Newspaper Page Text
Wednesday, Mar. 22, 1967 Griffin Daily News
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v * r z ^ Teen Queens ii £ iiifa i Mil f ^ i
mmu 1 fa * V : : v : v.: pi i HI r. »«-i IS
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pete for the title of :: ,
S$M fa s fa i |BPT* y- M i s s Teen Inter- 1111 I H s
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' farazfa Angeles March 2.3. Some pageant ill fafa i ! , r ■
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m seen here in various 4 fa ii i.
poses, including Miss t 4 V 1
U;,:M Sweden, Birgitta * 1 n .■::i II
1 Haglind, left, with 1SISS5 ii I :fa
some of her country- fa '
Hpi Karen I ■ i -
If men, and M • >;
f Schmidt, Miss > : ii
IUfa Atlantic Seaboard, 1 RH I #iv.:
right, I« I' |:4 fa.
, Wi';> shown after : : 1 11
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mmr'mmfr iflrlnnr'**-'' m A Swiss i i Science-minded. Maud
: x % Wi-i Sejournant, 18, represent
miss aiming '44 fa: ing France, hopes to be
' for the m m xfa. f I ■f either psychiatrist
% m I tional nt e r Teen na- % 1 •fafa# '"1 fa \ \ 1 m pediatrician. a Pretty or
•m title is Alda ■ .. ;i % m Patricia McNulty of Ire
p i Lardelli. Si -4 ■' mm I land, below, carries the
mm i Ii Irish sparkle in her eyes
0 m •: :• 1 m X, * to the pageant.
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A chance for screen exposure may be
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Students Jeer Draft Director
WASHINGTON (UPI) —Draft
Director Lewis B. Hreshey, the
target of strident protest from
the pacifist element on any
campus he visits, is running
into more general and hostile
resentment at Negro colleges.
In the latest incident Tuesday,
Hershey was Jeered from the
with the help of Crouch's experienced
and specially trained personnel.
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24
stage at Howard University by
a screaming group of 50
students who surrounded him
and waved posters saying the
draft was “unfair to the black
man” and “draft beer, not
college students.”
School officials told the crowd
Hershey was “insulted and
would not speak,” and led the
73-year-old general safley out of
the auditorium. There were no
injuries or arrests.
The day before, at predomin
antly Negro Morgan State
College in Baltimore, Hershey
received a less rude but
decidedly cool reception at a
similar r'udent gathering.
He was able to make his talk,
largely a historical survey of
the draft, but elicited strong
criticism for what a student
termed “evasive” answers to
such questions as why was
boxer Cassius Clay being
drafted.
Her'-h^y, who has headed the
Selective Service System for
two decades, appeared at both
schools i'xc!er the sponsorship of
student groups.
The draft director regularly
accepts xdent invitations to
speak, u-’mlly directing his
remarks t d clarifying mis
conceptions he feels are held
about the draft or asserting his
belief in its fairness.
Maddox Is Optimistic
On Industry Outlook
By DON PHILLIPS
United Press International
ATLANTA (UPI) — Gov. Les
ter Maddox returned to Atlanta
late Tuesday from his industry
hunting expedition in New York
and said Georgia has a “good
chance” of getting a major rub
ber products company to
expand its facilities in Georgia.
Maddox declined to reveal the
name of the company, but said
if an expansion were made in
Georgia, it would be near Dub
lin in Laurens County.
The governor said he was al
so considering trips to New Jer
sey and Wisconsin to promote
new industries for Georgia.
The governor said, “because
of the labor arrangements, the
financial arrangements that
have been made in our educa-
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tional system, we have a good
chance,”
Maddox conferred with offi
cials of the company in New
York and said in a news con
ference that Georgia offered a
favorable labor supply for In
dustry and an atmosphere of
racial peace. He suggested this
was due mainly to Georgia’s
tradition of segregation.
Maddox said financial ar
rangements for expansion of the
company had been made and if
it were to be in Georgia, the
company would make the an
nouncement.
Maddox flew to New York
Tuesday after participating in
the announcement of a new
Bibb Manufacturing Co. plant
at Percale, north of Macon.
The plant was financed by the
Monroe Comity Industrial De
velopment Authority by a $13.5
million bond. The money will be
used to construct and equip the
plant which would be leased to
the firm for 20 years.
The governor called the meth
od of financing the plant the
“beginning of something big in
our state.”
Hal Hatcher, chairman of the
authority, said this was the sec
ond largest financing of its type
so far in Georgia.
All tyes Used Auto Parts.
JONES AUTO PARTS
Call 227-6076