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Powers Seek End To Threat Os Another Mideast War
By PHILIP L. NEWMAN
United Press International I
The United States, Britain, i
France and the Soviet Union I
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are taking the first steps
toward a gib power attempt to
end the threat of another Arab-
Israeli war, according to I
I diplomatic sources in London. i
In the crisis area itself, both
Israelis and Arabs returned to
using words after a series of 1
armed clashes Wednesday and
Thursday.
In Jerusalem, Israeli defense
minister Moshe Dayan Thurs-
day told Arab businessmen in I
occupied sections of Jordan that 1
they can resume sending trucks
of goods across the cease-fire <
lines as long as they guarantee 1
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(Griffin Daily News Staff Photo)
ABCette Bazaar
The Griffin ABCettes will hold a Christmas Bazaar Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
at the Rural Urban Center at the Spalding County Courthouse. Showing some of
the items to be sold are (1-r) Mrs. Ike Hill, Mrs. Rex Snell, Mrs. Larry Chapman
and Mrs. Irvin Clark. Proceeds will be used for the ABCette scholarship fund and
for improvements at Patrick Park.
Scranton Reports
Mideast Findings
To President-Elect
By EUGENE V. RISHER I
NEW VORK (UPD—Richard 1
M. Nixon, briefed on problems 1
of being president in a lengthy 1
White House session Thursday, •
today called in his personal
envoy to discuss conditions in :
the troubled Middle East. i
Former Pennsylvania Gov.
William W. Scranton, dis- I
patched Dec. 1 on a six-nation
swing through what Nixon has ■
termed one of the world’s most
volatile regions, was reporting
his findings in a private session
with the president-elect.
Nixon completed the task of
selecting the top leadership of
his new administration and
plunged today into a close
examination of both the domes
tic and foreign problems he will
inherit when he takes office
Jan. 20.
He also scheduled a meeting
with John Gardner, the former
health, education and welfare
secretary who now heads the
Urban Coalition, a riot-born
voluntary organization which
seeks solutions to problems of
the urban poor.
Nixon places great emphasis
on efforts by voluntary organi
zations and private businesses
to help bring prosperity to the
underprivileged, and is seeking
to coordinate and accelerate the
activities of such groups as the
Urban Coalition.
Nixon spent eight hours with
his new cabinet Thursday,
discussing problems ranging
from the war in Vietnam to
what to wear to the inaugura
tion.
With only a 30 minute break
for lunch, the top leadership of
the Nixon administration and
their wives—about 75 people in
all—spent eight hours crammed
into a small room of the
I'’ 1
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ft i I 1
A \ K. A
CUTE COOKIES FROM KENT. Coeds in Ohio’s Kent
State University baked more than 1,000 pounds of
cookies for Marines stationed in Vietnam. Shown with
some of the results of the kitchen caper are Ohioans
Barbara Schwan of Ashland, seated; and, standing from
the left, Randi Shoham, Shaker Heights; Karen Henning,
Grafton; and Patricia Resick, Kent.
the traffic will not cover anti-' i
Israeli guerrilla activity. I
In Egypt, the semiofficial 1
Cairo newspaper Al Ahram said 1
today that Israel is continuing
Shoreham Hotel in Washington
hearing expert opinions on
problems and procedures for
conducting national affairs dur
ing the next four years.
According to Herbert G.
Klein, a spokesman, Nixon
urged his lieutenants to careful
ly select their assistants and to
be candid w’lth the public.
Klein said a free flow of
information can be expected
from the Nixon administration.
Thursday was a full day of
preparation for a changing of
the guard in Washington, so far
remarkably smooth and cordial.
The Nixon cabinet met with
Johnson administration at a
reception in the State Depart
ment. Nixon, his family and
personal aides paid a one hour
and 40 minute call to the White
House.
