Newspaper Page Text
How Many Devils Can Dance
on the Head of a Pin?
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Birds
of Ronald
34 Personal (ab.)
35 French river
36 Empress of
Russia
38 Attack
39 Past
40 Table scrap
41 Dull in color
44 Son of Gad
45 Stroke of
success
48 Muse of
poetry
49 Philippine
peasant
50 Cyprinoid
food fish
51 Devoured
5211 inted
54 Winter
vehicles
55 Soothsayer
DOWN
1 Singing bird
2 Nautical term
3 Entreaty
4 French
article
5 Emissaries
ACROSS
I—— longspur
8
cormorant
13 Declarer
under oath
14 Rental
contract
15 Female
ruff (var.)
16 Roof finial
17 Deserves.
18 New Zealand
parrot
19Doze
20 Property item
21 Atlantic (ab.)
22 Equal
(comb, form)
23 Adolescent
years
26 Intimate
companions
30 Masculine
nickname
31 Permission
to UM
32 Nocturnal
flyer
33 Diminutive
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5 n
p BHpI 17
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23 124 125 jra26 27" 'p&" |&
35 " ■|p rap
55“ rap 4 rap ~
55 ~~P ~ rap
Mu7j 3r ~~>r ~_1! '
41 42 43 44 ■MprZTTr
45 49 Sko
51 52 53
54
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“How do you communicate with a parent who thinks
the new left is a girl in the chorus line?”
GRIFFIN
JI
DAILY T NEWS
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeve »> General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bfll Kni S ht » Executive Editor Editor
Full Leased Wire Service UPI, Full NEA, Address all mall (Subscriptions Published Daily Eicept Sunday, Second Class
Change of Address form 5579) to P> 0. Box 135, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga.—Single Copy Ito
Answer to. Previous Puzzle
Hi- ,OuL/ i li IJAirj
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IAISISIS|R|t| |s|E|t|o|s|e|
29 Let it stand
(print.)
31 Cotton fabric
34 Pouters, for
instance
35 Canadian
province (ab.)
37 Ravfd
38 Baltimore ——
40 Papal cape
41 Golf mounds
42 Epochal
43 Censure
violently
44 Japanese
outcasts
45 Conceal
46 Roman date
47 Scatters,
as hay
53 Chaldean city
6 Asian
kingdom
7 Fall in drops
8 Entertainer
Jackie
9 Motive
10 Auricles
11 Anglo-Saxon
theow
12 Bird’s home
21 At all
22 A Gershwin’s
namesakes
23 Small pastry
24 Son o( Seth
(Bib.)
25 Feminine
appellation
26 Girl’s name
27 Wading bird
28 Facility
‘Quotes’
By United Pre s s International
WASHINGTON — Democratic
leader Sen. Mike Mansfield,
good-naturedly promising coo
peration to President Nixon who
briefly visited the Senate
Wednesday:
“We’ll do everything we can
to make you a good President,
a great President."
CORONADO, Calif. — Lt.
Cmdr. Charles Clark, testifying
at the Navy’s Pueblo Investiga
tion, that the Pueblo’s two .50
caliber machine guns were
completely inadequate:
“That is like asking what size
pocket knife should I carry
when walking down a street as
protection against robbers with
guns."
JERUSALEM — Israeli
Foreign Minister Abba Eban,
calling on the world to condemn
the hangings of alleged Israeli
spies in Iraq:
“Civilized mankind cannot for
its own sake stand silent.”
WASHINGTON—Rep. George
Bush, R-Tex., objecting to the
contemplated congressional sa
lary boost while working people
are being asked to keep salary
demands down:
“I don’t think It Is fair to ask
the people to stick with one
standard and then have the
House given another."
Almanac
For
Today
By United Press International
Today is Friday, Jan. 31, the
31st day of 1969 with 334 to
follow.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Satuyn
and Venus.
On this day in history:
In 1943 the Soviet Union
aimounced the virtual annihila
tion of 330,000 Nazi troops at
Stalingrad, a turning point of
World War 11.
In 1953 more than 2,000
persons lost their lives when
North Sea storms flooded
Holland.
In 1958 the United States
launched its first satellite,
Explorer I into orbit.
In 1968 North Vietnamese
Communist guerrillas raided the
U.S. embassy in Saigon, opening
the Viet Cong's New Year
offensive.
Thought For Today
A thought for the day—
French scientist Blaise Pascal
said, “Between us and hell or
heaven there is nothing but life,
which of all things is the
frailest.”
EDITORIALS KS
■ ■MBPIB*
THIS WEEK’S SPORTS EDITORIAL -fa it
Atlanta Draft
Looks Good
The 1968 pro draft is history now and if George
Kunz and Paul Gipson live up to their reputations, the
Atlanta Falcons could be one of the most improved clubs
in the National Football League.
Kunz, as is well known, was regarded as one of college
football’s finest stars last year. .
He was an offensive gem. Not one who gamed 2,000
yards rushing, or threw 20 touchdown passes.
Kunz spent his time blocking for the stars, who grabbed
the headlines.
