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I WCTU Monument '
J The picture on page one shows the top part of a ;
■ memorial at Hill and Solomon streets. It was erected
M by the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, Sept.
M 28, 1916.
Partain Opposes I
Private Hearings
ATLANTA (UPI) — Pardon tioned the propriety of legisla
and Parole Board member tors as lawyers appearing be-
J. O. Partain has advocated fore the board in closed ses
abolishing private hearings and sessions. He said they should be
private conversations about cas- required to state their cases in
es by the board. an open hearing.
“It shall be my personal poli- “They (legislators) control
cy in the future to conduct no our budget and our salaries and
private hearings and to talk to their appearance as attorneys
no individuals about cases ex- col! ld result in a conflict of in
cept at a public hearing before terest,” Partain said,
a full board on a regular meet- “Appearing on behalf of a
ing day,” he said in a letter to constituent without a fee is an
the other board members, Re- entirely different matter,” he
becca Garrett and J. W. Clax- at ided.
ton. Partain also recommended
i The board is currently under that the board change its hear '
investigation by the attorney ingddalest l es ‘° every , Tuesday
general’s office for alleged ™ther than two successive days
irregularities in the handling of e \ Ch m ° nth ’ He said the pres "
cases> ent system requires large num-
bers of persons to wait for
In his letter, Partain ques- hours before they can be heard.
MAD/U/ SEMI-ANNUAL
LAST CALL! HURRY! LAST CALL!
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SHOES s 4J<i
Last Call! Were to sl3 Last Call!
SKIRTS $ A SHELLS j sfl|
PANTS 2 J fl
Jackets £ Jamaicas
SHIFTS BAGS
DRESSES last $F $J $Q
CO-ORDS U 7 ' U
ALL SALES FINAL - ALL SALES CASH
SEE I
NOW layaway
Griffin Daily News
Violence Wanes
In Milwaukee
By LANCE HERDEGEN
MILWAUKEE (UPD—Racial
violence in the riot-stricken
Milwaukee Negro district waned
today. But a Negro was shot to
death by police during the
fourth straight night of fire
bombings and shooting.
Clifford McKissick, 18, a
college student whose father
had begged him to stay home,
was shot and killed while
running from the scene of a
firebombing. His was the fourth
recorded death in the turmoil.
A tough force of 6,700 police
and national guardsmen report
ed a relatively calm night in an
explosive 840-square block area
of the north side, which has
been sealed since Negroes
began a rampage of sniping,
looting and firebombing Sunday
night.
During the four nights of
violence about 100 persons were
injured and arrests numbered
705. The economic loss to the
city, in property damage and
shutdowns during one day of a
24-hour curfew, ran into the
millions of dollars.
Curfew Cleans Streets
Mayor Henry Maier’s city
wide curfew was clamped back
on at 7 p.m., clearing Mil
waukee’s streets. The police and
fire departments reported fewer
arrests and fires during the
night and no recurrence of the
iilib i
WsO< J
LWBOI
■Mses '7/H
••• vw ¥ f4^*^ x i
COLLEGE AT 4 — Kim Ung-
Young, 4, sits among college
students in a philosophy
class at Hanyang University,
Seoul, South Korea, where
he also studies chemistry, 1
physics and advanced math,
it is reported. The youngster
has a command of English
and a bit of German.
3
Thursday, August 3, 1967
.
brutal sniping of the previous
night.
The National Guard was
reported ready to remain on
duty through the weekend while
the mayor called for a new
biracial organization to work at
cooling the discord.
McKissick, an education ma
jor at Wisconsin State Universi
ty, was fatally injured when
police opened fire at four youths
who ran from the rear of a
paint store where three molotov
cocktails had been tossed.
Police said they saw the
firebombs thrown and shouted
at the youths to halt. They were
arrested at the nearby McKis
sick home, where Clifford was
found fatally wounded. He was
taken to a hospital and
pronounced dead.
