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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1965)
Home Edition OF DEAT THESTORIE THEY PULLDOURY SORORITY LAWN DECORATION WINNER Zeta Tau Alpha Produced This Display Recovering LBJ Resumes Work WASHINGTON (AP) dent Johnson worked at the na- tion's business in his green lounge chair and his hospital bed Saturday, while his family doctor said the President is showing unusual recuperative powers. At the same time. Dr. George C. Cain revealed that Johnson has still another kidney stone- one that has been there for years. He said doctors do not plan to remove it. And Cain indicated Johnson's doctors expect he will be a hard man to keep down. Presi- FATIGUED He said Johnson is fatigued from Friday's operation and had a minor headache, but add- ed "that is to be expected in a man just out of surgery. "You know the President," he said, "and to predict when he's going to get out, I don't know. We're going to keep him by main force until we feel it's safe." White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers said Johnson is receiving capsule intelligence reports on the world situation, and is in shape to do whatever needs to be done. "I assume that every decision that the President needs to take and every action the President needs to make will be done," he said. "I'm sure he will be carrying out his usual activities, which he's doing, really, to some ex- tent this morning," said Dr. Cain. Surgeons removed John- son's faulty gall bladder, which contained one stone, and took another stone from a tube that leads away from the kidney in a two-hour and 15-minute opera- tion Friday morning. Awake before dawn Saturday, Johnson signed 13 bills, read mail and conferred with aides. "The President is not a usual man," said Cain. "He has cer- tainly shown, I think, unusual recuperative powers. "I know of no way he could be doing any better than he is," Cain said. "We're very pleased." After the White House showed newsmen colored slides of John- son's blood-encrusted gall blad- der and of the quarter-inch stone removed from his right ureter, Cain came up with his surprise. KIDNEY STONE "There is a stone in the left kidney," he reported. "It's been there for years." But Cain said doctors do not expect it will be necessary to remove that stone. "It's been watched carefully for years," he said. "It has not changed." White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers said Cain's re- port was the first he had heard of the additional stone. It sent him off for clarification.. Moyers returned to report that doctors have known of the stone since 1955, when Johnson had an operation for removal of another kidney stone. He said it has remained the same size about one centime- ter in diameter for the past five years. "It appears to be trapped in the area of the par- enchyma," Moyers said. "The parenchyma is the meat part of the kidney, which produces the urine." NO INFECTION Johnson, he said, has experi- enced no symptoms from the stone, and examinations indi- cated it has led to no infection. Johnson, still taking his nour- ishment intravenously, was up early and soon on his feet for a few paces in his suite at Bethes- da Naval Hospital. Bennett Is Named Production Manager James Bennett has been named production manager of the Athens Banner-Herald, publisher R. W. Bailes Jr, an- nounced today. Bennett, 40, was assistant production manager of the Augusta Chronicle and Herald. before coming to Athens. An employe of the Augusta news- papers since 1949, he has served as press room superin- tendent and as press room forman of both the day and night shifts at the Augusta newspapers. Bennett, a native of Free- land, N.C., began his newspa- per career in 1945 with the Wilmington, N.C. Morning Star. He attended Waccamaw High School in Ash, N.C. and has attended several schools of industrial management. Bennett is a member of the North Augusta Chamber of Commerce, a past master of the Acacia Masonic Lodge in North Augusta and has served as chairman of the Key Men Committee of the Industrial Management Club of Augusta. He is a member and deacon Vol. CXXXIV, No. 164. ATHENS BAN JAMES BENNETT of the First Baptist Church of North Augusta, where he served as assistant superin- tendent and as associate di- rector of the adult training union department. He and his wife, the former Jean Best of Wilmington, N.C., have three children: Kay, 