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The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • Page 21
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The Tennessean du lieu suivant : Nashville, Tennessee • Page 21

Publication:
The Tennesseani
Lieu:
Nashville, Tennessee
Date de parution:
Page:
21
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

THI NASHVILLE TENNESSON. Thursday, Oct. 37, 1966 Protestant Historian Meet Slated Here Alabama To Pay Cost of Pupil's Choice on Race of Teacher Interstate System Near Halfway Mark Congo Dignify LTJMBTJMBASHI (formerly Elisabethville). The Congo UP) Neckties must be worn by civil servants of South Katanga province in their offices regardless of the weather in this mile-high capital 11 degrees south of the equator. "Functionaries should always be dignified during service hours," said the government ban on the open shirt collar.

night by Stat Prison Commissioner Frank Lee. Since last July, the new Kllby warden has been warden of th trusty barracks located near the main prison here. In his new assignment, he will retain jurisdiction over the trusty barracks as well as Kilby. Holman, who also was a former highway patrolman, died of a heart attack Sunday night. Simpson, worked for the patrol for nine years until he turned to penal work in 1955 as administrative assistant to th state prison board.

Nashvill layman and member HOWEVER. Dr. W. W. Elliot, superintendent of the Tuscaloosa county school boards with biracial faculties, so that pupils may "transfer from a teacher of the opposite race to a teacher of their own race." MONTGOMERY VP) Alabama'! top school official said that the.

stats has -evolved a plan to pay the cost of providing pupils a choice between white and Nefjro teachers in faculty-desegregated public schools. Stat School Supt. Austin Meadows said th. stats would absorb the entire cost of hiring additional teachers for city or Meadows said two additional teacher units have already been allocated to the Tuscaloosa Coun ty school system, where two Negro teachers were assigned this fall to predominantly white schools. of the board of th society, is to provide a "series of lectures by history scholars objectively in terpreting some phase of Disci pi church history." Dr.

Willis R. Jones, Nashville, is president-curator of the His torical Society. Its purpose is the locating, collecting and ar ranging of books, letters, period icals and pictures, for the use of scholars, that pertain to the Christian Churches and Churches of Christ. Harrell Fife Kilby Prison Warden Named MONTGOMERY (JP) Curtis M. Simpson, 43, former highway patrolman and Korean War veteran, has been named warden at Kilby Prison, succeeding the late William C.

Holman. Simpson's appointment, effec tive todsy. was announced last liiiir.wwlyjl8li, tan; Ty MlUL By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS More than half of Tennessee's interstate highway system will be open to traffic by Jan. 1 if weather permits, State Highway Commissioner David M. Pack said yesterday.

At the same time, ha an nounced that Interstate 65 from Nashville south to the Alabama line should be opened to traffic by spring with the completion of a 13.5-mile segment in Marshall and Maury counties. Pack said four sections of in terstate are expected to be opened by Jan. 1 to bring the total mileage ready for traffic to 545.5 miles. By spring, he said, 561.9 miles should be open including the Nashville-Alabama line segment of 1-65. A TOTAL of 1.050 miles of interstate Is planned for Tennessee when the Interstate system is finished probably about 1975.

With the opening of the Memphis-Nashville section of Inter state 40 and last week's ribbon- cutting which opened about 25 miles of Interstate 75 between Cleveland and Chattanooga, 513 miles of interstate now are open. Tentative completion of other major sections of th system are scheduled as follows: Interstate 40 between Knoxvlllt and Nashville by Dec. 31, 1968. Interstate 24 between Chattanooga and Nashville by Dec. 31, 1970.

Interstate 75 between Chattanooga and the 1-40 lunction west of Knoxvllle bv FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN Dec. 31, 171. This would open 1-75 between Knoxvillt and Chattanooaa, since 1-40 now Is open from near Rockwood to Knoxville. Sections to be opened by the end of the year, Pack said, in clude: 1-24 1.5 miles around th foot of Look out Mountain, toward Tiftonia from down town Chattanooga, plus a connecting 7.5 miles through Tiftonia to tht Georgia line. This would ooen 1-24 from Red Bank, a suburb north of Chattanooga, to the Georgia line.

1-40 a.i miles in Jefferson County, from Jefferson City toward tht North Carolina line. 1-aT 7. miles In Jefferson and Hamblen counties on a north-south route. l-5 I miles between Tennessee 11 and 15 in Giles County toward tht Ala bama line. Scheduled for opening by spring, pack said, is the 13.5 mile Marshall-Maury County segment which will complete the 1-65 segment from Ntstwiiit's Harding Place to tht Alabama line, other construction expected to be opened to traffic by spring included: miles from South Parkway In Memphis to the Memphis-Arkansas Bridge.

les from downtown Knox villt east. East-West Yule Pass Talks Begin in Berlin BERLIN UP) East-West negotiations over wall passes for West Berliners to go to Communist East Berlin over Christmas began yesterday. During seasonal pass periods, hundreds of thousands of West Berliners flock to the East to see their relatives. NOW THRU SUN. FIRST CAU EST.

194 "AMERICA'S LARGEST CASH mi P4 iVlALE the Fl sTI 1J Iff iff 1 till VUSb? 1 4s4 Historians representing three branches of a Protestant "res toration" and Christian unity movement that began In 19th Century America will speak here. Nov. 7-8. Dr. Ronald O.

Osborn, presi dent-elect of th International i tion of Christian JT Churches (Disci- 1 pies of Christ), 1 will represent i rVi churches related to the convention. Speaking as a member of the Church of Christ will be David Edwin Harrell associate pro fessor or nistory at the University of Oklahoma in Osborn Norman. REPRESENTING congrega tions associated with the North American Christian Convention will be Dr. Robert O. Fife, pro fessor of history and philosophy at MUiigan (Tenn.) College.

This year's Reed lectures will climax the 25th anniversary celebration of the Disciples of Christ Historical Society, under whose auspices they are given. The lectures are scheduled for 7:30 each of the two evenings in the Lecture Hall of the Thomas W. Phillips Memorial, home of the Historical Society. Th Reed Lectureship was es tablished Oct. 3, 1964.

Purpose of the lectureship, endowed by and named for Forrest F. Reed, FOR With Idaho to ALL v. 1 3 County system, said no funds for the additional units had yet been appropriated. He declined to say whether the two additional teach erg would be hired under the unit allocations, which Meadows says can be used only to give pupils a racial choice in teachers. The state has decided to make funds available for such additional teachers.

Meadows said "to provide the best possible learning situation for the pupils involved, and at the same time meet the demands of parents for relief from conditions that to them are Intolerable." A number of whit Tuscaloosa County residents sent petitions to th county school board and to Gov. George Wallac protesting th assignment of th two Negro teachers to predominantly white classrooms. Meadows said funds for the program are available "because of the transfer of pupils from public schools to non-public schools last year and this year." THE STATE superintendent said the state will pay the total cost of such additional teachers for the remainder of the year, including an amount equal to whatever supplemental pay the teachers would normally receive from the local board. Transfers from a class under a teacher of another race to one presided over by one of the pupil's own race would be "by freedom of choice of each pupil and their parents," Meadows said. 1 DIXIE FRIED 5: 11 A.M.

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À propos de la collection The Tennessean

Pages disponibles:
2 622 832
Années disponibles:
1834-2024