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The Chickens Come Home to Roost
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BRUCE SHANKS, THE BUFFALO EVENING NEWS
Why Politicians Run
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GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bill Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Foil Leased Wire service UPt Fall NEA. Address all Man (Subscriptlona Published Dally Except Sunday, Second C8am
ChMagt ef Address form »78 to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St, Griffin, Oa, Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy «•
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Quotes
By United Press international
NIMITZ HILL, Guam—Pres
ident Johnson stating the
objectives of the Guam confer
ence of diplomatic and military
leaders on Vietnam:
“We will i-eview our diploma
tic initativea and we will try to
estimate the chances of bring
ing peace to Vietnam through
honorable settlement.”
★
WASHINGTON—Chairman J.
William Fulbrlght, of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
stating his view of the
objectives of President John
son’s Guam conference -
“I think they (the administra
tion) will increase the manpow
er over there substantially in
the near future...probably fol
lowing this conference...then
they will decimate these people
to where they do give up and
then will begin reconstruction.”
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Tuesday, March 21,
the 80th day of 1967 with 285 to
follow.
The moon is between the first
and full stages.
The morning star is Mars.
The evening stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
American theatrical producer
Florenz Zeigfield was born on
this day in 1869.
On this day in history:
In 1790, Thomas Jefferson of
Virginia became the first
United States Secretary of
State. He was appointed to the
cabinet of George Washington.
In 1918, American and Ger
man soldiers fought in the key
battle of the Somme.
In 1945, some 7,000 Allied
airplanes dropped more than
12,000 tons of explosives on
Germany in a daytime raid.
In 1962, Soviet Premier
Krushchev pledged that Russia
would cooperate with the United
States in the peaceful explora
tion of space.
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 mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. My 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 Year
$18.20 (tax included.)
EDITORIALS
I
This Old House
Is Independent
The longest legislative session in recent Georgia history
having ended and the lawmakers and the citizens having
caught their breath, we offer these comments:
On the plus side: The House of Representatives esta
blished its independence and maintained it throughout the
sossion. This probably is the most significant achievement
of the session. In the past, the Governor selected House
leadership. This time the members chose them indepen
dently of the Governor.
The House has a depth of leadership headed by George
L. Smith of Swainsboro who did a particularly outstand
ing job. Today he is the strongest man in state government
in Georgia, an established fact which is becoming more
apparent every day.
On the minus side, the lack of upper echelon leader
ship in the Senate was painfully apparent. The Lieutenant
Governor took the reins but could not manage to guide.
Perhaps he will do better at the next session.
Altogether, it seems to us that the session was a good
one. It should not be judged by the number of laws it did
not pass because sometimes the best thing a law-making
body can do is to reject proposed laws. After electing a
Governor, it did pass a generally acceptable appropriations
bill and moved toward year by year instead of every other
year appropriations. It passed a supplementary appropria
tions bill also, adopted reapportionment plans in the regu
lar session instead of waiting for an expensive special ses
sion, worked out a compromise on the time bill, and dis
posed of the W and A Railroad lease by sending the con
tract back to the State Properties Control Commission for
further consideration.
Certainly action taken on all of these major measures
did not please everyone. On the other side of the coin, the
hard-won independence of the House does please just
about everybody and in years to come it probably will
prove to be the most outstanding achievement of the
session.
Very
Clever
A U. S. tool manufacturer, reports Marketing Manage
ment magazine, is stamping his products “Made in Japan”
so that buyers will think they are getting a bargain.
Darned clever, these Amelicans.
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
Does Bobby
Read The Papers •"C
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.) got up in the Senate
the other day and delivered a long talk advance-hilled
as a major address on U. S. foreign policy in Vietnam.
The spiel turned out to be a plea for yet another U. S.
bombing halt in hope Red North Vietnam would then
talk peace, plus a recommendation that the South Viet
nam Communists (Viet Cong) be admitted to such peace
talks and treated like a bona fide political party in any
postwar South Vietnam government.
Bobby didn’t offer to donate a pint or more of blood
to the Viet Cong, as he once said his fellow Americans
ought .to do. Otherwise, this major address was a replay
of various things he has said before.
Our own principal reaction to the speech: How closely
does the young man read the newspapers, or does he read
the newspapers?
We’ve tried these bombing halts several times, in hope
of bringing the enemy to peace negotiations, and the
enemy has used the pauses only to beef up for intensified
efforts to grab all South Vietnam (and later all Southeast
Asia) for Communist enslavement.
The press has reported this news in detail. Where has
Bobby been, that he apparently doesn’t know these facts?
And what kind of appeal can he hope to make to young,
alert, well-informed voters when he turns out to be so
pathetically behind the time in his own information?
oj <> * With Ye Editor •m 0
•
Some congressmen are “doves”, some are “hawks” said
at one time or another most of them go on a junket just
for a “lark.”
• • • • •
“If you can laugh at yourself you are civilized.” —
William Feather
• • • • •
With taxes for the Great Society, etc., it’s beginning to
look as if charity will HAVE to begin at home.
Tuesday, March 21, 1967 Griffin Daily News
stirs isis
-A
“Hey baby are you I A
— a
homely girl or a long-haired [tr
boy?” «»s \ \ i /A
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ANSWER I -- - 1
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Only ‘Some’
Why do our teenagers take
drugs, carry switch-blade kni
ves, drink all night and engage
in sexual orgies? I just can’t un
derstand our young people.
S.L.
Some teenagers, not all teen
agers! How easy it is to gener
alize. Most teenagers I know
go to church, drink malted
milks, eat hamburgers, stay
home at night doing homework,
and have respect lor their par
ents.
It might interest you to know
that in a questionnaire sent out
to a cross section of hundreds
of young people, when they were
asked to name the ten top traits
they wanted to see in young
people, they were: honesty,
friendliness, personality attrac
tiveness, sincerity, courage
good manners, respect for oth
ers, intelligence, humor and
kindness. Not too bad for a ge
neration which has seen more
violence, been through more
world tension, and live in t h e
most sex obsessed country in the
world!
Yes, I know that some of our
teenagers do the things you
mention. Millions of teenagers
are in rebellion. But these things
are done by a minority, and
they are highly publicized by the
press and television. We find in
our crusades that the group that
responds most readily are young
people from sixteen to twenty.
Our youth are seeking for mean
ing, love, guidance and purpose.
Let’s give them all the encour
agement we can.
VOR TODAY FROM
the Upper Room ©
When Jesus therefore saw his
mother, and the disciple stand
ing by, whom he loved, he saith
unto his mother. Woman, be
hold thy son! Then saith he to
the disciple, Benold thy mother!
(John 19:26-27)
PRAYER: Lord Jesus, if to
day we are offered a responsi
bility, help us gladly and willing
ly to accept it in Thy name.
Help us never to forget how
growth in love and faith came
to us. In Thy name we ask it.
Amen.
Thought For Today
German philosopher Georg
Wilhelm Friedrich Hegal once
said: “Life has a value only
when it has something valuable
as its object.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
It Js % '
a
More U. S. presidents
were born in Virginia than
in any other state. Eight
chief executives—Washing
ton, Jefferson, Madison,
Monroe,. Harrison, William Henry
Wilson—were Tyler, Virginians. Taylor and
The state with the second
greatest number of native
son presidents is Ohio with
seven, says The World Al
field, manac. Grant, Hayes, Gar
McKinley, Benjamin Taft Harrison,
and Hard
ing were born in Ohio.
Newspaper Copyright © 1967,
Enterprise Assn.
4
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