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Foodstuff
37 Spare and
sauerkraut
39 European perch
40 Ultimate lot
41 Tear
42 Group of eight
45 Reproduce
49 Cherished, as In
the mind
51 Important food
l » fish
52 Drop of eye
fluid
53 Steadfast
54 Sea flyer
55 Birds of prey
, 56 One who (suffix)
c > 57 Depot (ab.)
DOWN
1 Potato (Sp )
2 European river
3 Experimental
4 Antiquated
5 Egress
6 Affirm
7 Observe
8 Previous
ACROSS
1 Chicken ——
pie
4 Creamed ——
8 pudding
12 Fruit drink
13 Spindle on
which a wheel
revolvea
14 Part in a drama
15 Writing
implement
18 Certain
Pru iiiana
18 Expert chef
30 Concluding
paaaagea (music]
31 Exist
22 Toothed wheel
24 Memorandum
26 Erect
27 Folding bed
30 Exhibit
32 Dispassionate
34 Disclose
35 Physostigmine
36 Individual
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SIDE GLANCES
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“Your popularity is on the upswing, Senator. Your
latest recording got 30 per cent more squeals!”
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Car y Reeve*. General Manager Q u i m by Melton, Jr.,
Publisher Bai Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Full Leased Wire service UPI, Full NEA. Address all Mall (Subscriptions
Change of Address form 3579) to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St, Griffin, Ga.
Answer to Previous Puizle
i 1L
1 I 1 -I
diamonds
33 Accountant's
entry
38 Syrian city
40 Dreads
41 Horseman
42 Attar
r 43 Retinue
r 44 Short-necked
river duck
46 Simple
47 Civil wrong
48 Girl’s name
50 “Free nation”
vessel (ab )
9 Burden
10 Arm bone
11 Quantity of
i food
' 17 Frightens
19 Feminine name
23 Alleviates
24 Roman emperor
25 Baking chamber
26 Reignited
27 Turtle shells
28 Genus of
bustards
29 Number (pl.)
31 Weights for
Quote
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Chairman
Clinton P. Anderston, D-N.M.,of
the Senate Space Committee,
expressing his hope that the
space accidents suffered by the
United States and Russia would
result in greater cooperation in
space:
“I would hope that our
mutual sense of grief over these
accidents . . . would cause the
people of our two great nations
to sit down and talk to each
other about the technical
problems in these programs.”
COLUMBIA, S.C. —Gen. Wil
liam C. Westmoreland, com
mander of U.S. forces in
Vietnam, greeting a group of
high school students cheering
him on his arrival in Columbia
to visit his mother:
“This is quite a contrast from
the receiption I got in New
York. They tried to burn me in
effigy there.’ ’
Almanac
For
Griffin
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, April 26,
the U6th day of 1967 with 249 to
follow.
The moon Is between its full
phase and its last quarter.
The morning star is Mars.
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter.
Born on this day in 1785 was
pioneer American naturalist
John Audubon.
On this day in history:
In 1607, the first British
colonists to establish a per
manent settlement in America
landed at Cape Henry, Va.
In 1865, federal troops killed
John Wilkes Booth, the assassin
of President Lincoln, near Port
Royal, Va. He was killed
despite orders to bring him in
alive.
In 1954. a nationwide test of
the Salk anti-polio vaccine
began in 45 states.
In 1962, a U.S. Ranger TV
space shot fired three days
earlier hit the moon.
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. 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 Year
$18.20 (tax included.)
GRIFFIN
This Week’s Editorial
By A Woman Especially For Women
It’s A Fact
That - - -
It’s a fact that —
• Nearly everyone will tell you that a woman can’t
keep a secret. Yet most secretaries are women and their
bosses dictate secrets to them every day.
• Most husbands don’t like for their wives to operate
the vacuum cleaner when they are home. But the husband
will fool around with an electric saw or drill all day on his
day off from work and be surprised if the noise bothers
her.
• A balding man will spend hours looking at himself
in the mirror worrying about his hair coming out and think
it strange if a woman frets over a few gray ones of her own.
• Women are supposed to talk more than men but to
listen quietly, sympathetically and without interruption
when a man talks to them.
• When a man says: “I am sure of my wife,” it means
he is sure of his wife.” But when a woman says: “I am sure
of my husband,” it means she is sure of herself.
• Finally, a woman is expected to be poised. But, to
quote the Monroeville, Ala., Journal, “One woman’s poise
is another woman’s poison.”
Science: Handcuff
For Criminals
In all the discussion about crime and what to do about
it, one approach to the problem is seldom mentioned—
the application of modern science. Yet of all the weapons
which have been used in the war on crime in the past,
science and technology have been among the most effec
tive.
Albert V. Crewe, University of Chicago physicist and
director of the Argonne National Laboratory, points to the
accomplishments of forensic medicine as an example of
how science, by making detection more certain, has lessen
ed crime, or at least made the life of the criminal much
more difficult.
