Newspaper Page Text
"We Must All Hang Together!"
\ IIMBfl fetich
J Ki!|g|| xm 1
, V
V- 8
mmm wk V
n I . A\
A' jh
f, i 9 L-V
$ &
ii ■- A
I i > i
m M /a »
m VfcWAM iwm P>
tfcmes /(■ Mg ys.'/t
& ' mmmi 1 Em! »ilf8
MB m l l. w. Mm ■ >. ■b } ?’■ ■
' m m L
t ■Vr'*
.... .■< . •
m
mm
Strength
ACROSS
;1 Sound of
explosion
5 Vigor
9 Feminine
Appellation
11 Servile
13 City v„i». in Syria iWy
15 2* Beverage _ _____
i«A°“?r n S° dde *»
18 Angers ,
l»Of th e country
21 Aeriform fuel
22 -de Valera
(Irish leader)
25 City in Nevada
27 Essay
28 32 Worshipers Robust
34 Valleys persons
35 Painter, (poet) Guido
86 Storehouse
37 Greek letter
39 “--of
Two Cities”
2 3 4 f 6 7B
10 12
IS 16 8
19 20 !1
22 23 24
36 31
[34
135 V;
|38
._li__ 47 1 48 49 50 44
53 54 -
22
SIDE GLANCES
1
a <»
^Ayy.
!• •
nr
^ A i>r /
ft? 4 1 •v
Mi
* £ ? ? V
H-is I
• m» w RU. kc. m I*. Bi h*. Oft V
“Nonsense, Mr. Armbruster! You dance just fine for
& financial wizard!"
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEW
Qalmby Melton Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Ed&nr Editor
Fnll Leased Wire Serrite UPL Full NEA. Address An Mall (Subscript** Published Daily Except Sunday, Second
Claage el Address turn *579) te P. O. Bax. 185, E. Salomon 81, Griffin, Oa. Postage Paid at Griffin, Oa. — Stogie Copy •*
41 Underground
bud
42 Girl’s nickname
43 Harem chamber
46 Suitable for
48 plowing Hebrew
name
for God
51 Disclose
92 Strong and
hpalthv
53 Communists
54 Desire
DOWN
1 Choler
3 2 Pinch Range
4 Breach
5 Writing tool
6 Strength cn
7 Diadem
8 Roman netber
world
lOTraS 9 Entangle
of
wasteland
11 Deceived
Answer to Previous Puzzle
EJjES □□90 aha 6 E V A IS I a L. □□a S □ P I CEEE EECE
S3E3 5EBD 3 TiO E N T BI D I IS □osnaa f 5 6 D A
EBSi: 5E3C R 1 Aj T JQT T AlB PIN E IaIt □ T EE S am EBE3 □□□C3
12 Maseuline
nickname
17 Leech
19 Firm
20 Loosen
22 Anglo^tacon
letter
23 Indonesian
island
24 Feast day
26 (comb, form)
New
29 Guido's high
note
30Corded fabric
et Quote”
By United Press International
WASHINGTON —Sen. John
Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., In a
Senate speech:
“If the people of South Viet
Nam do not want to continue
the war, the United States
should not continue it for
them.”
★
WASHINGTON —Rep. Wil
liam C. Cramer, R-Fla.,
ranking minority member of
the House Public Works Com
mittee, on President Johnson’s
plans for the nation’s interstate
highways:
“Putting beauty before build
ing and to assign to it a higher
priority is foolhardy.”
31 Compass point
33 37 Glossy Freer coating
from
38 pollution
Bondservant
40 Agalloch
41 Prohibit
43 Burden
44 45 Strike River island violentlj
47-Vegas, Nevada
49 Dutch painter,
Gerald-
50Kimono sash.
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Friday, April 15, the
105th day of 1966 with 260 to
follow.
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning star is Venus.
The evening star is Jupiter.
Florentine painter and univer
sal genius, Leonardo da Vinci,
was born on this day in 1452.
On this day in history:
In 1861, President Lincoln
sent Congress a message
recognizing a state of civil war
and called for 75,000 volunteer
soldiers.
In 1865, Mr. Lincoln died and,
three hours later, Andrew
Johnson was sworn in as the
17th President of the U-S.
