Newspaper Page Text
Stairway to the Stars
>>: "
Y,
* j m t <■
■9 A * A
•
—i Mi i m
i \ .-V
■
■ • f
gl mmM Hi
Ini
* I a *■ ; 1
i :\Y HP Hi Wm
WMlTt ifepf- 0
mmm m
{; i , 1 Slit I w
'Wf cmaffu. #§ -tv
m mm .ijS*,'
r mm
Hi M " 111 M
V.
mr ■■fa. 1 -
9 ■sir'■ m
fca. Wm-- . I
|J|h| i 67
m m
Fruitful
ACROSS
1 Citrus fruit
7 Fruit popular
in pies (pi.)
IS Variegated
14 15 Keep Seniors
16 Covet
17 American
humoriat
18 Female sheep
20 Born
21 Softens in
25 temper Fossil resin
28 Moral
32 Friable soil
33 Puff up
34 Man’s name
38Godof love
37 Ensnares
40 Breaks in suddenly
two
41 Peachlike fruit
43 Mouths
.46 High card
47 * n Gypsy husband
constellation
Mock
Lariats
Ex punges
He brew ascetic
Scoffs
DOVW
1 Baking chamber
2 3 Depend Military
assistant
4 Compass point
5 Proselyte Judaism to
6-Ford
mountains,
Antarctic*
7 Fiery
8 Bill of an
anchor (naut.)
9 Pints (ab.)
io Stratum (dial.)
11 Ireland
12 Dirk
21 19 Tiny Clog
22 Comparative suffix
2 3 4 5 8 9 10 11 12
16
21 22 18 IF 2rp
23
W 26 27 Hill 29 30
41
43 44 45 51 52 [46 53 ■r 48
54 55
28
SIDE GLANCES
if MOYtL - I . BANKERS welcome* ASS<
pmecTORy -1
i [t l ¥ 9
t
: i?7 != r
I o 1
■ %
■4 )
~ ;
£8 --
«
*f * 2-1
A* * WO b Ntt . Ik . T * a . In . #1 St . 0 ft .
“Shouldn’t they be keeping a finger on the economic
Dulse?”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
4MB Leeeed Wire service UPL Full NEA. Address all Mall (Subscriptions Published Doily Except Sunday, Second Close
Cheage el Addreee form 8579 to P. O. Bex 135, E. Solomon St, Griffin, Go* Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. —
AnsWar to Previous Puzzle
r.i IV I A L O V Wj IS El [ECE ES 33333 s i i Ux 2323
2CIDE 3323 I333E3SBS
E33 E3ia issis EZE’533 £ S3E EE33 Egos
Article
Taciturn
Toward the
sheltered side
Dawn (poet.)
Diminutive of
Bartholomew
Indian
Preposition
Not as much
35 Race course
circuit
Extol
39 Thus (Latin)
40 In like mam
42 Surrenders
43 Hideous
monster
44 Portuguese
account money
45 $ine cups
47 Get up
48 European Disorder rive
49
51 Follower
52 Feminine
nickname
54 Sea eagle
55 Scottish sail
Quotes
By United Press International
SEABROOK, Tex. Rev.
Conrad Wimborn, during me
morial services for the three
astronauts who met death in
their Apollo capsule Friday:
“Let us not sing the victor’s
song unless we are willing to
risk the harsh notes of tragic
loss and personal sacrifice . . .
commitment means that.”
★
HONG KONG —A Peking
radio broadcast, quoting posters
put up by Peking University
students threatening to destroy
"bourgeois” laws:
“We revolutionaries are whol
ly lawless and godless. We are
wholly unafraid of your bour
geois laws, unafraid of God,
unafraid of Heaven and una
fraid of earth. We will build a
new, red earth.”
★
WASHINGTON —Gen Max
well D. Taylor, Just returned
from Vietnam, telling of a new
“atmosphere” there:
“There may be some changes,
some new developments in the
atmosphere during the course of
this year. The feeling out there
Is that the logjam may be
breaking up a bit.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, Feb. 1,
the 32nd day of 1967 with 333 to
follow.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
The morning stars are Mars
and Jupiter.
The evening stars are, Venus,
Saturn and Jupiter.
