Newspaper Page Text
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Vegetable Plate I
42 Combat vehicle
44 Kind
46 Mining lode I
47 Entire
i 49 Fruiting spike
51 Kind of lily
54 Melon type (pl.) >
58 Transferor of
property
60 Expel air
violently
61 Light brown
62 Guido’s note
63 Concede
64 Table scraps
65 Droop
66 Leaven
DOWN
1 Resistance units
2 Low tide :
3 Peruvian Indian:
4 Unity !
5 Nostril :
6 Greenland ;
settlement ;
I 7 Governor (ab.)
8 Feel one’s way 1
9 Harvest
ACROSS
1 rings
6 Fried —plant
9 cabbage
12 Red-orange dye
13 Craggy
pinnacle
14 Anglo-Saxon
letter
15 Staff bearer
16 salad
18;— rice
20 Oblong,
yellowish fruit
21 Superlative
suffix
22 Writing tool
23 Algonquian
Indians
26 Affirmative
response
28 Competent
32 Ordinary
language
34 Twitching
36 Trouble
37 Always (contr.)
38 Extinct bird
40 Chili con
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“I’m ironing and Edith It bowling ... all on account
of a crummy HINTS TO THE HOUSEWIFE column!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bai Knight, Executive Editor Editor
, run Leased Wire Servico UPL Fell NEA. Address all matt (SubeeripUens Poblished Daily Except Sunday. Second Clasi
£ Change of Address fora UM) to P. 0. Box IM, Si Solomon St, Griffin, Go. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga. — Single Copy Up
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Answer to Previous Puzzle
35 200 (Roman)
39 Petroleum
41 Adjust
43 Cabbage type
45 New Zealand
parrot
48 Ocean paths
50 Analysis
51 Roman senator
52 Winged
53 Scraped linen
54 Projecting rock
55 Adriatic wind
56 Greek war god
57 Let It stand
59 Palm leaf (var.l
10 Norse poem-
11 Arab boat
17 Biblical town
19 Pigpen
22 Greek letter
23 Young
1 barracuda
24 Region
125 on the cob
27 And others (ab.)
29 Unclothed
30 Row
31 Hebrew letter
(var.)
33 Printer's
measure
‘Quotes’
By United Press International
MIAMI (UPI) — Professional
golfer Barbara Romack, recall
ing her experiences as a
passenger on the hijacked
Chicago-to-Mlami jetliner forced
to land in Cuba:
“It was great. I got more
publicity out of this than when I
won the women’s open.”
NEW ORLEANS (UPI)—
Black power militant H. Rap
Brown, jailed for allegedly
threatening the life of an FBI
agent and his family, vowing a
fast until he is released:
“I’ll stay there until I'm
released or I’m dead. I’ll refuse
food and water. I won’t eat a
thing.”
SHIMIZU, Japan (UPl)—Kim
Hee Ro, barricaded in a hotel
and holding off police with
dynamite and 10 frightened
hostages told, reporters admitted
to see him:
“I feel like a Viet Cong.”
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Friday, Feb. 23, the
54th day of 1968 with 312 to
follow.
The moon Is between its Ist
quarter and new phasp.
The morning star is Venus.
The evening stars are Mars,
Jupiter and Saturn.
On this day in history:
In 1847, Gen. Zachary Taylor
and his American soldiers
defeated Santa Ana in the battle
of Buena Vista, Mexico.
In 1942, a Japanese submarine
fired 25 shells at an oil refinery
near Santa Barbara, Calif., the
first enemy attack on American
soil in World War 11.
In 1945 six members of the
Fifth Division of the U.S.
Marines planted an American
flag atop Mt. Surlbachi on Iwo
Jirna.
In 1965, Movie comedian Stan
Laurel of Laurel and Hardy
fame, died at the age of 74.
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 ere
same as by earrier. By mail
within 30 miles of Griffin:
one year SIB.OO, six months
$9.00, three months $4.50, ont
month $1.60. Delivered by
Special Ante: One Year
$21.00 (tax Included)
■fr -A-THIS WEEK’S SPORTS EQITORIfIL * -fr
Spring Sports
Around Corner
Basketball is over at Griffin High but that doesn’t mean
it’s time for athletes to relax.
The end of basketball signals the beginning of spring
sports, the busiest time of the year as far as athletic events
are concerned.
Coach Max Dowis has announced the beginning of
spring football practice.
Coach Don Pierce will call out his baseball players with
in the next few days.
Athletes, who participate in track, golf and tennis, are
anxiously awaiting arrival of their special season.
Griffin is known as a football and baseball town. So
those sports will attract a lot of interest in the next few
weeks. However, they must share the limelight with track,
tennis and golf.
Coach Dowis expects nearly 50 boys to participate in
spring football. That’s just the varsity unit. A large num
ber of youngsters will train with the “B” team.
Coach Pierce and a host of avid baseball fans are eagerly
awaiting the first pitch.
The Eagles are defending region baseball champs. That’s
nothing new.
Griffin has won many baseball championships and its
success at defending titles is remarkable.
This should be an interesting spring for sports fans, who
actively follow Griffin High’s football, baseball, track,
tennis and golf teams.
— Roger Dix
Pin-Lps Usually
Win In Final
Scientists who study the scientists who are studying the
secrets of Antarctica have noted an interesting behavioral
phenomenon, reports Science Service.
According to one psychological study of the men, who
spend up to a year in isolation on the frigid continent, the
first pictures to appear on the walls of their under-the-ice
quarters are pin-ups.