While their staffs discussed
mutual problems, Johnson and
Nixon met privately for the
second time since the election
to discuss a wide range of
problems, including how to
bring peace in Vietnam and
calm tensions between the
Arabs and Israelis.
Johnson invited each member
of the Nixon cabinet to call on
him personally during the
coming days and talked with his
successor about the three
addresses Johnson must make
to the Congress on the State of
the Union and the nation’s
economic condition.
Campbell Honored
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) —
Glen Campbell, playing his first
major movie role in “True
Grit” with John Wayne, was
named country music entertai
ner of the year at the Country
Music Awards in Nashville,
Tenn.
Friday, December 13, 1968 Griffin Daily News
its “expansionsist policy” and
blocking United Nations at
tempts at seeking peace in the
Middle East.
The violence Thursday in-
Quirks
By United Press International
BAD PENNY
HERSHAM, England (UPD—
Brian Bennett stopped by a
white elephant sale to buy his
wife Sibby a little present—a
cameo locket and matching
earrings. They cost $1.20. When
he showed them to Sibby, she
doubled up laughing.
It was the same set he gave
her seven years ago. She had
given the jewelry to the sale
earlier in the wees.
“I didn’t recognize the
things,” Bennett said.
THEIR LUCKY PAY
GOLDEN, Colo. (UPD—De
nise, Diane and Debby Lieber
man all had reason to celebrate
today— Friday the 13th.
The triplets were born 13
years ago.
B . -• ' ' •
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w) Plan beauty
in your
electric kitchen • • •
With the growing popularity of "total electric living,"
today's kitchens are a joy to behold and a delight to
own!
The smooth, neat appearance of the electric range
has always had great appeal. And it’s easy to find
just the right style and color to add both beauty and
efficiency to your new kitchen.
Modern kitchens, in modern homes — both farm and
non-farm — are typical of rural living today. Total
electric living, with its advantages and convenience, is
within reach of thousands of our rural people because
of the availability of low-cost electric power from the
Rural Electrics.
CENTRAL GEORGIA
ELECTRIC MEMBERSHIP
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COMMUNITY OWNED • COMMUNITY BUILT
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volved one Arab who marched
into an Israeli miitary head
quarters building in Jericho in
the occupied part of Jordan.
Israeli officials said the Arab
shot and wounded an Israeli
official and was in turn killed
on the spot.
In the Gaza strip seized by
Israel in the 1967 Middle East
war, Israeli officials said their
forces Thursday shot and killed
one Arab commando and
captured another.
In London, the diplomats
spotlight the big power search
toward peace:
—Britain: Foreign Secretary
Micheal Stewar has a special
envoy in the Middle East
sounding out settlement pros
pects in Arab capitals with no
progress yet reported. In
London, Prime Minister Harold
Wilson and Stewart today were
meeting Israeli Foreign Minis
ter Abba Eban on tthe same
subject.
—France: President Charles
de Gaulle was reported reviving
an earlier call for a four power
peace initiative in the Middle
East.
—United States: The return to
the United States of William
Scranton. President-elect Rich
ard M. Nixon’s Middle East fact
finder, indicated the next
president may launch his own
peace drive soon after taking
office Jan. 20.
—The Soviet Union: In the
past week the Kremlin has
begun calling for a Middle East
political settlement. Diplomats
said the Russians are anxious to
cooperate on the Middle East
talks with Nixon after he takes
office.
Lynda, Maj. Robb
Stroll Through
Bankok Temples
BANGKOK (UPI) — Lynda
Bird Robb and her husband
ajor Charles Robb strolled
hand-in-hand through two of
Bangkok’s oldest Buddhist tem
ples today, laughing, taking
pictures of one another, and
asking a multitude of questions
of their guides.
The elder daughter of Pres
ident Johnson, and her husband
on a five-day rest and
recreation leave from Vietnam,
went first to the arble
Temple, shortly after lunch, and
later to Wat Vo, oldest pagoda
in Bangkok.
2