In 1912, the luxury liner
Titanic sank off Newfoundland.
Of the 2,223 passengers aboard,
1,517 were lost.
In 1945, President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt was buried.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—
American writer Thomas Wolfe
said: “There is no spectacle
on earth more appealing than
that of a beautiful woman in
the act of cooking dinner for
someone she loves."
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $16.20, six months $8.50,
three months $4.50, one
month $1.55, one week 35
cents. By mall, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mail
within 30 miles of Griffin:
One year $13.10, six months
$7.35, three months $3.85, one
month $1.35, Delivered by
Special Auto: One Tear
$18.20 (tax included.)
EDITORIALS r
5?
\
* -A- THIS WEEK’S SPORTS EDITORIAL -A- -ft
Track Should Be
First Class Sport
There are a lot of fans who would like to see Griffin
High undertake a crash program to rebuild track into a
respectable sport.
For years track has been a second rate sport with
very little interest shown in the program.
Because of the lack of interest, and because Griffin, one
of the largest schools in 4-AAA, didn’t have a place for
home meets or for proper training, the sport died.
After its death, Griffin “used" the sport as part of a
training program for football players. Coaches insisted
that certain players go out for “track," not as enthu
siastic participants hut just to keep in physical condition.
(There’s nothing wrong with football players being
on a track team. Many would make good trackmen. But
using track merely as a training program for football is
not how the sport was meant to be.)
George Patrick, Griffin’s school superintendent, loves
track and many other sports. He is one person who would
like to see track hecome a prominent sport at Griffin
High.
Now that Griffin has a track, (it is at Spalding Junior
High) and other training facilities, there’s no reason why
the sport shouldn’t be emphasized.
With the new track and special emphasis on the sport
Griffin could field a fine track team within a year or
two. — Roger Dix.
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
Selection Right
Belongs To People
MOULTRIE OBSERVER
Unless the Democratic Party of Georgia reverses its
position, it will have repudiated a basic principle in which
Georgia Democratic voters have had full faith and con
fidence since Reconstruction days—that of grass-roots
administration of political campaigns at the local level.
A party rule, adopted sometime ago, which calls for
appointment of local Democratic committees, has raised
heated controversy among loyal Democrats throughout
the state. Consequently, pressure is being brought to hear
to cancel the rule and make modifications which would
return the selection of committeemen to the local level
where many contend it belongs.
Heretofore, the county Democratic executives com
mittee has been selected through an elective process. Can
didates qualified to make the race in the primary, just as
did candidates for other offices. The voters then, by dis
tricts, elected committeemen for specified terms.
There is some talk of modifying the original rule to
provide for selection of committeemen at county-wide De
mocratic conventions. That would not be as democratic
as the elective process, hut at least it would keep control
of the county committee within the grasp of local Demo
crats.
But now the new rules take control completely away
from the local Democratic membership and put it in
the hands of the State Democratic Committee, and con
sequently at the pleasure of a governor. Georgia’s citizens
—and Democrats—have consistently opposed any met
hod which would centralize control of local and area
politics. earlier voted
A Democratic Party subcommittee which
44-3 to put the new rule into effect is now reported ready
to cancel the rule and return to the system of electing
county committeemen. Swelling opposition within many
Georgia counties to the new rule would indicate the state
subcommittee would be wise to recommend—and the
State Democratic Executive Committee equally wise to
approvi ■the cancellation of this undemocratic method
of selecting county committeemen.
Cf * With Chuckling Ye Editor 1:0
Friend count your blessings. After taxes, they’re about
all that’s left to count.
• • • • •
"A fine old practice received a jolt recently when a
wedding guest, when asked if he had kissed the bride,
replied. ‘Not lately.’ ** —- Guest.
• • • • •
Our concern over the go-go dances of the present
younger generation lessens when we recall the jitterbugs
of our own mad youth.
Friday, April IS, 1966 Griffin Daily New
CVS WORLD
>
2
•}
An. I
PI
1
W 1966 hrNEA, (a*
♦. And futhermore, in my tax bracket, I hate to
think of how much I’ve ALREADY contributed to the
Poverty Program!”
m
ANSWER, 1
Finding Life
Please explain the Bible pas
sage: “For whosoever will save
his life shall lose it; and whoso
ever shall lose his life for my
sake shall find it*”
K.S.
