Memphis World Memphis World Publishing Co. 1967-01-07 J. A. Beauchamp ... THE MARCH OF DIMES NF THE NATIONAL, FOUNDATION Death Claims Ten Persons In Georgia Over Holiday A high - impact one - car crash on Atlanta's West expressway Sunday killed three persons and boosted the New Year's holiday weekend traffic death toll to at least 10. The victims were identified as Hosea James Harris, 36, and his wife, Fanny, of Atlanta, and Mrs. Harirs mother, Mrs. Hannah Hooten, of Savannah. A fourth person, Mrs. Minnie Thompson, of Rt. 3, Elberton, was injured. Police said the vehicle went out of control on a rani - slick highway, spun around and crashed into a bridge abutment. A. fire rescue squad had to cut the bodies of the victims from the wrecked car. A two - car crash killed four more persons, including a deputy sheriff and his prisoner. Dead were Eulton Country deputy sheriff Robert Wililam Watson, 42; his prisoner, James A. Dallas, 32, of Atlanta; Johnny Lee Stewart, record and moved 71 passengers and more than two tons of freight 21, of Ellaville, and Mrs. Mary Ann Peavey, 25, of Rt. 2, Fort Valley. passengers in the second vehicle. Three of the victims were killed instantly and rs. Peavey died Sunday. Injured were Bobby. Lee Peavey, the dead woman's husband, and Stewart's wife, Pat. Wirtz And Shriver Announce Coordinated Manpower Plan Secretary Wirtz also announced a appointment of Jack Howard administrator of the newlyated Bureau of Work Programs, which will incorporate these antipoverty programs. Howard, a former West Coast superman, has been administrator of the NYC Shine lishment. otar amounts allocated for all programs in fiscal year 1967 were $423 million. The new plan guarantees minimum involvement of local community action agencies which are given sponsorship and implementtation of the manpower program locally. The local agency will handle recruitment for the programs with the help of U.S. Employment Service personnel attached to the community agencies. The NYC—for Which Congress appropriated $325 million in fiscal 1967—was delegated by OEO to the Labor Department when the anti-poverty program was esta govning the NYC will, be revised to ing them into conformity with he new procedures. Half of the $73 million availble for the Nelson-Scheuer program will be used to finance subprofessional employment for the hard-core unemployed in such elds as health, education, welfare, neighborhood redevelopment and public safely The remainder will a used to expand existing work and training projects, such as Green, Thumb, which provide services to such areas, as beautifica tion and community betterment. Nelson-Scheuer funds are subject to the special state-by-state distribution formula governing most CAP funds. Thus close cooperation between Labor and OEO regional offices will be required. OEO will retain, final, authority over fund availability. The Kennedy-Javits program— or women $25 million is available or eal year 1957—-will support programs combining public and private resources in major assaults in the programs of urban areas which have high concentrations of employment. Regulations and policies governments Nelson and Kennedy- Javits programs, together with all other programs delegated to Labor by OEO, will be developed by a joint task force of the Labor Department and OEO and will become effective upon the joint approval of the Secretary of Labor and the Director of OEO. More detailed operating policies and guidelines also will be drawn up by a joint task force, in these joint task forces, OEO will be represented by the Community Action Program staff. The Department of Labor already administers the Manpower Development and Training Act and will share with the Department of Health, Education and Well are the responsibility for the Work Experience program as a result of amendments in the Economic Opportunity Act. President Johnson last June directed the Department of Labor to wort toward fuller coordination of manpower programs. 100% HUMAN HAIR WIG SALE IMPORTED CAN BE STYLED 6 WAYS $49 Black Or Black Dark Medium or Light Brown For Auburn, Blond or Mixed $10.00 extra ORDER C.O.D Pay postman on delivery $19.99 plus postage. If you send cash or money order company pays postage State Color Order now Satisfaction Guaranteed VALMOR HAIR STYLES Dept. M-433, 2411 Prairie Ave. Chicago, Ill. 60616 NEW NORTHEAST JET IS FASTEST FLYER It took President John Adams many days to commute between Boston and Washington, but last month one of Northeast's new Yellwbird jetliners made the run, in 42 minutes, 25 seconds flat. The new mark, scored by Captain Harold Sevigny, cut more than eight minutes from the previous at the same time Captain Sevrgny noted that the jet picked up a 140 mph tailwind during part of the 393 mile journey and modestly guessed that John Adams could have cut his time a little with such support for the coach and horses. ROUGH SKIN Believe pain and itching soothe quick! Switch to super-refined