Os the thousands of methods of committing murder that
are humanly possible, large numbers of them are seldom
used by even the most desperate, he says, simply because
of the ability of the medical pathologist to discover the
cause. Today, even the most stupid person would not con
sider committing murder by arsenic poisoning, for instance.
To Crewe, “it is absolutely incredible” that society
should rely so heavily on scientific criminology and yet
completely ignore its potentialities.
What he has in mind is a new kind of laboratory which
would contain a wide spectrum of scientists and instru
ments and devices. It would be about 10 times the size of
the FBI laboratory and use equipment of the highest per
formance—the largest and fastest computers available, a
nuclear reactor for neutron activation work, all of the most
modem analytical tools in chemistry, physics and biology.
It would have a staff of highly trained physicists, che
mists, mathematicians, pathologists, etc. It would be asso
ciated with the academic community as closely as possible
and be at least partially under public control. The whole
thrust of the laboratory would be to study the total prob
lem of crime.
Crewe believes science and technology have a role not
only in crime detection but crime prevention. In the matter
of crime on the streets, “it is at least conceivable,” he says,
that citizens could be licensed to carry miniaturized police
call systems in the form of small radio transmitters. A call
for help could be automatically and instantaneously trans
mitted to the local police.
The fingerprint identification system has not been de
veloped as far as it could, he says. Computers could help
here. Computers could also make possible the cataloguing
and identification of criminals by physical characteristics.
“Granting that these efforts may be costly the cost
would be infinitesimal compared to the cost to society of
crime itself,” says Crewe.
It seems to us that he’s got something there.
Communist Style
It is reported from London that Communist Romania
has ordered a Phantom V Rolls-Royce costing about $50,-
000 for its president, Chivu Stoica. The 20-foot limousine
will have a wine cooler, a cocktail cabinet, separate front
and rear air conditioners, a television set and radio tele
phone.
We are no longer surprised to hear how Communist big
shots live compared with the ordinary folk in their theore
tical share-and-share-alike paradise.
Chuckling
With Ye Editor
7 g ojfl]
Too many people started the new year like a tiger —
all tanked up.
••• • •
“A lot of people are like a wheelbarrow—no good, un
less pushed.” — Texas Legion News
••• • •
None of us wants to be classified as a “nut,” but some
times it takes a crank to get things started.
Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Class
Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy «o
BERRY’S WORLD
“It all started when we let
Junior go to Berkeley—then
Albert went out there to see
how he was doing . . .1”
MY t
answer!
by 1
Depression
I have been a Christian for
many years, but lately I have
suffered from chronic depres
sion. I don't know of any real
reason for it, and I know it is
wrong. What can I do? H.B.
Dr. Armand Nicoli, psychia
trist of Harvard, says that de
pression is caused mainly by the
gap between what we ought to
be and what we are. Basically
then, it is a concern that we be
better, and that is not all bad.
The apostle Paul experienced
something akin to depression.
He said, ”O wretched man that
I am; who will deliver me from
the body of this death?” There
obviously was a gap between
what he ought to have been and
what he was. This conscious
ness of need caused the wret
chedness, or depression, he ex
perienced.
But he made it clear that
Christians need not be chained
to depression, and he pointed
the way to victory over it. He
said, “For to be carnally mind
ed is death; but to be spiritual
ly minded is life and peace.”
The secret of victory, then, over
depression is to be spiritually
minded. What does this mean?
It means, for one thing, to let
His love for us, the end result
your mind meditate on the good
ness, the grace, and the love of
Gffd. When we look at oursel
ves, we are inclined to be de
pressed, lor there is so much
about us that is unfruitful and
unworthy. But when we reflect
upon Christ, His forgiveness, and
as Paul says, is “life and pe
ace.” The best cure for depress
ion is to get your mind off your
self, and upon Christ. In H i m
there is life, peace, and victory.
IO» TODAY FROM VU JI
Cbe Upper
I am the good shepherd: the
good shepherd giveth his life for
the sheep. (John 10:11)
PRAYER: O Lord, grant to us
Thy great love that we may love
Thee and make sacrifices for
Thee and for the good of others.
We pray in the name of the
Master, who taught us to pray,
“Our Father who art in hea
ven. . . Amen.”
Thought For Today
A thought for the day —
French scientist Blaise Pascal
once said: “Man is but a reed,
the weakest in nature, but he is
a thinking reed.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
B
Although soccer has
never drawn large crowds
in the United States, in
many other countries the
game is avidly watched by
millions of fans, says The
World Almanac. In Buenos
Aires, Argentina, soccer is
almost a religion for many
people. The city has 23
stadiums which sometimes
draw a combined total of a
million spectators on a sin
gle day.
Copyright © 1967,
HovxMoer En torpriao Ason.
Wednesday, April 26, 1967 Griffin Daily News
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