The Augusta news-review. (Augusta, Ga.) 1972-1985, November 22, 1972, Page Page 4, Image 4

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The Augusta News-Review, November 22, 1972 iiWlt- W IO ; 1 * ! ' jBIX. *_ . r 2 Local alumni listen to Rev. L.R. Neal (R), President oi local P.C. Alumni Chapter, call for Build It Back pledges. FORT GORDON NEW MP SCHOOL COMMANDER NAMED The U.S. Army Military Police School at Fort Gordon gets a new commander in January. A 47-year-old military police officer. Colonel Zane V. Kortum, will come to Fort Gordon from Washington where he is currently assigned as Deputy to the Provost Marshal General at Department of the Army. Colonel Kortum joined the Army as an enlisted man during World War II and rose to the rank of Sergeant First Class while serving in Italy. In 1946, he received a direct commission as a second jOWSII elect K* *I BETTY < B - J -> ANNIS t ° ’K Richmond i County School Board Responsive Responsible Paid Pol. Ad ZthinkX J(\ BIGGER £ NOW / *"7 / FOR THE / / YEARS / / _ AHEAD- / with fi 00 Savings Certificates M at Home Federal Think about your long-range goals What are they 9 A comfortable retirement income 9 College education for your children 9 A long-dreamed-of vacation 9 Big goals need big interest savings and that s why Home Federal offers you 6% Savings Certificates * The 6°- annual interest rate is guaranteed no matter what turns the economy may take and is compounded quarterly For the years anead. now s the time to Think Bigger Open a 6% Savings Certificate at Home Federal ■ss 000 mtmmufn 4 yti' torn or SIOOOO m.n mum 2-w term HOME [FEDERAL SAVINGS, MAIN OFFICE 735 BROAD Forest HlHs: 3224 Wrightsboro Rd (Variety Plaza) • Gordon South 1651 Gordon Highway Village West: 3133 Washington Rd Page 4 lieutenant in the M.P. Corps. In South Vietnam, the colonel commanded the 720th M.P. Battalion and the 89th M.P. Group. He also was Deputy Provost Marshal for the U.S. Army, Vietnam. Colonel Kortum has served in the Office of the Provost Marshal General since graduation from the Army War College in June 1970. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in Military Science from the University of Maryland in 1963. His military education includes graduation from the Army Infantry and Military Police School, the Army Command and General Giles Ends Attica Emory Giles and two unidentified Attica Memorial volunteers cleaning Central Avenue yard. Last Wednesday, Attica Memorial organizer, Emory Giles, announced he was ending his hunger strike which he began on September 11 as a protest for prison reform. Saturday, he was arrested on a marijuana charge. Giles told the News-Review that response to Attica Memorial was “very good” and a number of volunteers had donated time and performed Staff College, the Armed Forces Staff College, and the Defense Language Institute. The U.S. Army Military Police School was founded in 1942 and has been at Fort Gordon since 1948. It is the major training site for all active Army M.P. career and newly commissioned officers, criminal investigators, polygraphy examiners, career noncommissioned officers, correctional specialists, and selected civilians in both physical security and industrial defense instruction. Since its beginning, over 126,000 officers, enlisted men, civilians and allies have been trained at the school. CAROLS BY CANDLELIGHT Residents of the Central Savannah River Area are invited to attend a Christmas music-drama festival to be held at Fort Gordon on December 7. A cast of over 300 persons will participate in the 45 minute program. “Carols by Candlelight” will be presented by the Fort Gordon Chaplain Division Thursday, December 7, at 7:00 P.M. on Barton Field. Featured will be the Newberry Choir, Paine College Chorus, the combined choirs of Fort Gordon, and the First Baptist Church Bell Ringer Choir. Greetings to the participants will be extended by the commander of Fort Gordon, Major General Harley L. Moore Jr. Highlights of the program include a dramatic presentation of the Christmas Story and a community carol sing. The 17 countries which have greatly influenced the celebration of Christmas in the United States will be represented by the S. S.Si TONIC Mil as advertized on WR D W the station with "KICK” odd jobs to raise money for his prison reform organization. The former QIC Outreach Supervisor, who has spent approximately half of his 41 years in prison, was arrested with a companion, Cecilia M. Echols, at 2088 Heckle Street, and charged with possession of marijuana. Two others, Wilmer Finley and Randall Reed were arrested at the same address Friday on a narcotics charge. Family of All Nations as they sing “0 Come All Ye Faithful.” Area residents planning to attend should bring a clear glass container to hold the candle they will receive as the enter the luminary lighted entrance to Barton Field. Persons of all faiths are encouraged to attend this inspiring opening of the Christmas season. Barton Fjeld can be easily located be entering Gate One on the Gordon Highway and following the arrows. Inclement weather location will be Alexander Hall on 4th Infantry Division Road. NEW COMMANDER FOR SIGNAL