American movie star Clark
Gable was born on this day in
1901.
On this day in history:
In 1790, the U.S. supreme
court held its first session in
New York City.
In 1893, Thomas Edison
finished the world’s first motion
picture study at West Orange,
N.J.
In 1963, a Lebanese airliner
and a Turkish Air Force
transport collided over Ankara,
Turkey, killing 95 persons.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $16.20, six months $9.50,
three months $4.50. out
month $1.55, one week 35
cents. By mall, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mall
within 30 miles of Griffin:
One year $13.10, six months
$7.35, three months $8.88, one
month $1.35, Delivered by
Special A n t o: One Year
$18.20 (tax Included.)
EDITORIALS $
-
I
BERRY’S HID
Tt mwm •6-54-3- 1 pTOStH
ggf 11 X
© 1967 to NEA, he
“A $73 billion defense budget—let’s see North Vietnam
try to match THAT!”
This Week’s Editorial
By A Woman Especially For Women
What Makes
Men Tick?
One of the the popular American magazines male and recently what makes devoted. him an tick. en
tire issue to
Women can only hope that this will start a trend in the
magazine field.
For twenty years, at least, American magazines have
devoted a good part of their space to articles about the
American woman.
She hasn’t come out of it smelling like a rose. The
picture that has evolved isn’t one to give her much com
fort.
In fact, the picture looks something like this: A bossy
female, who has her poor husband so cowed he lets her
make all the decisions for the family and spend most of
the family income on what she considers important.
On top of that she is either a lazy stay-at-home whose
work is mostly done by labor-saving devices or she is a
working wife who neglects her home and children in order
to earn money for luxuries the family couldn’t afford on
one pay check.
She is said to be so dissatisfied in her split-level house
that she makes her husband miserable and is therefore
largely responsible for the climbing divorce rate.
She has gotten the full blame for juvenile delinquency
and just about every other breakdown in American family
life.
And all the while she has been examined and criticized
and picked to pieces, the American male has gone scot
free.
Well now it looks as though the magazines may be run
ning out of things to say about the American woman and
have begun to look at the American male with the sudden,
happy-thought “Let’s see what’s wrong with him.’’
If so, maybe the women will get a little rest from being
analyzed, dissected and blamed. We can only hope that’s
how it is going to be.
— R. M.
+ Guest Editorial ♦
Reapportionment
Now Urgent
MOULTRIE OBSERVER
When the Georgia legislature gets around to doing
something about reappointment to satisfy the federal
courts, the General Assembly would do well to recognize
that it is living on borrowed time.
The U. S. Supreme Court handed down a ruling which
shook up the Florida administration. In three separate
cases, the court rejected the Sunshine State’s plan of re
districting. But what is so important in the decision was
the stressed point that the court expects state legislative
and congressional districts to be drawn up in close con
formity with its earlier-announced one-man, one-vote doc
trine.
Florida intends to battle to the wire on its redistricting
plan, but the handwriting is already on the wall. Not only
Florida, but any other state which expects to operate under
its own districting plan must adhere closely to the one
man, one-vote principle in the future.
Georgia’s legislature did a better job than the Florida
body in framing a new districting plan for legislative and
congressional representation. But it must be emphasized
that the Georgia reapportionment plan won only limited
and tentative approval. The job must be finished this
year and next.
Georgia, thus, is in better position than Florida to com
plete the job of redistricting to achieve an equitable ap
portionment of representation in legislative operations. But
if the Georgia legislators permit themselves to be em
broiled in a bitter controversy of a rural-urban nature, or
because of individual jealousies, the current advantage
could be lost.
SM fSTm Chuckling jpJ ^
With Ye Editor
Despite all the talk about “the good old days,’* nobody
can turn the clock back. And nobody in his right mind
would if he could.
• • • • •
“Research has shown that tall men are just as short at
the end of the month as anybody else.” — Irish Digest
• • • • •
One reason it is best to think twice before you speak
is because so many people don’t think once before they
do.
MY
ANSWERP * If*
All The Facts
Adam and Eve sinned and all
generations after them have sin
ned and suffered for it. I believe
this is unfair, as we are born
with a tendency to sin. How can
we be blamed for this? RS.
