Newspaper Page Text
"We Want Warm Relations With All Nations."
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Alaska
tree
40 Number
41 Egg white
43 General' (ab.)
44 Disembark
46 Bowl ike
. curve
47 Elderly
48 Gloomy
50 Belligerent's
right to
seize neutral
shipping
52 Affray
53 Kad iak ——
(Pl.)
54 Whale oil
cask
55 Chalcedony
DOWN
, 1 Almond
pickers, for
instance
2 Soup
vegetable
3 Extinct bird
4 Held in
affection
5 Priest (Sp.)
C> Brewed
ACROSS
1 Alaskan city
sChilkoot —
9——River
10
Highway
12 Group of four
13 Tradesman
15Roster
16 Projecting
lug
13 Underdone,
as steak
19 Wooden core
(archaeol.)
20 Satisfied
22 Hail!
23 Auto
24 Exist
25 Congealed
into hoarfrost
27 Make certain
29 Scottish cap
30 Turf
31 Winesaps,
for example
35 Bestowed
38 Cutting tool
(var.)
39 Candlenut
jl E> |3 |4 |5 |6 17 18 I
pj ra
15 ■Bi6~ 17 gjBTS
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23 |H «25 26
27 ™ J? 1
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53 F"*
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•*lt must be the new morality. This couldn't have
happened at obedience school several years back!”
GRIFFIN
DAILJV #NEWS
Quimby Melton, ary Re« v es, General Manager Quimby Melton. Jr.
Publisher BiU Knight, Executive Editor Editor
Full Leased Wire Service UPI, Full NEA, Address all mail (Subscriptions Published Daily Except Sunday, Second Class
Change of Address form 3579) to P. O. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga.—Single Copy 100
Ktwvtt to Previous Puzzle
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drink
7 Cicatrix
8 Eastern
salutation
9 Naval clerk
11 Temerity
12 Vestige
14 Clarinet's
mouthpiece
17 Devoured
food
20 Malay
garment
21 Dry goods
dealer
26 Little devil
28 Employ
29 Vehicles for
hire
32 Loiterer
33 Arabian
rulers (var.)
34 Like the
beach
35 rush
36 Encircle-
37 Thin sheet
of material
38 Swiss river
42 Stratum
45 Spanish
painter
47Culture
medium
■49 Arikaran
Indian
51 Education
group (ab.)
‘Quotes’
By United Press International
WASHINGTON—NikoIai Podg
orny, chairman of the Soviet
Presidium, cabling President
Johnson on the success of the
Apollo 8 orbit of the moon:
“Accept our congratulations
in connection with the success
ful completion of the Apollo 8
spacecraft flight around the
moon, which was a new
achievement in space explora
tion by man.”
DALLAS — Biologist Jeffrey
J.W. Baker, urging that Catho
lics protest the Pope’s encycli
cal on birth control by diverting
contributions to pay for birth
control information in underde
veloped nations:
"On this Sunday, I suggest
that Roman Catholics all over
the United States and Puerto
Rico could express their disap
proval of the encyclical by
withholding all monies from the
collection plate.”
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Dec. 30th,
the 365th day of 1968 with one to
follow.
The moon is between Its first
quarter and full stage.
The morning stars are Mars
and Jupiter.
The evening stars are. Saturn
and Venus.
On this day in history:
In 1853 the United States
bought 45,000 square miles of
land south of the Gila River
from Mexico for $lO-million. It
now is the southern parts of
Arizona and New Mexico.
In 1903 fire swept the Iroquois
Theater in Chicago, killing 588
persons.
In 1947 King Michael of
Rumania abdicated, claiming he
was forced out by Communists.
In 1959 President Eisenhower
called off the ban on American
nuclear tests.
thought For Today
A thought for the day: Ralph
Waldo Emerson said: “Every
hero becomes a bore at last.”
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Subscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $19.00. six months SIO.OO,
three in ont h s $5.00. one
month $1.75, one week 40
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates are
same as by carrier. By mail
within 30 miles of Griffin:
one year 516.00, six months
$9.00. three months $4.50, one
month $1.60. Delivered by
Special Auto: One Year
$21.00 (tax included>.
EDITORIALS S
Fine Young Men
Stand Tall At GHS
We do not know what the Governor of Georgia thought
the other day when Griffin High School s Honor Guard
of ROTC cadets welcomed him and his party to Griffin.
But here is what we thought:
The cadets were a sight to behold. Their uniforms were
immaculate, their movements crisp, everything just so. As
they used to say in the Army, “You could hear their eye
balls click.”
Here were examples of our very finest; some white boys
and some black, all young and erect and confident and
American. We felt, too, a sense of awe and of wonder that
so short awhile ago they were only little fellows playing
Santa Claus, yet all of them men now. And inevitably there
was regret that we older people have dumped so heavy a
load upon their shoulders —but pride that they looked per
fectly ready, willing and able to carry it and to straighten
out a big part of the snarl of trouble which beset the world
in general and their generation in particular. And confid
ence—we felt great confidence in them.
