 ★Edition Fir* Cents to my home by illness, and this is the only way I can help. "Yours for progress, Edward J. McGurty." * * * RITMAN replied: “Your contribution is, of course, very generous, but the spirit which motivated your ac tion is even more inspiring to all of us. "It is people like you who make all struggle worthwhile." » * * THERE were other develop ments in the case too. At the request of Police In spector Edwin J. Daly, Ritman agreed to withhold legal action for “a few days” until Daly could complete his investigation of the police raid. Daly, who has already ad mitted that the raid was "ill advised," has concluded his questioning of Capi. Malt Mur phy and other policemen of the Hyde Park station. Now he is getting statements from the students who were arrested. As progressives awaited Daly’s report to Commissioner John C. Prendergast, a number of influential newspapers blast ed the storm-troopers tactics of the police. * * * THE Chicago Defender, Negro weekly, charged that ‘ the vague charge of disorderly conduct” placed against the students — and later dismissed in court— was a “veil” for the real reason for the arrests: “the presence of a Negro” at the Youth for jEk JU 'So 13ia the people** viewpoint -—- | I | P Wallace meeting. The article was the Defender's main news story of the week. The Sentinel, which has the largest circulation bf any Eng lish-language Jewish weekly in the U.S., also hit the police raid. The Sentinel’s editor, J. I. Fishbein, pointed out in an edi torial: “Most of those arrested hap pened to be Jews. Undoubtedly, this was one of the most de cisive factors motivating Capt. Murphy. "The 'good' captain knows a Hitlerite conception of a 'Commie' when he sees one— especially if the name happens to be 'Rosenbaum,' Blumen lhal.' ‘Wolfson’, or 'Fineberg.'" * * * THE Lawndale News and the West Town Herald, West Side community newspapers both discussed the case in front page columns written by Morris Kap lan, editor of both weeklies. "Perhaps there should be a special hour or two reserved for silent contemplation of the Bill of Rights by Chicago's policemen," Kaplan suggested. He called the police raid "un- American and undemocratic." Kaplan also quoted the Amer ican Civil Liberties Union as denouncing the police raid, which the ACLU called “a shocking violation of personal civil rights, approximating the conduct of the Gestapo.” The Civil Rights Congress, in cooperation with the Progres sive Party, is handling the case. By ISABEL CARR Big time realtors are riding the crest of a new wave of evictions in Chicago. July, which brought Chicagoans oppressive heat and electrical storms, brought also a record flood of 570 evic tions on the first day of the month. A survey by The Chicago Star showed that the Muni cipal Courts have handled an average of 300 eviction cases a day since July 1. Most affected by the flood of evictions is the South Sid- Negro community, where, a recent survey showed, 1,000 pending eviction cases will find at least 7,000 persons home less by Jan. 1, 1949, if the courts decide in favor of landlords. * * * ACCOMPANYING evictions are increased rents of the majority of Chicago tenants. Eighty per cent of all rent increase applications by landlords are being granted almost automatically by the Office of Housing and Rent Control. The eviction rush and higher-than-ever rents are the direct result of passage, April 1, by the bipartisan 80th Sec Page DEM LEADER Howard McGrath (center) couldn't even fake a emile for reporters at a convention press conference in Philadelphia—not with that king-si*e Truman poster breathing down the back of hi* neck.