Taken into custody were his
brother, Alvin, 19, and two 17-
year-olds.
“Don’t Leave House”
“Don’t leave the house,” A.J.
Naturalized
Citizens Named
To Space Crews
By EDWARD K. DELONG
UPI Space Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UPD—An Australian physicist
and a Welsh chemist will
become the first naturalized
U.S. citizens to join the nation’s
spacemen.
A group of 11 new astronauts
will include Dr. John A.
Llewellyn, a professor at
Florida State University in
Tallahassee, a native of Cardiff,
Wales, and Dr. Philip K.
Chapman, a staff physicist at
the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology experimental astro
nomy lab, born in New South
Wales, Australia.
The new astronauts also
include a Houston medical
intern, an Illinois astronomer
and a former Air Force flight
surgeon, informed sources said.
Llewellyn and Chapman have
become U.S. citizens in the last
two and one-half months to
confirm with requirements of
the Scientific Astronaut Selec
tion Committee. Previously, the
Astronaut Corps had been open
only to native-born Americans.
Special Ruling
A special ruling permitted the
pair to apply for the nation’s
astronaut program, despite
their foreign citizenships at the
time they applied.
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA)
confirmed that all five men
identified are in final running
for the new astronaut group.
“Final selection determination
has not been made” however, a
spokesman said.
The other three are:
—Dr. Karl G. Heinze, an
astronomer at Northwestern
University in Evanston, 111.
—Dr. Donald Holmquest, an
intern at Houston’s Methodist
Hospital.
—Dr. William E. Thornton,
until June a flight surgeon at
the Air Force School of
Aerospace Medicine in San
Antonio, Tex.
Wife “Moderately Apprehen
sive”
Selection of the 11 astronauts,
the second class of scientist
spacemen to be picked, will
extend the ranks of astronauts
to 57 members.
Chapman, 32, received a
doctor of science degree from
the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) last June. He
had been at MIT since 1961,
receiving a master of science
degree in 1964.
Llewellyn, 34, teaches chemis
try and astronautics at Florida
State. Llewellyn, whose Welch
born wife is not a U.S. citizen,
has been on the Florida State
faculty since 1964.
Llewellyn said he was looking
forward to his astronaut assign
ment but that his wife was
“moderately apprehensive.”
QUICK QUIZ
Q — ln a total eclipse of the
sun, which side of the sun’s
disk is first covered by the
moon?
_ A—'The west side—or the
right-hand side for observers
in the Northern Hemisphere;
the left-side for observers in
■the Southern Hemisphere. The
moon’s actual motion is from
west to east, and it overtakes
the sun.
Q —Are bears found in
South America?
A—The Andean black bear
or spectacled bear is the only
one.
Q —What does the court
cry, “Oyez,” mean?
A—“ Hear ye!” The cry is
usually uttered three times, to
demand silence in the court
room.
Q —What organ of a bird
produces the feathers?
A—The skin.
McKissick said he told his son.
“I was constantly talking to
him about not taking part.”
Fire engines, some accompa
nied by armed guards, raced
through the night to put out
blazes. But the total was only
about half compared with the
night before.
MID - SUMMER
CLEARANCE SALE!
Thursday - Friday - Saturday
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V 2 17 East Solomon Street Phone 227-2248
The death toll Included a
white policeman and a white
woman shot to death at a home
where police battled a sniper
the first night, and a Negro
woman stricken by a heart
attack while fleeing the scene of
a firebombing.
Milwaukee’s economy was
running millions of dollars Ip
the red because of the mayor’s
restrictive curfew, the most
drastic civilian tactic imposed
in any community in the nation
where racial turmoil has broken
out this summer.
The curfew was on for all but
two hours Monday and was
lifted for the daytime hours
Tuesday and Wednesday. But
Milwaukee, the nation’s 11th
largest city, has been in a state
of emergency since 2:37 a.m.
Monday, shutting down taverns
and liquor stores, stopping sales
of guns and ammunition, and
restricting gasoline sales.