hospital quality White Petroleum Jelly ¯ Twice as much for 27¢ OF MINOR RHEUMATIC PAIN With proved analgesic action If you suffer the annoying minor pains of rheumatism, neuritis, muscle aches, arthritis, help yourself to blessed temporary relief with proved salicylate action of C-2223. Thousands keep it handy, use it regularly time and time again whenever such pain makes them miserable. Many call C-2223 "the old reliable." Today for pain relief you'll welcome every time, ask for C-2223, At your drugstore. "C-2223" Temporary Relief For Minor Pains Of RHEUMATISM, ARTHRITIS, NEURITIS, LUMBAGO, MUSCLE ACHES Keep War On Poverty At Full Strength, LBJ Urged The social work profession has added its voice to those urging that "the war on poverty" under the Economic Opportunity Act be continued at full strength. In a letter, to President Johnson and, leaders of Congress, Helen Cassidy, president of the 46,000 member organization expressed the concern of me association's board of directors that as a result of re cent Congressional action, communty action programs, in particular are being seriously curtailed. "It is both urgent and necessary that there be no reduction of the impact the Economic Opportunity Act has made on communities by providing a wide range of opportunities and employment to persons from low income areas," Miss Cassidy said. "In many comunities, heard to a substantial degree for the voices, of the poor have been the first time in formulating what can and should be done to help them achieve some control of their own destinies." Through the impact of the OEO program, both governmental and voluntary agency services, are now more accessible more flexibly administered and more attuned to what poor people need and desire. Miss Cassidy declared. However, this is a change that has just begun — a momentum started — which can quickly lost if the promises that initiated the 'War on Poverty are dampened or half-forgotten," she said. The success of the effort by the Department of Housing and Urban Development to create mode neighborhoods in 60 cities under the recently enacted Demonstration Cities Act will be "uniquely dependent upon representative organ action of the people in the neigh borhoods involved," the NASV pointed out. "We see tile community action agencies of OEO providing a key source for such organization and carrying the basic responsibility of advocacy for the people affected, Miss Cassidy said. Rather than continuing budget cuts for the OEO, the NASW urged a "renewed commitment to the 'War on Poverty' through a supplementary appropriation early in 1967 and an increased authorization for fiscal 1968." "In the two short years ove which this program has operated it has abundantly demonstrated it potential," Miss Cassidy said. "In order to make real strides Lower the change which the program promised initially, however, a on range commitment to its particular puroes and methods of operation is demanded." NEW YORK — Two outstanding Negro girls make their debuts as fashion models on the pages of a national publication. Nancy Gist, 18, 5136 South Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, and Daphne Maxwell, 18, 241 West 62 Street, New York, New York, are featured in the January issue of Seventeen Magazine among 17 girls chosen to personify the nation's most accomplished teens. To find these girls, Seventeen's editor enlisted the aid of leading civic, scholastic and service organizations, and thousands of young women under 20 were screened; The winners were brought to New York to pose before the color cameras for the fashion protfolio in the 21st annual "You the Reader" issue, devoted to contributions of talented term in every field. Miss Gist is shown in a ribbed knit top with a span of stripes across the midriff, and a bonded jersey skirt. Miss Maxwell wears a sew-it-yourself overblouse suit. Nancy Gist sophomore class president at Wellesley College and a Wellesley scholar is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Gist. Her father is deputy regional administrator of the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and her mother, Dorothy J. Gist, is administrator of the University of Chicago Department of Pediatrics Woodlawn Clinic. The gifted teen, who plans to major in economics or political science, hopes for a career in law and politics. "A trip to Germany in the summer of 1963 broadened my life considerably," she says. "I lived with different families for three months, traveling and studying to learn the language and culture, firsthand. Since then, my total orientation has been in the direction of meeting, listening to and learning from people." Daphne Maxwell, a freshman scholarship student at Northwestern University, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Green Maxwell, My parents have done such a fine job of bringing me up," she says, "Here are some of the things I have attained due to their love and guid ance: I was accepted at