Newspaper Page Text
Thursday, March 23, 1967 Griffin Daily N ews
iisss: ww----- - ■
r» #3 li
mug Hi i
Meet - £: ^ m mmmm 1 i |P * 2 ; |F
m :
Mrs. Georgia *
4
V, 1®!
rV. I i ’
m m
1 •? ; ;
j fcsl ’ “5- ,'sSj
Mrs. Athens Mrs. Atlanta Mrs. Augusta
MM Faye Thompson Mary Ann Green Ann Holden
k
fm g|
: : V"
■ ' ' m '4 ■\ /:
v ■;
Kd
w m H m
■ ■' * 1 i
\ m m * ■ * 40 IKv > . 1
■■■■
% j o % -
Sf fk : ;! mm m * At * -'. ?
: m ^ r?/. 1
cSSift:;::
Mrs. Golden Islea Mrs. Macon Mrs. Rome Mrs. Savannah
Jo Ann Bassford- Louise Dodd Juanita Hudson Betty Afinick
Here she is—Mrs. Georgia 1967. Although the new title
holder won’t be named until April 7, she will be (me of
these seven local winners in the annual competition to
name the state’s representative homemaker. The new Mrs.
Georgia will be crowned on a state-wide television net
work, originating from the scene of the pageant in Atlanta
on Friday, April 7, from 10 to 11 p.m. The crowning of
the new Mrs. Georgia will climax two days of competition
Women Drag Heels In Leadership
Woman’s View
By GAT PAULEY
UPI Women’s Editor
FEW YORK (UPI) —Women
hate done battle for suffrage
ano - for equal pay for equal
wo-k alongside men.
But despite these struggles
ani others of women won in the
20h century, women still drag
th>ir heels in an area where
thsy’re desperately, needed—in
th* roles of leaders.
instead, women are settling
fo- a “cosy, restricted, small”
oistence.
These are views of Dr.
Rosemary Park, president of
HELP WANTED
MALE
Need Plant Workers — We Will Train. No Pre
vious Plant Experience Needed. Good starting
Rate and Excellent Company Paid Hospitalization
and Retirement. Also Liberal Vacation and Holi
day Benefit. Openings on all shifts. Apply in
person.
KAWNEER CO.
Highway 54 One Mile North of Jonesboro, Ga.
(An Equal Opportunity Employer)
PHILLIPS HOSPITALITY
DAYS
FRIDAY And SATURDAY - MAR CH 24 - 25
COME SEE US AND REGISTER FOR
FREE PRIZES
1st Prize 2nd Prize 3rd Prize 4th Prize
4 50 25 25
Safety Action Gallons Gallons Gallons
“ 66 ” “Flite-Fuel” “Flite-Fuel” “Flite-Fuel”
TIRES GAS GAS GAS
NO PURCHASE REQUIRED TO REGISTER - - - - YOU DO
NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WIN!
• DRAWING SATURDAY, MARCH 25 - 8:00 P. M.
FREE ' ' mm
CTN. OF SIX :
i
WITH THE PURCHASE OF 8 OR
MORE GALLONS OF PHILLIPS "66"
GASOLINE.
MORRIS “66 SERVICE STATION
Experiment Street and Ellis Road Phone 227-1992
Howard Morris, Owner and Operator
19
Barnard College, who soon will
move to a top post with the
University of California at Los
Angeles (UCLA).
"Never have we had a time in
which sheer brain power is so
important,” said Dr. Park.
“The rewards today are for
brains. And it doesn’t matter to
which sex they belong.”
Yet these exists a massive
leadership gap between men
and women and Dr. Park sees
this "absence of qualified
women for posts of leadership”
a matter of “profound concern”
to the nation.
The college president’s com-
in areas of (1) homemaking abilities; (2) poise, person
ality and grooming; and (3) church and community partici
pation. Mrs. Georgia 1967 will represent our state in the
Mrs. America contest May 4-14 in San Diego, California.
Atlanta Gas Light Company, sponsoring the competition
for the fourth consecutive year, explains that the contest
aims at recognizing the role of today’s mother-homemaker.
ments were touched on briefly
in her final biennial report to
Barnard’s trustees. She expand
ed on them in an interview.
In a nation where more
persons get college and univer
sity degrees than ever before,
what happens to these potential
women leaders?
“We just don’t have them
anywhere,” said the president,
“whether it’s in government,
industry or education.”
And it isn’t because of
discrimination because of sex
either. “Oh, there might be one
or two instances, but it can’t be
generalized.” A portion of the
1964 Civil Rights Act forbids
discrimination anyway.
As Dr. Park puts It,
“President Johnson is making
every effort to get women into
government (with more than
120 appointments to federal
posts). But we have no woman
in the cabinet, for Instance. The
government crop just isn’t
ready to harvest yet.”
In education, the leadership
gap shows in absence of women
as college presidents, deans,
even full professors, she added.