17, Kathy, 13, and Jim, 9. PHONE 543-2512 FIVE FINALISTS FOR MISS HOMECOMING 1965 TITLE PRESENTED AT HALFTIME Ann Brown Jane Kimbrell Celeste Shoffner Bickie Rutherford Frances Gay Seeing Sites Old grads will find well remembered scenes such as the University Arch and the Chapel and new sights like the Coliseum and the Phar- macy buildings on a full page of pictires on page 21. Other more or less famil- iar views on the page are an aerial view of the cam- pus, a corridor at the new apartments for married stu- dents, the Journalism School, pool and apartment buildings at University Gar- den Apartments, the Science Center, Athens Area Chamber of Com- merce, Museum of Art, Center for Continuing Edu- cation, Founders' Memorial Garden, halftime show at Sanford Stadium, and the University President's home. The pictures were collect- ed and arranged by Nick Colquitt of REM Studio for use on postcards which he now has available. Vatican Council Hurrying VATICAN CITY (AP) The Vatican Ecumenical Council en- ters its fourth year Monday, certain to complete by Christ- mas its goal of launching the Roman Catholic Church into a new orbit of modernization and renewal. With the 2,200 council bishops working at unprecedented speed, all the remaining docu- ments with one possible ex- ception are expected to be finished by late December. The range of issues covered and those still to come is vast. The issues hold profound mean- ing not only for Roman Catho- lics but for the rest of the world. as well. By the time the council ends the leaders of the Catholic Church will have come up with conclusions on worship, educa- tion, Church government, reli- gious liberty, relations with Protestants, Jews and other non-Christians, and countless other issues. For the first time in its histo- ry, the church will have been. pushed by its leaders into a di- rect embrace with the rest of the religious and secular world. REVOLUTION It is nothing less than a revo- lution, accomplished in a re- markably short time. When Pope John XXIII opened the council on Oct. 11, 1962, no one knew how long it would last. But the talk was of at least five years, and a duration of even 10 or 20 years was not ruled out. There was fumbling and un- certainty at first as cardinals, patriarchs, archbishops, bishops and heads of religious orders assembled for the first ecumeni- cal council since 1869-70. Gradually, the council fathers found their range and blasted long traditions of secrecy, hesi- tation and indirection. The bishops set up panels to inform the world through the daily press of what the council was doing. SERVING ATHENS AND I ATHENS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1965 Bulldogs Fight Back To Overcome Tigers Banner-Herald Photo by R KIRBY MOORE BOOMS ONE OF THREE PUNTS DOWNFIELD He averaged 47.7. Guard John Kasay (66) Takes Off. n Crawfordville Eight Negroes Arrested After Sidewalk Sit - In CRAWFORDVILLE, Ga. (AP). A sidewalk sit-in led to the ar- rest of eight young Negroes Sat- urday and a threat by Negro leaders that more attempts will be made to eat in a private din- ing club in this rural town in east Georgia. Helmeted state troopers took the young demonstrators-four boys and four girls-to jail aft- er the woman proprietor of the club told the Negroes she had no more membership cards and they sat down in front of the business place. Police Chief J. W. Durham said the demonstrators were disturbing the peace. Later, about 35 Negroes staged a protest rally outside the one-story Taliaferro County jail and a Negro leader, the Rev. Charles Brown of Ameri- cus, Ga., said: "I have seen a lot of white people and the white people in this town are the stupidest I've ever seen." Another Negro spokesman said the demonstrations at the private club, once known as the Liberty Cafe, will continue. "If we can't eat in that place Monday morning, we will have so many people sitting in front of there you will think it's the Waldorf Astoria," he said. About 30 state troopers ringed the Negro group as it stood by the jail and later moved to one side of the red-brick county courthouse. The troopers ignored one white man who stood in the courtyard and shouted that of- ficers were "pampering the Ne- groes." Negroes at the rally were also told that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., president of the Southern Christian Leadership Confer- ence, will speak in Crawford- ville at 8 p.m. Monday. SCLC