the Bronx High School of Science where; in my senior year. I was elected President of the Senior Class; and also from where I graduated with two wards, I was accepted at every college to which I applied with, a full scholarship to each." The versatile girl is also also an accomplished actress. "I began acting to get over my fear of singing in public," she confides. "Since then I've appeared in 'In White America' off Broadway and I was wardrobe mistress for another offBroadway production. When people hear I'm goig to Northwestern University they think of drama, but I think of kids. I worked on the Upward Bound project there this Simmer, teaching children, to read, directing them in plays, I want to continue working with kids. I light up when I'm with them." Gives Report On Education In Quarterly The State public school system's program for exceptional children started 20 years ago with only 83 teachers but today that number has grown to nearly 1,500 and more are needed. The State Department of Education, in its quarterly" publication. said finding teachers for students who are handicapped or gifted was one of the "thorniest problems" facing educators. Exceptional children fall into a number of categories, ranging from physically handicapped to intellectually superior. But the one thing they all have in common is that they need special handling in the schoolroom. Classes for exceptional children got under way back in 1946 with' just 3 teachers. Now the 1496 available instructors teach classes for 57,249 children in 62 of Floridas 67 counties. In the past few years the department said, both the number and quality, of exceptional child teachers had improved. For inance, there were only two full time professors in Florida teacher, special education in 1963. No, there are 30. The public schools provide exceptional child, education service for the following categories and Laors of children: Mentally retarded educable 12,269, mentally eterded trainable 1,617, physically handicapped 3,535 speech impaired 922 hearing impaired 1,320, visually impaired 640, intelectually superior 1,271, socially and emotionaly disturbed 10 679. The department said it was estimated that only 41 per cent of those children sending specialize services were getting thm, Slighty are than hail of those children. n get no services at all estimated there were 135.42 exceptional children in Flor of 976 were in the public schools. DO'S And Don'ts AN SO, I SEZ Sunday School Lesson In the Lesson we are studying today, as learn of the eaing or the palsied man before the multitude who had come to hear Jesus teach in the Synagogue. While most of those present, had come to worship, to listen and to learn, there were come who had come hoping to catch Jesus in some voaton of the strict Jewish laws. Of this Jesus was fully, aware the public heading of the palsied man, following Jesus for giveness of the man's sins. For — while Jesus was basically concerned with man's spirituals tate — He also Knew that great Controversy raged around His a Messiahship. It is not top surprising there fore: that being greatly impressed by the faith of the sick man's friends demonstrated by the lengths they went to get their compassion into Jesus presence against odds) Jesus demonstrated Divine power invested in Him by heating the man of his physical ions its Knew that the scoifer. world say that it was pasy for just anyone to say: "Your, sins are foreven what was needed to concnce the doubters was a concrete demonstration of His Divine Sonship. For Jesus never for a minute lost sight of the fact that His mission was to bring sight to the spiritually blind, to enrich, the poof of spirit. to heal broken lives, to deliver from tie captivity of sin. The parables e taught, the help that He gave to e materially poor, the restoration of physical sight to the blind—all of these, practical demonstrations had but one end ... the teaching and acceptance of God's Word. in assuming His ministry on earth, Jesus was fulfilling the promise of centuries, All during his dinistry He was careful to proclaim the fact that He was only the instrument of God. What great deeds that were wrought through Him were evidences or God' s caring. The Holly Spirit was at work a Christ's life at must necessary be at work in our lives it we dark approximate Christianity in its basic concept It was fitting that Jesus' should take a public announcement of call to the people of his bira and it s fitting, toway; that, we should relised that every Christians ministry began where the lives and has his being or at as only Christian concepts and Godly living should estimate from the surroundings in which we first become aware of the ultimate of our lives. Concern for their friend was the on for the lengths to which the sick man's friends went to to bring him beere Jesus, and in this regard we would co well to remember that the church has been $4 to as the company of the concerned. We are not good members