These begin to be covered by travel posters after several
months—pictures of sun-drenched beaches and mountain
forests.
Then, about two or three months before the men are due
to return home, the pin-ups reappear.
The Whole Rhyme
For Computer
WALL STREET JOURNAL
“Thirty days hath September, April, June and Novem
ber—all the rest have 31 except ...” So begins a com
munication just received by an acquaintance of ours from
a bank in New York at which he has a savings account.
“Unfortunately,” this neatly printed communication goes
on, “our computer was not told this familiar rhyme and
credited all savings accounts with 31 days’ interest in
November. To compensate for this mistake the computer
was instructed to make the proper adjustment in Decem
ber. By doing this, savings accounts will receive the correct
amount of interest for the November - December period,
We’re sorry.”
Gracefully done, indeed. For once, in this computer
age, the blame is placed where it belongs, and not on
defenseless machines. It might be a good idea, though,
for the computer to be told—and pretty quickly, too—that
familiar rhyme in its entirety as it supposedly was written,
in 1606, by some scholars in Cambridge, England.
For after tolling off September, April, June and No
vember, it goes on like this: “February eight—and twenty
all alone, —And all the rest have thirty-one;—Unless that
lean vear doeth combine, —And give to February twenty
nine.”
Chuckling
With Ye Editor S;
Teacher: “Where’s your pencil, Alf?”
Alf: “I ain’t got one, teacher.”
Teacher: “How many times must I tell you not to say
that. Listen: I haven’t got a pencil; you haven’t got a
pencil; they haven’t got a pencil; we haven’t got a pencil.”
Alf; “Well, where is the ????? are all the pencils?” —
Brooks (Alta.) Bulletin
BERRT’S MLB
“ALL RIGHT, ALL
RIGHT — let’s stop soul
searching about the war in
Vietnam on company time 1”
MY
*7 U-J
Moral Jungle
I heard Hugh Heffner, Harvey-
Cox (a theologian) and William
Buckley of the National Re
view, discussing the morals of
our nation on television, and af
ter the discussion the emcee
made the comment: “No one
knows the answer.” Is it possi
ble that there is no answer to
the complex moral problems of
our country? T.C.
I believe that we are wander
ing through the moral jungle
of permissivism in this country
because we have forsaken the
Biblical concept of moral abso
lutes. It is like an airplane pilot
throwing out his compass and
chart, and saying, ‘‘l can navi
gate without these aids.” The
human heart so designed that
it cannot navigate, morally and
spiritually, without guidelines.
Just as a pilot, due to physical
limitation, cannot orient him
self in the air without mech
anical instruments, (he doesn’t
know if he is upside down or
right side up when he can’t see
the ground), we cannot maintain
our moral equilibrium without
moral absolutes.
If there was no law there would
be chaos in the world. There are
so many ideas about what is
right and what is wrong, the
state of the world would be one
of chaos and confusion. God,
in His wisdom, has given the
world moral guidelines in the
Ten Commandments and the
Sermon on the Mount. They are
simple, they are fair, and they
are reasonable. Anyone can see
where our philosophy or moral
relativism and permissivism is
leading us. The answer is for
all of us to honor God’s laws.
MMM Bj
FOR TODAY FROM 'A'“
Che lipper Room Mfr
There is one body, and one
Spirit, even as ye are called in
one hope of your calling. (Ep
hesians 4:4)
PRAYER: Our Father, may
the light of Christ shine throu
gh our lives. Draw us together in
Thy love so that our witness may
be greater. Through Thy Son,
Christ our Lord, we pray, as He
taught us, "Our Father who art
in heaven. . . Amen”.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day:
American playwright Irwin
Shaw said "there are too many
books I haven’t read, too many
memories I haven’t kept long
enough.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
wh.
figajlOj-P
The year I of the Moslem
calendar, which corres
ponds to A.D. 622 in the
Christian calendar, com
memorates Mohammed’s
Arabian journey or hegira
from his birthplace, Mecca,
to the city of Medina, notes
The World Almanac. Islam
(Arabic for “submission”)
is. t h e r e f 0 r e the most
recently f 0 u n d e d of the
world’s major religions.
Copyright © 1966,
Newep.ij'er Enterprlee Ann.
Friday, February 23, 1968 Griffin Daily News 4
: ‘W iTHBr a. ®'- ,n
1
© 1941 by NIA, Inc.* *
Television
Friday Night
2 5 11
6:00 Newsroom I Love Merv
:15 ” Lucy Griffin
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7;00 Huntley Panorama ”
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8:00 ” ” Exercise”
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9:00 ” Movie: ”
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W:00 Tomorrow's ” Judd
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:45 ” “The Long Bishop
if :00 Hot Summer”
I > :15
Z :30
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Saturday Morning
So -
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7:00 Hercules 4-H Hour
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:45 Gordon ” In Living
8:00 Hopalong Mr. Fix ~
•15 Cassidy ” ”
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9:00 Super 6 Frankenstein Casper
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:45 President ” Four
gg| :00 Flintstones Shazzan Spider-Man
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II 9 ;30 Movie: Space Journey to th<
U:00 the Lost” Moby Dick King Kong
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Saturday Afternoon
gg :00 ” ’’ Beatles
I J :15
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JkflMl ;45 Goliath Quest Bandstand
1:00 Bird man Lone ’’
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3:00 Earth College B-ball ”
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5:00 Shell's World Lost In Space Wilburn
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4