Every Christian is not called
upon to physically sacrifice his
life for Christ. The deeper mean
ing of this passage is in the dea
th of self and our selfishness.
Christ will brook no half-heart
ed discipleshlp. He calls upon
us to “forsake all and follow
Him.” To be half a Christian,
is to be no Christian at all.
I think that much of our diffi
culty today Is that our lives are
so diversified. Religion to many
has become a status symbol, a
mere badge of respectability.
But Jesus urged His disciples to
’deny themselves, take up their
cross and follow Him.’’ We are
to be immersed in the faith; to
lose ourselves In dedication to
His cause, and by so doing we
“find ourselves.” There Is no
mystery here, actually. The ath
lete, the scientist, the scholar,
the Inventor, who loses himself
in his work, succeeds in his par
ticular field, and thus finds him
self. Christianity calls for a high
dedication, and when we enter
into it half-heartedly, we make
a farce of Christ’s cause. Don’t
he afraid to “loose yourself’’ for
Him, for when you dare to do
this, all life sparkles with mean
ing and fulfillment.
•fapumifi
FOR TODAY FROM
jCbe Upper Room*
The same Lord Is Lord of all
and bestows his riches upon all
who call upon him. (Romans 10:
21, RSV)
PRAYER: Father, we thank
Thee that through the resurrec
tion of Jesus we are made rich.
We thank Thee for the material
blessings and for the spiritual
blessings that come from Thee.
Lead us to use them to Thy ho
nor and glory. In Jesus’ name.
Amen.
m V
The European corn borer
is one of the most devastat
ing insect pests of Ameri
It can first agriculture on record.
started damaging
corn in New England, in
facture 1916-17, where brooms the manu
of from
broomcorn imported from
dustry. Europe was a principal in
The corn borer next
spread to the Midwest,
America’s “corn belt.” In
1949 alone this pest caused
the loss of 315 millio n
bushels of corn.
O Inqrclopatdki liltnata
4
Television
Friday Night
2 5 11
:00 Newsroom Movie Cheyenne
:1S 99 89 *
•30 Huntley m n
:45 Brinkley •9 »
9 omoo i | Panorama News
T. & K News 99
*?. s ej Wild, Wild Flintstonefl
*3 3 West n *
9 'T. *3 |o»ow * * * * Heroes Hogan’s 99 99 Tammy Addams Family 99
9 T. *3 T. |ou»ow e te a a "1 « C Pyle Smothers Brothers Gomer Farmer’s Daughter The Guy Big
*00 Man From Trials of Court
•15 U.N.CX.E. O’Brien Martial
:30 n M
:45 M H
:00 Newsroom Panorama Night Watch i
1 S 99 •9
:
:30 Movie Movie
•45 Carson “Night “Girls at
OIQOIO a Monster” Sea”
• m
a *»
a » m
Saturday Morning 4
6 Fence Across The
7 :00 Movie 4-H Hoar
:15 “Enchanted 99
:30 Island” Sgt.
I -.45 H Preston
itt/) Captain Adventures
Kangaroo In Living
Comedy M
Hour M
:0O Jetsons * First Aid
:15 II t Cenrse
•30 Atom Ant Tennessee Cartoon
:45 m Tuxedo Carnival
:00 Secret Mighty Porky Pig
:15 Squirrel Mouse If
:30 Underdog Lassie Beatles i
:45 M H
v i Tom and Casper
Jerry M
!■ McGraw Quick Draw Magilla Gorilla
Saturday Afternoon
•00 Sound Of Sky King Bugs Bunny
•15 Tooth •» •»
L£ans 4
:30 Movie: Milton The
t45 “The Atomic •» Monster
\i%zi 5 £ I My Friend Hoppity
: Flicka Hooper
1 Movie American
: “Paris Bandstand
CM ftggs l!” S Playboys” t
• H a
Stars of
*» Tomorrow
CO a Ripcord Lawman
• m »
t Littlest Tournament
a Hobo of
* Movie: Champions
* “It Happens a»
* Every Spring” s»
*
Ill* 9 Wilburn '
9 Brothers
News Wi