of that, church if we allow bar concern to center solely around crohal concerns and interests. We need to be exquisitely aware that man's condition will not undergo an essential change until man himself, has changed. And it Was this change that motivated the adent of Jesus and His ministry on earth. The men who brought their, afflicted friend to Jesus were blessed with 'conviction .. conviction that Jesus could help him be whole again; they had FAITH The man who had received healing at the hands of Our Lord also had that faith, and he walked away a living testimony of God's concern for His children. CONCERN and CONVICTION — — these are the basics of Christianity! JESUS BEGINS HIS MINISTRY In the Lesson we are studying today, as learn of the eaing or the palsied man before the multitude who had come to hear Jesus teach in the Synagogue. While most of those present, had come to worship, to listen and to learn, there were come who had come hoping to catch Jesus in some voaton of the strict Jewish laws. Of this Jesus was fully, aware the public heading of the palsied man, following Jesus for giveness of the man's sins. For — while Jesus was basically concerned with man's spirituals tate — He also Knew that great Controversy raged around His a Messiahship. It is not top surprising there fore: that being greatly impressed by the faith of the sick man's friends demonstrated by the lengths they went to get their compassion into Jesus presence against odds) Jesus demonstrated Divine power invested in Him by heating the man of his physical ions its Knew that the scoifer. world say that it was pasy for just anyone to say: "Your, sins are foreven what was needed to concnce the doubters was a concrete demonstration of His Divine Sonship. For Jesus never for a minute lost sight of the fact that His mission was to bring sight to the spiritually blind, to enrich, the poof of spirit. to heal broken lives, to deliver from tie captivity of sin. The parables e taught, the help that He gave to e materially poor, the restoration of physical sight to the blind—all of these, practical demonstrations had but one end ... the teaching and acceptance of God's Word. in assuming His ministry on earth, Jesus was fulfilling the promise of centuries, All during his dinistry He was careful to proclaim the fact that He was only the instrument of God. What great deeds that were wrought through Him were evidences or God' s caring. The Holly Spirit was at work a Christ's life at must necessary be at work in our lives it we dark approximate Christianity in its basic concept It was fitting that Jesus' should take a public announcement of call to the people of his bira and it s fitting, toway; that, we should relised that every Christians ministry began where the lives and has his being or at as only Christian concepts and Godly living should estimate from the surroundings in which we first become aware of the ultimate of our lives. Concern for their friend was the on for the lengths to which the sick man's friends went to to bring him beere Jesus, and in this regard we would co well to remember that the church has been $4 to as the company of the concerned. We are not good members of that, church if we allow bar concern to center solely around crohal concerns and interests. We need to be exquisitely aware that man's condition will not undergo an essential change until man himself, has changed. And it Was this change that motivated the adent of Jesus and His ministry on earth. The men who brought their, afflicted friend to Jesus were blessed with 'conviction .. conviction that Jesus could help him be whole again; they had FAITH The man who had received healing at the hands of Our Lord also had that faith, and he walked away a living testimony of God's concern for His children. CONCERN and CONVICTION — — these are the basics of Christianity! . . . Politics, Race Riots Among Top 10 Stories In Georgia The top news story of 1966 in Georgia was unquestionably politics from the day Ernest Vandiver quit the governor's race through he U. S. Supreme Court ruling hat the legislature could elect the next chief executive. The board of editors of united press International in Atlanta rated the political story No. 1 in the op 10 of the year. The other une, in order of votes received Were: The Atlanta race riots, Dr. Irille H. McKinnon's resignation, as ead of Milledgeville State Hospital the surprise showing of the University of Georgia football team, the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee and the Julian Bond controversy, the Ku Klux Klan trials in Athens, the escapades of bandit. Jesse James Roberts, the precedent-setting Ellaville trial; the Cordele racial uprising and the activities, of desperado Bobby Lee Reynolds. After Vandiver dropped the bombshell that he would not seek the governorship because of recurring heart trouble, there was speculation that Sen. Herman Talmadge would run for governor. But he said he could