Your reasoning doesn’t take in
ail the facts. You see, Adam
and Eve didn’t have to sin! In
fact, they were given every in
ducement not to sin, but they
deliberately disobeyed.
By the same token, though we
are prone to sin, we don’t have
to sin. Each of us has the cap
acity to make the same choice
Adam and Eve made, and today
as then, we all choose to sin
when we reach the age of ac
countability. We tell a lie — we
are jealous we get angry
without Just cause.
In a sense our destiny hinges
on our choice! We are not only
judged for Adam’s sin, but for
our own. Adam knew no privil
eges that are not ours through
Christ; and he knew no remorse
that is not ours, if we elect to
be disobedient. Nothing has
changed — there are no new
sins; only new sinners. But if
we will, our lives can be a Pa
radise with God’s fellowship at
the very center. This is what
Christ accomplished by the
Cross.
^pRiiyfR (OiU
FOR TODAY a
Cbe Uppgr
Love bears all things, believes
all things, hopes all things, en
dures all things. (I Corinthians
13:7, RSV)
PRAYER: Almighty God, help
us to sense the magnitude of
Thy love for us and the great
ness of the power of Christian
love. As we strive this day to be
true followers of Christ, help us
to practice this indispensable
Christian love. We pray in the
Master's name. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—Irish
poet Thomas Moore said: “Ask
a woman’s advice, and, whatev
er she advises, do the very
reverse and you’re sure to be
wise.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
|f m m i
V
,i*
IB L
The Domesday Book is
the result of a survey of
England ordered by
William the Conqueror.
Completed in 1086, it con*
sists of two volumes in
Latin detailing the size,
value and ownership of all
lands within the country,
says The World Almanac.
In addition, it records the
number of freemen and
serfs on individual estates
as well as the number of
plows, mills, fish ponds and
livestock. The book is now
kept in London and is an
invaluable source of infor
England. mation on 11th-century
Copyright © 19(7, Asm.
Newspaper Enterprise
Wednesday, Feb. I, 1967 Griffin Daily News
Television
Wednesday Night
2 5 11
Oft 00 Newsroom Movie: Yogi
15 » Bear
30 News News Merv
45 at n Griffin
00 Death Panorama e
15 Valley Days News £
30 Virginian Moviet Batman
45 99 “Latin M
§ S Lovers” Monroes
sss; a n M
t
> » V
3 0<AOM a **’§§• 8 Movie:
n a s * “It’s Only
« Gome* Money”
Pyle m
oo ispy Danny m
15 99 Kaye m
30 * ■* »
45 99 H Olympic*
00 Newsroom Panorama Night
15 «t Watch
30 Johnny Movie: Stageeoeoh
45 Carson “Mothrn” West
©motft , *
t- 111
a
*
Thursday Morning
H
Science »»
Town, C'nlry Colloquium
Farm Sbew 99
H ! News
8 »
s Mr. Ptx
s
: Captain Cartoon
8 Kangaroe Carnival
8 m »
8 m W
•00 Today In Beverly 8
:15 Georgir HiUbilllee 8
:30 Gloria Andy Gale
:45 w Griffith
101 •00 Beach For Dick Van Girl Talk
;15 The Stars Dyke M
•30 Concentration Secret Dateline
99 Storm Atlanta
•00 Boone Don Supermarket
:15 a» Barber Sweep
; 30 Hollywood 99 Dating
•45 Squares Game
Thursday Afternoon
:00 News Love Of Donne
:15 99 Life Heed
•30 Movie: Search For Father
•45 “Caught In Guiding Light Knows Best
9 ©«Ou, The Draft” Matches and Ben
.
at Mates Casey
at As The World s
at Turns i
:00 Of Password Newly Wed
•15 Oar Liven a Game
•30 Doctors House Party Dream
:45 » Girl
•00 Another To Too Hospital
•15 World The Trnth General
•30 Ton Don’t Edge Of a*
:45 Say Night »
•00 Match Mike Dark Shadow*
:15 Gama DongUM m
:30 Popeyo p Where Iht
:45 Clnb *• Action b
t Movie: News
• "The Golden
SI 1 Age of C’mdy News
m *
4