SCHOOL The commander of the White House Communications Agency has been named to head the Southeastern Signal School at Fort Gordon. Brigadier General Albert Redman Jr. will arrive at Fort Gordon the latter part of January to assume command of the 24-year-old signal training facility. General Redman was born in Dundee, Illinois, on November 3, 1920. He graduated from the University of Maryland in 1963 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Military Service. He earned a Master’s degree in Business Administration from George Washington University in 1967, and is a graduate of the Command and General Staff College, the Armed Forces Staff College, and the Industrial College of the Armed Forces. He enlisted in the Army in 1942, attended Officer’s Candidate School in 1943, and took part in the Normandy Invasion in 1944 as a second Police Report TRIO ARRESTED STEALING MEAT A man and two women were picked up while stealing meat from Krogers at 1529 Walton Way Sunday. When police arrived the manager Lindsey Yeoman had the 3 people in custody. The 2 women had hidden eight rib This Week At Th® Library Model trains produced by members of the Aiken Model Engineering Society will be on display in the glass cases in the second floor lobby of the Augusta-Richmond County Public Library through December. Founded two years ago by a pair of railroad modelers from Aiken, the Society has grown to more than a dozen members. There is no formal organization and no dues are collected, but membership in the National Model Railroad Association is required. Meetings are held in the homes of the members on the first Friday of every month. At present the group has 8 layouts in various stages of development, with at least two more in the serious planning stage. Interests are varied, but the majority is modeling current day railroading, rather than the past. lieutenant. His assignments as a tactical communications officer included action in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Holland, and Germany to include the link-up with the Russians at the Elbe River. Prior to assuming command of the White House Communications Agency, the 5 2-year-old signal officer was assigned to the Joint Chiefs of Staff as Chief of Communications Systems Engineering. He was promoted to the temporary grade of Brigadier General on September 1, 1971. As commander of the Signal School, General Redman will be responsible for a training facility that has graduated over a half-million students since 1948. The school has an authorized staff and faculty of over 3,000 members, both military and civilian. The basic mission is to train tactical communications and offer basic and advanced courses of instruction for Signal Corps officers. __ *Th > « S / |,l A MIND IS A TERRIBLE THING TO WASTE. There are people bom every day who could cure disease, make peace, create ait, abolish injustice, end hunger. But they’ll probably never get a chance to do those things if they don’t get an education. We’re educating over 45,000 students at 40 private, four-year colleges every year. Most of these young people would never get to college on their own. Three quarters need some kind of financial aid. Well over half come from families earning less than $5,000 a year. You can help us help more. By sending a check. To UNCF, 55 East 52nd Street, New York, N.Y. 10022. Whatever you can afford. Because we can’t afford to waste anybody. GIVE TO THE ONITED NEGRO COLLEGE FOND. eye roasts under their clothing. The 3 were identified as Thomas J. McLaurin alias James Jackson of 1419 McCauley Street, Gloria Jean Walker of 1519 Floyd Street and Deadre Thompson of 1498 Carver Drive. Police investigated McLaurins car and found a large quantity of meat inside the car on the back floor. It was later found that the two women were using alias names. They were identified as Ruth Martin and Madelyn Weaver. MAN SHOT A man was shot late Sunday while he was going to visit some friends at the Underwood Homes. Jimmy Small of 683 Gilbert Manor was walking on the 500 block of Fairhope Street in the Underwood Homes when an unknown person fired a small caliber gun at him, hitting him in his right shoulder. He was treated at University Hospital. ROBBED AT KNIFEPOINT A man under the influence of alcohol was robbed at knifepoint when he stopped his car at the corner of 9th and Florence Street. Willie Williams of 1329 Twiggs Street told police that on Saturday around midnight he stopped at the stop sign when 3 men approached his car. One of the men put a knife to his throat and took him out of the car demanding his money. Mr. Willians refused and the men took 5196.00 out of his pocket. The three men got into their 1970 dark blue Mercury and drove East on Florence Street. BUS STATION ROBBERY A woman waiting for her bus to North Carolina was robbed at the Trailways Bus Terminal. Dora Snuggs said a man came up to her at 11:00 P.M. Saturday and told her if she didnt’t give him her purse he would kill her. He then ran South on 7th Street with her purse. Trailways officials made arrangements for Mrs. Snuggs to get back to Rockingham, N.C. BURGLERY IN SCHOOL PARKING LOT A woman’s car was burglarized in the Richmond Academy Parking lot. Joyce Terry said that at about midnight Monday a tall man wearing a long grey coat, white cap and tennis shoes and a woman wearing a brown coat entered her car and stole a cloth coat, an instamatic camera and a box of 32 caliber shells. Miss Terry saw the pair running East toward Baker Avenue. I THE GREATEST BEDROOM BUY IN AUGUSTaJ®L W ■Mina-.r W w QfIMBB P ,>e dft out of the past stress***? peca' 9 drawer triple m aS 'e- won. ■ turn.:,)-. . , 'oda.s cathedral mirror. , MSk'V .. r • armoire and headboard • ther CPS -1-awer ■ S' gi" ndeed Here s beer q t .