best serve in Washington, thus setting the stage for former Gov. Ellis Arnall to emerge as a forerunner only to suffer a crushing defeat at the hands of segregationist Lester Maddox in the Democratic runoff. Another surprise of the political year was the showing of State Sen. Jimmy Carter of Plains in the Democratic gubernatorial primary. Relatively unknown, in statewide political circles," he came in a few votes behind Maddox, who gained national fame when he refused to integrate his Atlanta restaurant. The Nov. 8 general election saw Congressman' Howard Callaway become the first serious GOP contender for the governorship in modern times. But neither Maddox nor Callaway polled a majority because of a write-in movement for Arnall. This threw the election into the General Assembly under the Georgia Constitution. But a threejudge federal panel in Atlanta rufed the Legislature could not legally elect the governor. That decision however, was overrulled on appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court. The top story of 1966 will carry over into the new year, with the General Assembly expected to chose the governor in January. The Atlanta riots — placing second in the editors ratings — were first touched off by a white police officer wounding a Negro car theft suspect. Four days later, a white motorist gunned down, two Negro youths in another section of the city, killing one and triggering our nights of rioting. The sudden resignation of Dr. McKinnon, the respected head of the State Mental Hospital at Miledgeville, left many Georgians in shock. He was accused of padding expense accounts. He has not been heard from $4 leaving the state after making good the shortages and receiving a suspended jail sentence. The Georgia Bulldogs scored one of the year's big surprises. Picked to place seventh in the Southeastern Conference, the team wound up in first place and with a Cotton Bowl bid. The Bulldogs ended the season in fourth place nationally, losing only one game, a 7-5 defeat by Miami. The Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee proved to be, a real headline getter after Stokely Carmichael took the reins and "black power" became its cry Julian Bond supported SNCC's denunciation of the U. S. involvement in Vietnam—and as a resuit he was denied his seat in the State House of Representatives. While a court cattle raged, Bond was re-elected to the House in the general election—and the U. S. Supreme Court ruled in December that the House erred in denying the young Negro his seat. The escapades of desperado Jessie James Roberts began with bank robberies in Georgia. He was subsequently arrested in Mexico and began, serving his sentence at the Atlanta Federal penitentiary, where he mare a daring over-the-wall escape. He was recaptured a few days' later, riding a bus to Waycross. The Ellaville trial made southern history, A jury of 11 Negroes and one white man convicted one Negro, youth of manslaughter in the murder of a white police officer. A second youth pleaded guilty to the same charge. In Cordele, Negroes demonstrated for several days, causing a sensation which the American and Georgia nags were ripped from a pole at the courthouse. Another bank robber Bobby Lee Reynolds, shared the limelight with Jesse James Roberts Reynolds was apprehended outside an Atlanta bank shortly after his third robbery. He was sentenced to life in prison, but tried mil Reiusville, and remained at large as the year ended. VANDIVER BOMBSHELL The top news story of 1966 in Georgia was unquestionably politics from the day Ernest Vandiver quit the governor's race through he U. S. Supreme Court ruling hat the legislature could elect the next chief executive. The board of editors of united press International in Atlanta rated the political story No. 1 in the op 10 of the year. The other une, in order of votes received Were: The Atlanta race riots, Dr. Irille H. McKinnon's resignation, as ead of Milledgeville State Hospital the surprise showing of the University of Georgia football team, the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee and the Julian Bond controversy, the Ku Klux Klan trials in Athens, the escapades of bandit. Jesse James Roberts, the precedent-setting Ellaville trial; the Cordele racial uprising and the activities, of desperado Bobby Lee Reynolds. After Vandiver dropped the bombshell that he would not seek the governorship because of recurring heart trouble, there was speculation that Sen. Herman Talmadge would run for governor. But he said he could best serve in Washington, thus setting the stage for former Gov. Ellis Arnall to emerge as a forerunner only to suffer a crushing defeat at the hands of segregationist Lester Maddox in the Democratic runoff. Another surprise of the political year was the showing of State Sen. Jimmy Carter of Plains in the Democratic gubernatorial primary. Relatively unknown, in statewide political circles," he came in a few votes behind Maddox, who