Newspaper Page Text
If at First You Don't Succeed
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Map? ®
| Great Schools |
ACROSS .
I Washington and
—University
4—-University,
Naw Haven
I——Point
12 Entire amount
IS Sleeping
14 Martian (comb,
form)
15 Eccentric wheel
IS Peruse
17 Notion
»I 8 Lay into position
30—University,
Cambridge i
SI Getaway (slang) i
93 Take into court
94 Helices . x
93 Marine eagtea
32 Loiter
S 3 Gaseous
element
SS Half (prefix)
38 Suffer pain
38 Stout, thick
fabric (Fr.)
40 Alcoholic drink
41 Tin, for instance
43 Enliven
45 Swine genus
I 47 Woody fruit-
48 Ascribe’
i 51 University,
Montreal
54 Notre
University
55 Fragrant East
Indian wood
57 Byway of
: 58 Class of
vertebrates
59 Erect
160 Ostrich relative
61 Encounter
62 Narrow road
163 Sorrowful
DOWN
1 Openwork fabric
2 Ancient Biblical;
kingdom
•3 Dutch elm 1
disease :
4 Railway :
employe :
5 Lincoln’s :
nickname :
• Jacob’s wife *
? Icelandic poems:
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fibth-*- i BPr
b -Tfcrß-4~ - 57
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SIDE GLANCES
USftl I
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• WW.fclWiae.tM.MttAM.WL
“She knew very well this was my night to bowl!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Reeves, General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Pull Leased Wire Service UPI, Full NEA. Address sD mall (Subscriptions
(Inn •< Address form 351#1 to P. O. Box 135, B, Solomon St, Griffin, Ga.
1 L i^ n jy*ir A 0 Previous Punic
31 Without (Latin)
34 Negative prefix
37 With least effort
39 Unfeigned
42 Haul
44 Earthenware
cup
46 Become tangled
48 Tenant in
Paradise
49 Safeguard
50 Pintail duck
51 Lament
52 Peruvian City
53 Praise
56 Meadow
5 Instruments of
abandonment
(law)
9 Wagner's earth
goddess
! 10 Prophet
11 Tailless
amphibian
19 Auricular organ
21 Regret
24 Bang
25 Step
26 Lower limb
27 Short-billed rail
29 Negations
30 Send out
‘Quotes’
By United ress International
WASHINGTON—Pierre Paul
Schweitzer, managing director
of the International Monetary
Fund, describing the gold rush
as “temporary flurries.”
“Nothing Is presently happen
ing to the dollar. No major
central bank Is using the
London market to buy gold.”
DETROIT—James A. Harri
son, chairman of a group of
Michigan Democrats supporting
Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-
Minn., for the Democratic
presidential nomination, reject
ing an appeal to stop criticizing
President Johnson:
“We Intend to make known
our position as Democrats to
the present administration’s
short-sighted foreign policy,
particulary In Southeast Asia,
and its superficial and Inade
quate response to the many
problems we face here at
home.”
Almanac
For
Todav
V
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Nov. 27, the
331st day of 1967 with 34 to
follow.
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mars
and Saturn.
On this day in history:
In 1901, the War Department
authorized the creation of the
Army War College to Instruct
commissioned officers.
In 1945, President Truman
named Gen. George Marshall
special representative to China.
In 1956, President Elsenhower
issued a statement denying
differences over the Suez Canal
had weakened the American,
British and French accord for
NATO.
In 1962, all 97 persons board a
U.S.-bound jet were killed when
it crashed in Peru.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year >19.00, six months SIO.OO,
three months $5.00. One
month $1.75, one week 40
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rate are
same as by carrier. By mail
within 30 miles of Griffin:
one year $16.00, six months
$9.00, three months $4.50, one
month $1.60. Delivered by
Special Auto: One Year
$21.00 (tax included)
EDITORIALS
Very Good
Manners
Griffinites and Spalding Countians have every reason to
be proud of the “One Nation Under God” observance
climaxed with presentation by the Exchange Club of a
Freedom Shrine to Griffin High last week.
The entire observance was impressive, but perhaps the
most impressive phase of all was not even planned. It was
the response of the more than a thousand students at Grif
fin High.
Student leaders who participated on the program did
exceptionally well. The auditorium was filled with young
men and women (no, we won’t call them “boys and
girls”), who conducted themselves with dignity and great
courtesy. We never have seen better manners displayed
at any public gathering.
We here in Griffin and Spalding have every reason to
be proud of “the younger generation” which so often is
criticized for the acts of only a few.
The county isn’t “going to the dogs” with them — not
by a long shot. From where we sit, it looks as if it is going
to improve considerably.