> W Wmß ierpretat or o’ Spa' s' grdnye.jr roomy spar ** MMafi Mm comfortably sca-ed so. contemporary homes night s’and $69 95 HgBB FURNITURE SHOWROOMS I 844 MODEL ROOMS ON DISPLAY AT ALL TIMES! 1162 BROAD ST. PH. 722-2957 e BEST VALUES | N AUGUSTA FOR OVER A DECADE - EST. 1959 B 1 SHOP SUNDAY 1 P.M TO 5 P.M. MONDAY AND FRIDAY TKB P.Ms ■ Open Sat. 9:30 to 6:00 Si BB ■ <? ■ s2o ° INSTANT CR E D |T WITH ANY MAJOR CHARGE CARD J man indicated, but did not prove, that he was not a student. The coroner said that the dead man had no identification on his person. “He was approximately 20 years old,” the coroner said. “He was a black rrtale, and he had his hair in pigtails, 20 or 30 of them. Reports About Militants “He had three or four keys in his pocket, one of them a car key, perhaps; four or five $1 bills in his pocket and a wrist watch.” Governor Edwards said there had been reports that “outsiders” had been on the campus at Southern in recent days. He said that state intelligence units also had received “unverified reports” that militants from “out of state” were on the way to Baton Rouge. Two black men from Chicago were stopped while trying to enter the campus last night after airline officials reported to the police that the two had checked long boxes as luggage. Governor Edwards said that the men had rifles when stopped at a railroad overpass leading to the campus. Both said they were graduates of the school returning to Baton Rouge for the scheduled football game between Grambling College and Southern that was to have been played tomorrow, but has now been canceled. Most Leave Campus The men told the police that they had brought the rifles to go hunting while on vacation in Louisiana, the authorities said. Neither man was charged because it is not a violation of Louisiana law to carry rifles. The weapons, the Governor said, were taken by Federal agents. Most students had left the campus today in line with an order from Governor Edwards that the school be closed until MRegister H H And ■ H Vote I THE RIGHT TO VOTE WAS WON WITH BLOOD AND LIVES. DON’T THROW IT AWAY. Slain Cont’d. From P -1 after Thanksgiving Day. A few foreign students and several from out of the state, however, were allowed to remain in a freshman dormitory. Apprehensive parents who flocked to Baton Rouge today to pick up their children at the campus were halted by a state police and National Guard roadblock set up on the railroad overpass that leads from U.S. Highway 61 to the college grounds. Guards searched every automobile, and most of the parents were refused admittance to the campus. A huge traffic jam developed at the roadblock as the parents waited for their children to walk to them. Governor Edwards toured the campus again today, holding an impromptu news conference beside a large pool of blood that marked the spot where the two men died. A Negrq workman had tried to brush up the blood without success, and the crimson-stained broom he used was lying on the grass. A smell of tear gas still hung over the campus. Many of the newsmen talking to the Governor began to weep from the effects of the gas, but the Governor seemed to be immune. The mother of Denver A. Smith, the 20-year-old student whose body was identified yesterday, described her son as one who believed “in the right things.” He was not “a militant,” she said. The television film taken on campus yesterday showed Mr. Smith and the other man who was killed running away from tire front of the administration building as the police fired volleys of tear gas toward them. Both fell about the same time, about six feet apart. Mr. Smith’s sister Josephine, 19, also a student at Southern, said that many of the students could not hear what the police were saying when the students were ordered to disperse yesterday. Helicopters flying overhead drowned out the words, she said. Miss Smith said that, as the police started to advance, many students ran into the administration buildings “to avoid any trouble.” Before the fatal confrontation yesterday, there were several weeks of protests on both the campus here and in New Orleans. Students seized buildings, staged mass marches and boycotted classes to support their demands for improved living conditions, better food, broader programs of black studies, and the resignation of Dr. Netterville, the school president, and of Dr. Emmett W. Bashful, the vice president in charge of the New Orleans campus. Both men are black. A number of students have contended that Dr. Netterville yesterday gave them permission to occupy the administration building here.