gained national fame when he refused to integrate his Atlanta restaurant. The Nov. 8 general election saw Congressman' Howard Callaway become the first serious GOP contender for the governorship in modern times. But neither Maddox nor Callaway polled a majority because of a write-in movement for Arnall. This threw the election into the General Assembly under the Georgia Constitution. But a threejudge federal panel in Atlanta rufed the Legislature could not legally elect the governor. That decision however, was overrulled on appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court. The top story of 1966 will carry over into the new year, with the General Assembly expected to chose the governor in January. The Atlanta riots — placing second in the editors ratings — were first touched off by a white police officer wounding a Negro car theft suspect. Four days later, a white motorist gunned down, two Negro youths in another section of the city, killing one and triggering our nights of rioting. The sudden resignation of Dr. McKinnon, the respected head of the State Mental Hospital at Miledgeville, left many Georgians in shock. He was accused of padding expense accounts. He has not been heard from $4 leaving the state after making good the shortages and receiving a suspended jail sentence. The Georgia Bulldogs scored one of the year's big surprises. Picked to place seventh in the Southeastern Conference, the team wound up in first place and with a Cotton Bowl bid. The Bulldogs ended the season in fourth place nationally, losing only one game, a 7-5 defeat by Miami. The Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee proved to be, a real headline getter after Stokely Carmichael took the reins and "black power" became its cry Julian Bond supported SNCC's denunciation of the U. S. involvement in Vietnam—and as a resuit he was denied his seat in the State House of Representatives. While a court cattle raged, Bond was re-elected to the House in the general election—and the U. S. Supreme Court ruled in December that the House erred in denying the young Negro his seat. The escapades of desperado Jessie James Roberts began with bank robberies in Georgia. He was subsequently arrested in Mexico and began, serving his sentence at the Atlanta Federal penitentiary, where he mare a daring over-the-wall escape. He was recaptured a few days' later, riding a bus to Waycross. The Ellaville trial made southern history, A jury of 11 Negroes and one white man convicted one Negro, youth of manslaughter in the murder of a white police officer. A second youth pleaded guilty to the same charge. In Cordele, Negroes demonstrated for several days, causing a sensation which the American and Georgia nags were ripped from a pole at the courthouse. Another bank robber Bobby Lee Reynolds, shared the limelight with Jesse James Roberts Reynolds was apprehended outside an Atlanta bank shortly after his third robbery. He was sentenced to life in prison, but tried mil Reiusville, and remained at large as the year ended. RIOTS SECOND The top news story of 1966 in Georgia was unquestionably politics from the day Ernest Vandiver quit the governor's race through he U. S. Supreme Court ruling hat the legislature could elect the next chief executive. The board of editors of united press International in Atlanta rated the political story No. 1 in the op 10 of the year. The other une, in order of votes received Were: The Atlanta race riots, Dr. Irille H. McKinnon's resignation, as ead of Milledgeville State Hospital the surprise showing of the University of Georgia football team, the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee and the Julian Bond controversy, the Ku Klux Klan trials in Athens, the escapades of bandit. Jesse James Roberts, the precedent-setting Ellaville trial; the Cordele racial uprising and the activities, of desperado Bobby Lee Reynolds. After Vandiver dropped the bombshell that he would not seek the governorship because of recurring heart trouble, there was speculation that Sen. Herman Talmadge would run for governor. But he said he could best serve in Washington, thus setting the stage for former Gov. Ellis Arnall to emerge as a forerunner only to suffer a crushing defeat at the hands of segregationist Lester Maddox in the Democratic runoff. Another surprise of the political year was the showing of State Sen. Jimmy Carter of Plains in the Democratic gubernatorial primary. Relatively unknown, in statewide political circles," he came in a few votes behind Maddox, who gained national fame when he refused to integrate his Atlanta restaurant. The Nov. 8 general election saw Congressman' Howard Callaway become the first serious GOP contender for the governorship in modern times. But neither Maddox nor Callaway polled a majority because of a write-in movement for Arnall. This threw the election into the General Assembly under the Georgia Constitution. But a threejudge federal panel in Atlanta rufed