As for courtesy and manners, we adults could learn a
lot from the student body at Griffin High, instead of the
other way around. Perhaps THEY should teach US how
to act.
Exciting
Excitons
The electronics age has hardly arrived and already
scientists are looking beyond it into an entirely new field
of solid state physics—excitonics.
Excitons are similar to electrons, the tiny particles which
carry an electric charge and make possible television, high
speed computers, etc. But excitons don’t conduct electri
city. They have a potentially more useful property, say re
searchers: They can transport light energy.
Fantastically tiny excitonic-powered devices are en
visioned which may someday replace many of the functions
now being performed by electronics.
Today, excitons are laboratory curiosities. But so were
transistors only a decade or so ago.
♦ Guest Editorial ♦
A Big Chunk
Os Concrete
RALEIGH, N. C., NEWS AND OBSERVER
In almost every town in the section landmark homes are
gobbled up swiftly to make room for parking lots and the
like. Os course, many of these ancient dwellings are bereft
of human habitation.
Sometimes the windows are sockets without eyes. The
floors have sereve humps, the chimneys have DTs, and
rats riot in the library. A few stand with militant square
jawed and two-fisted gables, fighting time for every cor
roded inch and hour. But if the incessant demands of ex
panding society must be met, the truth is that the bull
dozer pushes down in two days the last physical symbol of
all that love, tears, and labor wrought across a century or
two centuries.
Such homes were built on their specific locations origin
ally because it was a short walk “up town.” But, ultimately,
these homes were stumbling blocks when “up town” de
manded leg room in the oldest residential streets. (The
earlier occupants are buried in the “old” cemetery that is
now in the path of the projected freeway. Thus, the dead
bring vexations to a machine society of which they never
heard.) Sometimes, the old line played out; and, again,
the recent generations moved elsewhere.
Today, unknowing motorists park where the white roses
grew, where oaks once seemed tangible lessons in immort
ality. People park and stomp cigarette butts and toss gum
wrappers where vanquished men planned the town’s future
and good grace. Engines stutter where pianos played and
poetry was read. Well, such may be historically inevitable.
But someone should cherish and tell these sagas so that
his son may know tomorrow that the moon once shone on
something more than a big piece of concrete.
Chuckling
With Ye Editor g
War On Junk
The war on roadside junk
Goes on with flash and flair.
Only trouble so far is —
The junk’s still there!
Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Cisne
Postace Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy Ite
BERRY’S WORLD
“How about taking a page
out of Sarge Shriver’s book
and threatening to resign if
they don’t pass your 10 per
cent tax surcharge?”
MY Mb
ANSWER g|
Not Heriditary
I have a. girl friend who Is the
daughter of a fine Christian fath
er and mother. She swears, tells
dirty stories and is not above
immorality. How could such a
well-reared daughter be so dif
ferent from her parents? S.A.
Unfortunately, goodness is not
hereditary. Children do not have
to be taught to swear, tell dirty
stories, and be immoral. Left
alone, they will do these things
instinctively. But, they have to
be taught the things of the Lord,
and, more they must know
Christ personally, if their lives
are to be changed and made
constructive. Some minister’s
children turn out badly, and one
reason for that is: they know the
theology of Christianity, without
knowing the Christ of Christian
ity. A valid faith cannot be
handed down from generation
to generation like a family
heirloom. That is what the Bible
means when it says: "Work
out your own salvation with fear
and trembling.” (Phil. 2:12).
However, the Bible says, “Tr
ain up a child in the way he shall
go, and when he is old he will
not depart from it.” The influ
ence of her Christian parents,
the earnest prayers that have
been said for her, may some
day have their effect, for the
Bible encourages parents to be
faithful in bringing children up
in the ways of God, and promis
es that ultimately such discipl
es will be fruitful.
PHfIVER
Che
Father, forgive them; for they
know not what they do. (Luke
23:34)
PRAYER: Father, help us to
follow Christ’s example in pray
ing for those who seek to harm
us and despitefully use us. As
we pray for them, may our he
arts reach out in love and con
cern. May our prayers in their
behalf be followed by efforts to
break down all barriers that ex
ist between them and us. For
Jesus’ sake. Amen.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—British
author Rudyard Kipling said:
“The silliest woman can man
aged a clever man: but it needs
a very clever woman to manage
a fool.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
The World Almanac re
ports that a “missing link”
in the evolution from wasps
to ants was found recently
on the shores of Raritan
Bay, N.J., preserved in
amber or fossilized tree
resin. Study of the insects,
half-wasp and half-ant, in
dicates that the world’s
first social insects date
from 100 million years ago,
a time when dinosaurs
were becoming extinct.
„ Copyright © 1967,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Monday, Nov. 27, 1967 Griffin Daily New*
•jrf if FL®!
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