Newspaper Page Text
Duval Says MH
Program Setback
SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) —
State Mental Health Director
Dr. Addison Duval said Wednes
day that Georgia’s mental health
program received a setback by
1 - claim of the U. S. Public
Health Service to the Hunter
Air Force Base hospital.
Duval, who hoped to see the
100-bed facility become the nu
cleus of a regional health center
in the Savannah area, said the
move would cost the state $2.5
million.
Savannah officials, however,
were pleased with the agency’s
clalm to the facility, which is
being phased out by the federal
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government. Federal agencies
were given priority over state
and local governments in claim
ing it for use.
Mayor Malcolm Maclean said
he and other community lead
ers, including two veterans’
groups and the Maritime Union,
had been working for two years
to achieve the goal.
The Public Health Service
plans to move its present Sa
vannah hospital to the nearby
base.
Duval said that plans to
establish a mental health cen
ter in Savannah will be con
tlnued.
Dateline
Georgia
Lawmaker Says Session Too Short
SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) —
Chatham County Rep. Albert
W. Kiley said Wednesday that
lawmakers were unable to ade
quately consider bills in the last
General Assembly session be
cause it was 10 days short.
Kiley said that by counting
Saturdays and Sundays as work
days the legislators were not
only shortening the session from
40 to 30 days, but were also
wasting the taxpayers money.
Hoschton Officer Shot In Dispute
ATHENS, Ga. (UPI) — A
Hoschton, Ga., police officer
was in critical condition at St.
Mary’s Hospital early today
after being shot while appar
ently trying to intervene in a
dispute between a 36-year - old
man and his wife.
Authorities at Hoschton said
they were bolding Roger McDon
ald and expected to charge him
during the day.
Outlaw Runs Out Of Luck
ATLANTA (UPI) Jesse
James Roberts Jr., an outlaw
with an uncanny ability to
evade authorities, apparently
ran out of luck last Thursday.
The convicted bank robber
was en route to Atlanta federal
penitentiary from Columbus,
Ga., where U S. Judge J. Rob
ert Elliott had just sentenced
him to 75 years in prison.
‘Head Start’ Cancelled In Gwinnett
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. (UPI)
— The Operation Head Start pro
gram has been canceled by the
Gwinnett County School Board.
The board voted to cancel its
program Wednesday unless the
Office of Economic Opportunity
permits it to operate under pres
ent plans.
Mrs. Leslie Jo Bentley, dlrec-
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“It’s wrong to say that we
work on Saturdays and Sundays
when there isn’t a legislator in
the house on either day,” he
said.
The Savannah lawmaker said
that by eliminating the week
ends as official work time the
session could be stretched to
eight weeks.
“That would give us more
time to carefully weigh bills and
attend to state business as we
should,” he said.
Officer Grady Robertson, 47,
had apparently attempted to
quell an argument between Mc
Donald and his wife, who were
recently separated.
Another officer said Robertson
found them arguing in the yard
of the bouse to which Mrs. Mc
Donald had recently moved and
told the woman to go inside.
Robertson was shot shortly
afterward, the officer said.
Hie Sylvester, Ga., native,
once one of the FBI’s 10 most
wanted criminals, somehow
managed to pop the lock on
his handcuffs with a fountain
pen refill cartridge.
Three lawmen in the car
quickly discovered Roberts had
shed his manacles and kept him
under close guard until he was
safely under lock and key.
tor of the program, told the
board the QEO regional office
in Atlanta accused Gwinnett
County of trying to prevent a
biracial program. The OEO
ordered the county to change its
transportation system.
Operation Head Start is de
signed to aid disadvantaged chil
dren.
BPW Group
To Attend
Convention
The Georgia Federation of Bus
iness and Professional Women’s
Clubs will hold its 47th Annual
State Convention May 13-15 at
the New Albany Hotel In Albany,
Ga.
The Business and Profeesional
Women’s Luncheon Club of Grif
fin will be represented at this
convention by Its president. Miss
Bernice Wise and the following
delegates: Mrs. Lynn Jenkins,
Mrs. Bernice Stinchcomb, Miss
Linda Pryor and Mrs. Linda
Freeman.
Also attending the convention
from the Business and Profes
sional Women’s Luncheon Club
will be its 1963-65 president, Miss
Joyce Howard, who is serving
as state finance chairman of the
Georgia Federation of Business
and Professional Women’s Clubs.
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AYE AYE EYA —Drawing
a bead on stardom, she
hopes, is newcomer from
Finland Eya. That’s all, just
Eya. She’ll appear in an
American thriller after
gaining something of a
name for herself in Paris
as “the most beautiful spy
in France.”
Pythagoras Chapter
No. 10 — R. A. M.
Regular Convo- 1
cation tonight w
All qualified
invited 1
to be present at I
1:M p.
MILLARD BASS, H. P.
J. T. BRAKE, JR., SECTY*
Griffin Daily News
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What can happen to the unsecured human body in an auto
collision is illustrated simply but grimly in this series. A
person in normal sitting position in a car moving at 40
m.p.h. is thrown forward at the moment of impact. Legs
slam into the bottom edge of the dashboard with the possi
bility of both kneecaps fracturing. Pelvic injuries (arrow)
may result. Forward motion stopped by the dashboard, the
body is thrown upward so that head may strike car roof or
windshield while chest smashes into the steering wheel.
Prevention can be a simple matter—fasten seat belts.
Official Contends
Highway F unds Short
SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) - A
state Highway Department of
ficial has contended that a
shortage of federal fluids is de
laying construction of Inter
state 95 in Georgia and that
the road cannot be completed
unless Congress allocates many
more billions of dollars.
John Wilkerson, Highway De
partment design engineer,
painted a gloomy picture for
construction of the interstate
Wednesday at a public hearing.
Wilkerson said, however, that
1-95 will hold top priority for
the state Highway Department.
He said the road cannot be
completed unless Congress allo
cates many more billions of dol
lars for the nation's interstate
system.
Wilkerson said 1-95 will be
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completed ahead of Interstate
85 and Interstate 16 in Georgia
if sufficient federal funds are
forthcoming. President Johnson
has asked Congress for more
funds to complete the interstate
road program by February,
1973.
Florida and South Carolina
road officials reported that all
or most of 1-95 in their states
are either under construction
or in the right of way acquisi
tion stage.
B. A. Scott, division engineer
for the U. S. Bureau of Pub
lic Roads, said the road will
be a significant one nationally
because it will run from north
ern Maine to Miami and will
serve 15 per cent of the na
tion’s population.
Hedy Lamarr Files
False Arrest Suit
Thursday, May 12 , 1966
LOS ANGELES (UPI) —Film
actress Hedy Lamarr's attor
ney said be will file today a $5
million false arrest suit against
the May Co. department store
for accusing the star of
shoplifting last January.
Miss Lamarr, 52, was acquit
ted April 26 by a municipal
court jury after a week-long
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—
trial.
Hie Viennese-born actress
was arrested In the store’s
parking lot last Jan. 27. Store
security personnel said she had
taken $86 in merchandise.
Miss Lamarr said it was a
“misunderstanding” and that
she had intended to pay for the
articles.