the Legislature could not legally elect the governor. That decision however, was overrulled on appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court. The top story of 1966 will carry over into the new year, with the General Assembly expected to chose the governor in January. The Atlanta riots — placing second in the editors ratings — were first touched off by a white police officer wounding a Negro car theft suspect. Four days later, a white motorist gunned down, two Negro youths in another section of the city, killing one and triggering our nights of rioting. The sudden resignation of Dr. McKinnon, the respected head of the State Mental Hospital at Miledgeville, left many Georgians in shock. He was accused of padding expense accounts. He has not been heard from $4 leaving the state after making good the shortages and receiving a suspended jail sentence. The Georgia Bulldogs scored one of the year's big surprises. Picked to place seventh in the Southeastern Conference, the team wound up in first place and with a Cotton Bowl bid. The Bulldogs ended the season in fourth place nationally, losing only one game, a 7-5 defeat by Miami. The Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee proved to be, a real headline getter after Stokely Carmichael took the reins and "black power" became its cry Julian Bond supported SNCC's denunciation of the U. S. involvement in Vietnam—and as a resuit he was denied his seat in the State House of Representatives. While a court cattle raged, Bond was re-elected to the House in the general election—and the U. S. Supreme Court ruled in December that the House erred in denying the young Negro his seat. The escapades of desperado Jessie James Roberts began with bank robberies in Georgia. He was subsequently arrested in Mexico and began, serving his sentence at the Atlanta Federal penitentiary, where he mare a daring over-the-wall escape. He was recaptured a few days' later, riding a bus to Waycross. The Ellaville trial made southern history, A jury of 11 Negroes and one white man convicted one Negro, youth of manslaughter in the murder of a white police officer. A second youth pleaded guilty to the same charge. In Cordele, Negroes demonstrated for several days, causing a sensation which the American and Georgia nags were ripped from a pole at the courthouse. Another bank robber Bobby Lee Reynolds, shared the limelight with Jesse James Roberts Reynolds was apprehended outside an Atlanta bank shortly after his third robbery. He was sentenced to life in prison, but tried mil Reiusville, and remained at large as the year ended. COURT BATTLE The top news story of 1966 in Georgia was unquestionably politics from the day Ernest Vandiver quit the governor's race through he U. S. Supreme Court ruling hat the legislature could elect the next chief executive. The board of editors of united press International in Atlanta rated the political story No. 1 in the op 10 of the year. The other une, in order of votes received Were: The Atlanta race riots, Dr. Irille H. McKinnon's resignation, as ead of Milledgeville State Hospital the surprise showing of the University of Georgia football team, the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee and the Julian Bond controversy, the Ku Klux Klan trials in Athens, the escapades of bandit. Jesse James Roberts, the precedent-setting Ellaville trial; the Cordele racial uprising and the activities, of desperado Bobby Lee Reynolds. After Vandiver dropped the bombshell that he would not seek the governorship because of recurring heart trouble, there was speculation that Sen. Herman Talmadge would run for governor. But he said he could best serve in Washington, thus setting the stage for former Gov. Ellis Arnall to emerge as a forerunner only to suffer a crushing defeat at the hands of segregationist Lester Maddox in the Democratic runoff. Another surprise of the political year was the showing of State Sen. Jimmy Carter of Plains in the Democratic gubernatorial primary. Relatively unknown, in statewide political circles," he came in a few votes behind Maddox, who gained national fame when he refused to integrate his Atlanta restaurant. The Nov. 8 general election saw Congressman' Howard Callaway become the first serious GOP contender for the governorship in modern times. But neither Maddox nor Callaway polled a majority because of a write-in movement for Arnall. This threw the election into the General Assembly under the Georgia Constitution. But a threejudge federal panel in Atlanta rufed the Legislature could not legally elect the governor. That decision however, was overrulled on appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court. The top story of 1966 will carry over into the new year, with the General Assembly expected to chose the governor in January. The Atlanta riots — placing second in the editors ratings — were first touched off by a white police officer wounding a Negro car theft suspect. Four days