He didn’t go unnoticed by the pro scouts. Atlanta,
along with many other teams, felt Kunz was the best offen
sive lineman in college ball. So they will pay a good price
for his services.
Georgians know Mr. Gipson. He was t n,e one-man
wrecking crew who tore the Georgia Bulldogs’ defense to
pieces in 1967 and almost repeated the feat in 1968.
If Kunz blocks as well for the Falcons as he did at
Notre Dame, and Gipson runs as good as he did at Hous
ton, part of Atlanta’s problems are solved.
Several other players drafted may make the team and
develop into stars.
However, Kunz and Gipson have an excellent chance
of becoming immediate football heroes.
— Roger Dix
People Easier
Than Money
Casey Stengel, for many a baseball season, guided the
New York Yankees through many a summer month in
search of a pennant and a cut in the World Series. There
must have been many a trial and many a tribulation,
enough to run a manager crazy.
Casey retired from baseball in apparent good health,
except for a bad leg, moved to California where he became
an executive in a bank.
There he managed money instead of people, baseball
players in particular.
Old Casey has just proven our point. That money is
more troublesome than people. After just a few years of
managing money and after many years of managing base
ball players, he winds up in a hospital for ulcer surgery.
Soft Toward
Campus Rebels
PORTLAND (Me.) PRESS HERALD
College and university officials all over the country —
and a good many other Americans, too——have been watch
ing in fascination the test of strength going on between
educators and rebellious students at opposite ends of the
country — San Francisco State College and Brandeis Uni
versity at Waltham, Massachusettes.
At the California institution, student radicals have been
on strike since early November, combined with a good
deal of violence, while some 250 members of the faculty
struck the other day. The acting president of the college,
S. I. Hayakawa, is going to fire many of the teachers, and
he has police on guard protecting students who wish to
study.
At Brandeis the resistance to the seizure of one of the
buildings by 65 Negroes has been passive, though Pres.
Morris B. Abram has declared the rebels suspended, and
infers that some will be dismissed.
In both cases, it seems to us, the forces of lawlessness
have been encouraged by failure of the two presidents to
move swiftly and strongly to kick out the strikers, fire the
teachers and restore order. In both cases, court restraining
orders have been granted but not invoked. At Brandeis
police have not even been called, and while Mr. Haya
kawa has much the better record of firmness, the longer
these crises are allowed to exist the more likely that the
tactics employed by the nihilists will spread to other camp
uses.
Brandeis was founded in the liberal Jewish tradition,
and Dr. Abram is trying to maintain it through persuasion.
Yet at Waltham the Negroes and their backers, and the
strikers at San Francisco, have made what they call non
negotiable demands, and their effect, if not quickly re
pudiated and punished, will be to destroy the institutions
involved.
And quite likely that is the intention of some of those
now demanding campus power.
Chuckling
With Ye Editor X
People who think they are hot stuff generally get the
cold shoulder.
• • • • •
“One thing most people need most for breakfast is time
to eat it.” — Goshen, Ind., News
••• • •
Nature is the most fascinating subject in the world —
particularly human nature.
HEART'S MID
“From now on, Pat—would
you please call me ‘Mr.
President’?”
MY A
ANSWER ®
A Worrier
Ail my family is concerned
about me because I worry a gr
eat deal. Can you help meT G.S.
God has made you a responsi
ble person, and has entrusted to
your care certain work. There
are many things you can do no
thing about, but there Is noth
ing God cannot do. I would sug
gest that you first make sure
that you have faithfully dischar
ged your own responsibility.
When you have done so, you can
then commit the outcome to
God. Remember the Bible says,
“Casting all your care (anxiety)
upon Him for He careth for
you." As for the multitude of th
ings over which you have no
control, you can be sure that in
sofar as they concern you at all,
they are In His power. Jesus
said: “Take no thought for the
morrow”, for He knew well that
there were many who would do
just what you are doing.
It Is possible that your worry
grows out of a knowledge that
all Is not right with God. This is
so general a problem that I
suggest It to you. Trust in Christ
for salvation, yield yourself to
God, and then commit every
problem to Him for He Is able
to solve your many problems.
•Sa
»O» TODAY HOM Vv'J!
Cbe Upper Hoorn«th
None of us lives to himself.
(Romans 14:7, RSV)
PRAYER: Dear Lord, help us
to be mindful that every day
our conduct Is Influencing oth
ers. Keep us sensitive to the gr
eat material and spiritual needs
of this war stricken world. May
our dally lives reflect the spirit
of Christ, in whose name we
pray. Amen.
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
Claudio Monteverdi’s
“Orfeo” (1607), which has
been called the first opera,
continues to be performed
today, The World Almanac
notes. Although Peri’s
opera, “Euridice,” preced
ed “Orfeo” by seven years,
it is considered too feeble
to rank as a first. Mon
teverdi developed the
arioso, a singing, style mid-:
way between speech and
aria, and introduced string
tremolo and pizzicato to
heighten the sense, of
drama.
Copyright © 19S9 t
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
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Friday, January 31, 1969 Griffin Dany news
IT-IB
ggi I pc
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