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Griffin Daily News
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20
Wednesday, July 30, 1969
Rev. A. D. King
Was Drinking
Before Death
ATLANTA (UPI) — The late #
Rev. A. D. King, only brother of
slain civil rights leader Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr., had
been drinking at the time of his
backyard pool accidental drown- •
ing July 21, the Fulton County
Medical Examiner said Tues
day.
The autopsy showed the cause •
of death to'be accidental drown
ing but the blood sample indi
cated 0.27 per cent alcohol con
tent, said Dr. Tom Dillion. Such ,
an amount is more than twice
the content needed for a drunk
driving conviction under Geor
gia law.
The Rev. King’s body was *
found in the morning, clad only
in his undershorts, by his three
youngest children. Friends said
the Rev. King came home late •
and took a midnight swim in
the recently completed pool.
King played a vital back
ground role in his brother’s a
more highly publicized civil
rights actions. He helped orga
nize the famous Birmingham,
Ala. demonstrations in 1963 and #
served as midwest organizer for
the 1968 Poor People’s march.
In the interim, King preached
in Louisville, Ky. at the Zion
Baptist Church and remained •
highly active in the civil rights
movement.
After his brothers death by. a
sniper’s bullet in Memphis, «
Tenn, in April 1968, the younger
King returned to Atlanta and
took up his slain brother’s role
as co - pastor with their father
at Ebenezer Baptist Church.
He also took a more active
part in the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, the civil
rights organization founded and *
led by his brother.
At the time of the Charleston,
S.C. hospital workers strike
earlier this year, he appeared *
alongside SCLC’s new chief, the
Rev. Ralph Abernathy.
•
Fulton County
Bows To HEW
On School Close'
ATLANTA (UPD— U.S. Rep. •
Fletcher Thompson, R-Ga., de
clared Tuesday that the Fulton
County Board of Education had
bowed to federal demands and t
agreed to close the all - Negro
Eva Thomas High School in
College Park.
County school Supt. Dr. Paul
West said the board had in fact •
agreed to close the school, but
it was the best of three options
offered by the U.S. Department
of Health, Education and Wei- •
fare.
West said the two other alter
natives would lead to either
“resegregation” or artificially ,
altering the school attendance
geographical guidelines.
The first option would have
paired the grades, thus having
black and white youngsters go *
to, for example, the 9th
and 10th grades together in one
school building, with the 11th
and 12th grade students doing *
the same in another building.
West said this would never
work, because white parents
wouldn’t stand for it.
He compared the other alter
natige to an artificial “numbers
game.”
Thompson, taking a much
stronger line than West, said
the whole incident smacked of
“executive tyranny” from
Washington.
He said it only re - enforced *
his intentions to start impeach
ment proceeding against HEW
secretary Robert Finch.
Thompson maintained that the .
board’s action was a “very
painful measure” and “was not
called for by law.”
■■ •
Pope Paul Sets
Stage For Move
To End Civil War
KAMPALA, Uganda (UPI)
Pope Paul’s historic three-day ’
visit to Africa starting Thurs
day will set the stage for one of
the most intensive efforts to
settle the Nigerian civil war. • ■
Officially Pope Paul is flying
here on the first recorded papal
visit to Africa to attend a
meeting of African bishops, ' 1
dedicate a memorial to 22
Roman Catholic Martyrs and
officiate at a mass consecrating
12 new bishops. , ’
The Pope himself has focused
publicly on the Nigerian peace
issue by declaring in Vatican
addresses that his visit could ,
serve no finer purpose than to
aid in settling the two-year
conflict between Nigeria and
Biafra.
Possibilities for peace talks
broadened when Nigeria an
nounced it would send a top
level delegation to Uganda,
headed by Information Minister J
Anthony Enahoro. Biafra said it
was sending three representa
tives.