later, a white motorist gunned down, two Negro youths in another section of the city, killing one and triggering our nights of rioting. The sudden resignation of Dr. McKinnon, the respected head of the State Mental Hospital at Miledgeville, left many Georgians in shock. He was accused of padding expense accounts. He has not been heard from $4 leaving the state after making good the shortages and receiving a suspended jail sentence. The Georgia Bulldogs scored one of the year's big surprises. Picked to place seventh in the Southeastern Conference, the team wound up in first place and with a Cotton Bowl bid. The Bulldogs ended the season in fourth place nationally, losing only one game, a 7-5 defeat by Miami. The Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee proved to be, a real headline getter after Stokely Carmichael took the reins and "black power" became its cry Julian Bond supported SNCC's denunciation of the U. S. involvement in Vietnam—and as a resuit he was denied his seat in the State House of Representatives. While a court cattle raged, Bond was re-elected to the House in the general election—and the U. S. Supreme Court ruled in December that the House erred in denying the young Negro his seat. The escapades of desperado Jessie James Roberts began with bank robberies in Georgia. He was subsequently arrested in Mexico and began, serving his sentence at the Atlanta Federal penitentiary, where he mare a daring over-the-wall escape. He was recaptured a few days' later, riding a bus to Waycross. The Ellaville trial made southern history, A jury of 11 Negroes and one white man convicted one Negro, youth of manslaughter in the murder of a white police officer. A second youth pleaded guilty to the same charge. In Cordele, Negroes demonstrated for several days, causing a sensation which the American and Georgia nags were ripped from a pole at the courthouse. Another bank robber Bobby Lee Reynolds, shared the limelight with Jesse James Roberts Reynolds was apprehended outside an Atlanta bank shortly after his third robbery. He was sentenced to life in prison, but tried mil Reiusville, and remained at large as the year ended. ALLURING BOUFFANT DYNEL WIG No. 766A $12.50 For complete Illustrated Catalog of Hair Styles Wigs Hair caps. and attachment — Send name and address. It's yours FREE upon request Just write Gold Medal Hair Prod. Inc WHEN YOUR SKIN CRIES HELP Relieve the Itching Misery of "Upset Skin" Attacks You don't have to live with the awful torment of skin upset by the agonies of itching of certain minor skin irritations Palmer' "Skin Success" Ointment is the proven way millions get fast, blessed relief when their skin cries "help" As this internationally famous skin medication cases the itching, and induces fast relief from itching miseries, you'll feel better fast! Doctors know scratching can disfigure as well as cause dangerous infection. You owe it to your comfort, and appearance, to let "Skin Success" Ointment help make your life live able again Palmer's "Skin Success" Ointment. Only 44¢ Save 77¢ by buying the large economy size with four times much for only 99¢ Satisfaction guaranteed or yourmoney refunded. ...plus head-to-toe protection with the deep-acting foamy medication of "Skin Success" Soap. It beauty bathes while it fights germs that often aggravate perspiration odors ...makes you sure you're nice to be near. Palmer's "Skin Success" Soap. DEPENDABLE QUALITY SKIN CARE PRODUCTS SINCE 1840 LOVELIER COMPLEXION Relieve the Itching Misery of "Upset Skin" Attacks You don't have to live with the awful torment of skin upset by the agonies of itching of certain minor skin irritations Palmer' "Skin Success" Ointment is the proven way millions get fast, blessed relief when their skin cries "help" As this internationally famous skin medication cases the itching, and induces fast relief from itching miseries, you'll feel better fast! Doctors know scratching can disfigure as well as cause dangerous infection. You owe it to your comfort, and appearance, to let "Skin Success" Ointment help make your life live able again Palmer's "Skin Success" Ointment. Only 44¢ Save 77¢ by buying the large economy size with four times much for only 99¢ Satisfaction guaranteed or yourmoney refunded. ...plus head-to-toe protection with the deep-acting foamy medication of "Skin Success" Soap. It beauty bathes while it fights germs that often aggravate perspiration odors ...makes you sure you're nice to be near. Palmer's "Skin Success" Soap. DEPENDABLE QUALITY SKIN CARE PRODUCTS SINCE 1840 SPRINGLESS SEATS In the future, your car may have springless seats, according to Modtin a lasts, a McGraw-Hill pupilcation, One company has developed new seats made on urethane foam cushioning with a vny cover which reportedly are more comfortable limit seats with springs, In addition, a springless seat lends itself it a variety of new designs which were not possible with the conventional car seat. ISABELLA of PARIS