has been pushing the school de- segregation campaign in Talia- ferro County. Only about a dozen white per- sons stood by as the eight young See SIT-IN, page 2 U. S., Red Convoys Hit In Vietnamese Combat SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)-Hazards of war caught up with two big truck convoys-one American and the other in Com- munist service-in operations reported Saturday. Viet Cong guerrillas ambushed a 20-truck transport company of the U. S. 1st Infantry Division about 40 miles north of Saigon Friday night. A military spokesman said the Americans suffered moderate casualties before fighting their way out of the trap. As if in response, eight U. S. Air Force jets pounced before dawn on a North Vietnamese convoy of more than 30 trucks on a coastal highway 160 miles north of the border. The spokesman said they destroyed 11 trucks and damaged 21. Thousands of American and Australian troops pressed an of- fensive in the Ben Cat area 30 miles north of Saigon, on the edge of the guerrilla-infested D Zone. Contact was reported light, though helicopters ferrying sup- plies to the allies drew heavy ground fire. Georgia Defense Gets Touchdown By STEVE TEASLEY Banner-Herald Sports Editor Seemingly engulfed in a psychological trap for two quarters, Georgia's fourth-ranked Bulldogs bolted briefly away with two touchdowns in less than seven minutes of the third period and whipped Clemson's Tigers, 23-9 here Saturday in Sanford Stadi- um. The trap had been developing all week. Georgia owned three wins, including two big ones over highly ranked Alabama and Michigan, while Clemson had just dropped a 38-6 decision to a not- so-brilliant Georgia Tech team. The situation for an upset was right and Clemson followed the pattern - at least for 30 minutes. DEFENSE SCORES Frank Howard's Tigers left at halftime with a 9-6 lead. It was the first time the Bulldogs had trailed all year, and 45,000 Homecoming fans, a full house, were getting mentally prepared for an upset when that old relia- ble 'Dog defense made its usual spectacular entrance with 3:48 gone in the third quarter. Guard Jimmy Cooley, who said recently he wanted to join defensive line mates George Patton and Dickie Phillips in scoring a touchdown, almost got his wish. The junior guard from Avondale cracked through the line to block a Don Barfield punt which end Larry Kohn pounced on in the end zone, giv- ing the Bulldogs the lead. Bob Etter booted the PAT. It was the first play for Coo- ley since midway the Vanderbilt game when he bruised his hand. Kohn, also in on the rush for Barfield, joins Patton and Phil- lips as defensive linemen who have scored. The other two got TDs versus Alabama and Vandy on intercepted passes. GEORGIA DRIVES Only seven minutes later, Georgia put another seven points on the board when sopho- more fullback Ronnie Jenkins climaxed a short 46-yard driv with a three-yard scoring burst. Etter, who later kicked a 37- yard field goal with one second left in the game, added the ex- tra point. The march came after Clem- son had been driven back to its four and punted. It took the 'Dogs 11 running plays, five in- side the ten to get it in. Etter had his Bulldog conver- sion record in number made consecutively ended after 22 straight when his team scored late in the first quarter. Vandy had opened the point- making up with a 65-yard march finished off by fullback Hugh Mauldin's three yard run. The first Georgia TD came less than four minutes later af- ter a drive of 74-yards. The pay- See TIGERS, page 15. FOOTBALL SCORES Auburn Chattanooga 30 7 Florida 17 Mississippi 0 Duke 21 Pittsburgh 13 Virginia 14 VMI 10 Navy 42 Wm. & Mary 14 North Carolina 10 N.C. State 7 Miss. State 27 Southern Miss. 9 Texas 19 Oklahoma 0 Mich. State 24 Michigan 7 Tennessee 24 S. Carolina Maryland 3 10 Wake Forest 7 Ohio State Illinois Minnesota Indiana Colorado Okla. State Iowa State 8423411766744770 28 14 42 13 -312 34 21 Kansas 1123 2 Missouri 28 Kansas State Purdue 17 lowa California Air Force 24 Nebraska 37 Wisconsin DEATHS Mrs. Ellen Sappington Caok. Atlanta. 998 23-9 ERALD 42 PAGES TODAY LIBRARIES HEY YOU TIGERS... A LITTLE DOG WILL DO YA Banner-Herald Photos by REM FRATERNITY LAWN DECORATION WINNER Sigma Pi Brothers Made This Creation UNIVERSITY UP GEORGIA OCT 11'65 315 WEATHER Mostly fair today, to- night and Monday with mild afternoons cool nights. and Daily. 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