Newspaper Page Text
The Party Line
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“Good grief, Clara! I never saw you so anxious to duck
out of a little rainr*
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr,
Publisher Bffl Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Vkdl Leased Wire Service UPL Fall NEA. Address All Mail (Subscription Published Daily Except Sunday, Second CfaMK
Change of Address form 3519) ts F. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St* Ottilia, Ga, Footage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy 5a,
“Quote”
MOSCOW —Tass, the official
Soviet news agency, comment
ing on the President’s meeting
in Honolulu with the leaders of
South Viet Nam:
“One cannot take seriously
the assurance in the official
communique on the intention . .
. to continue the peace
offensive.”
★
MIAMI —Candace Mossier,
accused of killing her husband,
heard commenting at various
times to her lawyer Tuesday
during the testimony of prosecu
tion witnesses:
“A frameup ... I never said
a word . . . I’ve never seen or
heard of this man.”
★
WASHINGTON —Carl H.
Madden, director of economic
research for the U. S. Chamber
of Commerce, saying that edu
cation and training would be a
cheaper way of giving jobs to
unemployables than creating
inflation:
“The price of inflation far
exceeds the cost of making
these people employable."
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Friday, Feb. 11 , the
42nd day of 1966 with 323 to
follow.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning star is Venus.
The evening stars are Jupiter
and Saturn.
The American inventor of
electricity, Thomas Edison, was
born on this day in 1847.
On this day in history:
In 1937, General Motors
agreed to recognize the United
Auto Workers Union.
In 1943, Dwight Eisenhower
was made a full general in the
U.S. Army.
In 1945, President Franklin
Roosevelt, British Prime Minis
ter Winston Churchill and
Soviet Marshal Josef Stalin
ended a week-long World War
n conference at Yalta.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
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Delivered by carrier: One
year $13.91, six months $7.31,
three months $3.87, one
month $1.S4, one week 30
cents. By mall, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mall
within 30 miles of Griffin:
One year $10.82, six months
$6.08, three months $3.09. one
month $1.13 (tax included.)
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EDITORIALS ss
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Cage Team
To Remember
Another basketball season is drawing to a close.
Only two regular games are left, then comes the region,
and maybe the state tournament.
It will be a sad day for many loyal fans when the buz
zer ends the final game.
Coach Chris Jones and his Eagles and Coach Julian
Grantham and his girls have written excellent chapters
in the school sports history.
There might have been better teams at Griffin High
(some people will argue that point) but never have
teams generated so much enthusism and support among
fans.
Judging from the crowds, Griffin had the best support
of any team around, not only at home but on the road.
We hope the Griffin teams make it all the way to the
Big Dome and the State Tournament. They deserve it.
But whether they make it or not, Griffin fans will
always remember the 1965-66 teams as two of the most
colorful in Griffin High history and they will always be
proud of them.
The Griffin boys, the Griffin girls and the cheerleaders,
who are charged with keeping up the school spirit, de
serve all the praise they get.
Castro Boils In
Shipping Water
The number of ships docking at Cuba from non
Communist nations has declined from 341 in 1964 to
260 last year, according to an exile organization that
keeps tab of the number of ships coming and going. In
December only 19 free world ships stopped at the docks
as against 33 in November, says the Revolutionary
Unity.
Assuming the figures from the organization are correct
ind they undoubtedly do have good sources of in
formation — then two things must he happening. Pres
sures are being applied to other countries to refrain from
doing business with Castro are working, or else Fidel’s
funds are running low. Exporters have a habit of wanting
money for goods shipped to such unstable countries as
Cuba. So the latter sounds more plausible.
Daddy, What’s
Botswana?
FREE PRESS, Detroit, Mich.
Any day now, Johnny may come home from school
and face you with the question: “Daddy, what’s Bots
wana?’’ What will you do then?
The coming of independence to former colonies and
protectorates of the British, the French, the Belgians
and the Portuguese has left the mapmakers gasping.
Nyasaland is now Malawi, Northern Rhodesia is called
Zambia, Ruanda-Urundi has become two nations, Rwanda
and Burundi. Trinidad and Tobago are one nation called,
well, Trinidad and Tobago. Tanganyika and Zanzibar
united into Tanzania. Dutch New Guinea is now Indo
nesia’s West Irian, Portugal’s Goa only a state in India,
and Egpyt, which united with and then separated from
Syria still calls itself the United Arab Republic.
If your map is really old, change the Gold Coast to
Ghana, split up French West Africa to show Guinea,
Dahomey, Ivory Coast, Mauritania, Mali, Niger and Up
per Volta; French Equatorial Africa to Central African
Republic, Chad, Gabon and Republic of Congo (Brazza
ville) — not to be confused with the former Belgian
Congo, now the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Leo
poldville). Botswana? Well, it’s really the British
And protecto
rate of Bechuanaland, about to become independent
under the new name. (A big country it is too, with a
territory larger than all of France.) The two other
protectorates of Britain in southern Africa, Basutoland
and Swaziland, will also join the list of independent
countries in 1966.
Pooped? Just think of the problems facing the United
Nations Secretariat which has to provide space for 130
nations by the end of the year. The General Assembly
Hall was designed for only a modest increase over the
51 member nations which signed the Charter a mere two
decades ago.
You’ll have to go back to school dad and catch up on
the new geography.
Friday, February 1 1, 1966
BERRY'S WORLD
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“Sorry, mister, this is private property—no ‘camping’!”
MY
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Receiving Christ
. I try to understand about re
ceiving Christ, but to me it is
so complicated. J.B.
Isaiah said regarding the way
of salvation: “And an highway
shall be there, and a way, and
it shall be called The way of hol
iness; the unclean shall not pass
over it; but it shall be for those:
the wayfaring men, though fools,
shall not err therein.” (Isa. 35:
8 )
Receiving Christ Is so simple
that even “fools”, and small
children are capable of believ
ing and receiving. Jesus said,
“Except you be converted and
become as little children ye
shall not enter the kingdom of
heaven.” Little children are
openhearted, trusting, and be
lieving. When we grow older,
sin clouds the mind, hardens
the conscience, and makes the
heart irresponsive.
You say “you try to under
stand”. The Bible says: “T h e
natural man receiveth not the
things of the Spirit of God; for
they are foolishness unto him;
neither can he know them, be
cause they are spiritually dis
cerned.” (I Cor. 2:14)
Nowhere in the Bible is com
prehension or understanding
made a condition of salvation.
But faith is! The Bible says,
“Without faith it is impossible
to please God.” God has pro
mised salvation, He has given
you the power of choice, so re
ceive it — thousands have, and
your need and your capacity are
no different. "God is no respec
tor of persons.”
* Che roe non Upper Toenv Room© mom 1
This is tF message which you
have heard from the beginning,
that we should love one anoth
er. (I John 3:11, RSV)
PRAYER: Give us, O God, a
fresh realization of the meaning
of love as revealed in the life
and teachings of Jesus. So,
whatever out lot, may our daily
actions be a visible and effec
tive translation of that word in
to meaningful ser.ice. In the
Master’s name. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—U.S.
inventor Thomas Edison:
“There is no substitute for hard
work.’
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The first career soldier
to become president of the
United States was Zachary
Taylor, 12th president. He
spent 40 years in the army,
of which 25 were devoted
to Indians frontier duty he served against with the
and
distinction in the Mexicag
War in 1846 and 1847.
Washington, Jackson and
Harrison all had distin
guished this military their career* chief
but was not
profession
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