Barnard’s president gave a
variety of reasons women settle
“for a relatively small exis
tence.”
There was the "bit retreat"
to suburbia, which made it nigh
onto impossible for women to
run a home and be a job leader
too.
Dr. Park believes this popula
tion trend is reversing, howev
er.
Women with families are less
mobile, because husband and
children necessarily come ahead
of career.
Men More Aggressive
In turn, traditionally men are
“more aggressive—the man
knows he is under the economic
pressure of making the living
lor .limself and family. A
woman usually is responsible
only for herself.”
The affluent society in which
women do not have to work—
although 26 million of them do—
also is a factor in the leadership
lag. And Dr. Park believes
there is a traditional lack of
SCO pe in women’s aspirations.
The solutions? She said that
women need to be “encouraged
*'° think in more factual,
realistic terms about the
opportunities society offers
them, which seem indeed to be
almost limitless.”
Get all the education you can.
tvhile you’re young and It’s
easier. College and university
help to show young women that
their lives “need not be cozy,
restricted and small,” she said,
“This is proved over and over
by the number of girls at
Barnard who go on to graduate
work and added basis for
leadership.”
Dr. Park formerly was
president of Connecticut Col
lege. She leaves Barnard June
30 after nearly five years as
president to become vice
chancellor for educational plan
ning and programs at UCLA.
Her husband (she married after
the Barnard appointment) is
Dr. Milton Anastos, professor of
Greek at UCLA.
They overcame the separation
gap “by supporting the airlines
and phone companies,” she
said.
WmM W
■
.....
mm ^5?
% 4 i
i' * *)
i “ ;
»
' I 9
X ,v
j- .....
r -
:■
55
m '• j
M I vi-:^ % >
.
lb i m
>>; : ;
■ rc
v ,
i2?'j
'V ■■
l
3 PURPLE HEARTS — Marine
Cpl. Joseph Luca, 20, who
migrated from Italy to Meri
den, Conn., in 1960, shows
how bullets chewed away
part of his helmet in Opera
tion DeSoto in South Viet
nam. He is not yet a U.S.
citizen, but he has won three
Purple Hearts, f Radiophoto J
Blacking Range
NEW YORK (UPI) —Next
time you are inclined to grum
ble about heavy housework in
your modem home, give a thou
ght to grandma.
Her chores included blacking
the coal range and washing soo
ty lamp chimneys every Satur
day, say historians at the Clean
liness Bureau.
This Easter ■'i- Wot! m I
Be sure you outfit is by "Country Set" ■ *v;’
or "Howard Wolf" from Collins, Ltd. ' ft
(tk % 9 m
»•
■
ISi! (MS Hi H fr »Js
lit Ifwfcsywh
..... i •A]
■ *
fe J
i,: II *:• •. v: mj&f
s
\. 1 \ %'■ \\
\ j-tAX ^ j
vAk*. 1%N|
p . i ty Country Stt \
m m
it i\ ,
■ i wm
.
fifi ■ I if ■A ftiiiP ft
' '{* *, m
—
\ g The print may be quaint, but the look is
fir completely contemporary when Traditionals
\ ro by Fortrel-flax Country lends Set itself tailors to subtle this dapper colors: duo.
sun
nt dune beige, shell pink, spray green.
!. & Jacket,
t $8.00; skirt, $10.00, 3-15. The
I Is matching shell, S-M-L, $7.00
HOWaRD WOLF
' ia f
■■•li
mm f ii-N- li '5K
mmm m
!-• ;
r <>\
m m
•’
H ~
ft m "
s
m N'., [•&
uflimMfa ■41 ■■■■I
■ m W'E
3
V. BP
M ...
ISSI Tt &
: v
■ i*
I
V $4Qoo
jg- The pea jacket goes allover flowery, gives St
m a great new look to these authentic Tradi- »
gS tionals by Country Set. To wear with it, a jg
lx slim skirt, a square-necked shell. In sundune K ’v
jj£ beige, shell pink, or spray green. Fortrel- HOW8RD
g flax, jacket, $20.00; skirt, $10.00, 3-15. ^ WOLF
S Shell, S-M-L, $8.00 g COLLINS,
Ltd.
"Formerly Goldstein's
HELLO LIMITED
CARMEL. Calif. (UPI)—Girls
wearing high heels better watch
their step in Carmel.
City officials are enforcing a
statute prohibiting heels higher
than two inches. They want to
be protected if girls in spiked
heels fall on the city streets.
For those who insist on
wearing extra high heels,
there’s an out. They can apply
for a city permit.
Clean Pores
HELSINKI (UPI) — There are
records and there are records.
After the Helsinki Olympics in
1952, Heikki Hirvinienl decided
to do a little record-breaking of
his own. Now 67 he claims to
have taken 8,000 sauna baths
since the end of the games, and
he doubts anyone can top that.
I ifil*
Want Ads Pay