Mostly we were plain proud — proud of these young
men themselves, proud of the hundreds upon hundreds of
fine young people whom they represented, proud of the
school and the community which produced them, and
proud of the Nation and of the State under whose flag
they stood.
And confident. You couldn’t look at the cadets stand
ing there without feeling confidence in them and confid
ence in the future of this community, this state and this
nation.
New Budget
LBJ’s Last Act
Officially, Richard M. Nixon assumes office as president
on Jan. 20. In one profoundly important area, however,
it will be a year to a year and a half before the new
j administration can really begin to take over from the old.
President Johnson’s last major constitutional duty will
be to present the new Congress with a budget under which
the government will be asked to operate from July 1, 1969,
to June 30, 1970. Although Congress has the final say on
spending and although the new president will not be with
out influence on Capitol Hill, the basic Johnson budget for
fiscal 1970 is something the Nixon administration will have
to live with — and accept responsibility for— for A full
I quarter of its term in office.
I It is estimated that out of every federal dollar now
scheduled for spending, the president has control over less
I than 30 cents. The balance has already been committed by
previous acts of Congress or, like the interest on the nation
al debt, is automatically provided for.
Rep. Wilbur Mills, chairman of the House Ways and
Means Committee, has pointed out that because there are
so many of these built-in growth factors, federal spending
next year would go up by $7 - $lO billion over this year’s
$185.1 billion without a single new appropriation bill being
enacted. Even the most economy-minded president can’t
, get around that fact.
I
Book
Power
DENVER POST
Out-of-touch types such as black militants may still be
urging Negro college students to tote guns on campus, but
for those in touch with reality we relay an item from the
Wall Street Journal.
So intense has the scramble become among big business
firms to hire scarce Negro college graduates as executives
and executive trainees that the number of recruiters visit
ing five Atlanta-area Negro colleges is up 25 per cent this
year.
And Columbia University’s business school reports its
Negro graduates are getting more job offers than Whites,
and at salaries “5 to 10 per cent higher”.
For these opportunities, book-toters probably have an
edge.
Chuckling EN
With Ye Editor St;
A report tells us that the U. S. dog population is about
30 million. We wish that the growling was confined to
them.
• • • • •
“Students who have already become so well-informed
and wise that they know more than college officials about
how the colleges should be run don’t need additional edu
cation.” — Olin Miller, Thomaston Times
• • • • •
Friends really count — and you aren’t much of one un
less yours can count on you.
BEHRY'S WOU
“In away, I guess you could
call it a little protest of my
own—l’m burning CREDIT
CARDS!”
MY
ANSWER w 3
Get Him Back
I have a son who went away to
college and became involved in
these student rebellions. We a
greatly disturbed. Wte sent him
away to get a good edneation,
and now all he does is demoen
strate and join student ctivist
groups. How can we get our son
back? H.H.
Something new is developing
on our campuses. A revolution
is taking place. It is a known
fact that about five percent of
the students on our university
campuses are anarachists with
no Interest at all In education.
They are there to stir up trou
ble and to capture the uncom
mitted student for their causes.
Every generation Is awed by
the actions of the coming gene
ration — principally because
they act differently than they
did when they were young. It is
natural for students to re-exa
mine the beliefs and Ideas of
their parents, particularly when
they’ see the magnitude of the
problems the world is facing.
But I can’t see what good des
truction riots are doing. Have
these young people really de
flnde what they want? Have
they an Intelligent alternative to
the methods, Institution and phi
losophies of “the establish
ment?” Have they thought out
a concrete program of action
that will change things for the
better?
If not, they should settle down
to the business of Improving
their Intellectual capactiies and
preparing for the future Intelli
gently. Some want to “burn
down” but they have nothing to
replace It with.
As for your son, It may be too
late to "get him back”, but
If his financial resources were
curtailed, It might Induce h 1 m
to change his attitude toward st
udy.
AMOflUll
»O« TODAY HOM
Che Upper
All they that heard it won
dered at those things which
were told them by the shepherds.
(Luke 2:id)
PRAYER: O Lord, grant
that our observation of Christ
mas may become Christian. So
may Christ — His teachings, sp
irit, and power — change our
pagan culture to a Christian ci
vilization. For His sake. Amen.
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
IJgllls
IrWWMI ! ®
New York’s Roxy Thea
ter, with 6,214 seats, was
the world’s largest when it
opened in 1927, The World
Almanac says. Named for
owner Sam “Roxy”. Rotha
fel, the theater was a con
glomeration of Gothic, Ren
aissance ■ and Moorish
styles. Theatricality ex
tended even to ushers.
Each evening 125 ushers
marched into the rotunda,
white-jacketed day ushers
transferring their flash
lights to gold-braided eve
ning men. The Roxy was
torn down in 1960.
Copyright © 1965,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Monday, Dee. 30, 1968 Griffin Daily Newa
© IKS by NEA,
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