Newspaper Page Text
Death in the Afternoon . . .
and Morning and Evening!
i - -v' 1 /S»r . jXI
* r <^<r" M "’’—*■ •'" ; • > \jsdSfihZ3 HBb&■•
'■''■'‘•j’■'?*' 1 - ’"'7 <Qf ™
>'/^wcm$ l ) JEW i IJ
— --tj — , J/ s - A ffl’ ul j I
K i fXt' • I W
yjj ■?• /1 B
WFw ’ hb
w 1 wlf ■ ’..>**>•■. ■ ; '‘ f fle
'■' ■ r\ why
J * iBF
wW jr> ■ <<.
A‘ -> " > 4rife ,^'‘^>^'; . ' ,<,9 * y: ~SyM£^^^^^^, l akW4:.!..i.--- Mr -■••• ■ '
9*Xati< v •
I 11
Arabian Nights
Eden
32 Challenge
33 Amorphous
volcanic rock
37 Dolt
■ 38 Truck, for
example
40 Hebrew letter
41 Compass point
42Froster,as
of cakes
43 Half (prefix)
44 Geometric
ratio
46 Saddle part
48 Minute groove
49 Moslem noble
(var.)
50 Acorn, for
instance
51 Requires
DOWN
1 Comprehend :
2 Tempt
3 Mine entrance
4 Dry, as wine
5 Slavic
ACROSS
IBarmecido
8 Aladdin’s
wonderful——
10 Peruvian
mountains
11 Greek assem
bly place
13 Region in
Greece
14 Wanly
16 Pert girl
17 Scottish
dance
19 Total amount
20 Sinbad's bird
21 False gods
22 Baba
23 American
essayist
25 Culture
medium
26 Shade tree
27 Document
29 Stories
31 Mistress of
1 |2 13 14 15 |7 1 8 1 9 I
io il iFI
13 14 15
is Hr 18
20 M 2 ' H 22
23 24 pg«2s
gs Hl f '
j 29 |3O J ’
32 mH| 33 34
37 m 3B 39 jjafco
41 M 43
44 45 — 4T 47
______ _
51
31
111 r— ’
11 to-
“Our public relations manager asked me to speak to
you Wilson. He’d appreciate it if you’d try to
look a little less menial!”
GRIFFIN
DAILY
Quimby Melton, Cary Reeve ’» General Manager Quimby Melton, Jr.
Publisher Bin Kni S hl > Executive Editor Editor
Full Leased Wire Service UPI, Full NEA, Addrees all mall (Subscriptions Published Daily Except Sunday. Second Class
Cbangs of Address form 157») to P> 0. Box IM, E. Solomon St., Griffin, Ga. Postage Paid at Griffin, Ga.—Single Copy Me
Antwtr to Previous Puulo
28 Caucasian
language
29 Harasses
30 Impresses
32 Accomplishes
33 Hail!
34 Noted in
detail
35 Bomesticators
36 Wicked
38 Type of rifle
bullet
39 Group of eight
43 Widgeon
45 Exist
47 Botanical
group
(comb, form)
empires
6 Coat collar
part
7 Bedouin head
cords
8 Gram mole
cule (var.)
9 Portend
12 Os the wing
13 Land measure
15 Norse mythi
cal giant
18 Eternity
21 Small island
24 Depend
25 Peak
27 Barrie charac
ter (2 words)
‘Quotes’
Ry United Press International
PARIS —North Vietnamese of
ficial, commenting on specula
tion Communist delegates might
become more flexible In Viet
nam talks:
“We have neither hardened
nor softened our position. We
merely maintain our position.”
WASHINGTON—Staff report
for President’s Commission on
Violence, describing differences
between riots in Miami and
Chicago during the national
conventions:
“The Miami rioters were not
consciously seeking publicity as
were those in Chicago and they
apparently had no plans to
embarrass the police by provok
ing them to take unusually
strong action in view of the TV
cameras.”
LOS ANGELES—Mrs. Mary
Sirhan, appraising the jury that
will try her son, Sirhan B.
Sirhan, on a charge of
murdering Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy:
“They seem like nice people.
I must pray for them and may
God give them light.”
NEW YORK—Mayor John V.
Lindsay, commenting in this
election year on criticism of
him for the city’s slow recovery
from the effects of a snow
storm:
“The year 1969, I am sure,
will become a political snow
job.”
Almanac
For
Today
By United P r ess International
Today is Thursday, Feb. 13,
the 44th day of 1969 with 321 to
follow.
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
Tire evening stars are Venus
and Saturn.
In 1635 the Boston Latin
School, was founded. It Is
known as America's oldest
public school.
In 1914 the American Society
of Composers, Authors and
Publishers was formed.
In 1945 Russian soldiers took
Budapest after 49 days of
fighting in which more than
50,000 German troops were
killed and 133,000 captured.
In 1968 the United States
rushed 10,500 combat troops to
South Vietnam.
Cooperation
Opened Door
Plans to develop a new recreational center got a boost
this week with a $4,500 contribution from the Griffin
Kiwanis Club’s Fair Association to get two ball parks
started.
The Recreation Department of the city which will be in
charge of organized activities at the park hopes to have
the first two fields ready by spring.
This is the first step in a long range program to expand
recreational facilities for a growing Griffin-Spalding popu
lation.
Cooperation is the key that unlocked the first door to
this dream.
Dundee Mills which owns the land already had plans
for development of the 70 acres into a park. It agreed to
lease the area to the city for development.
Although located in the county, the City Recreation
Department will supervise activities.
A civic club got the project going with a contribution.
Thus city and county governments joining with private
industry and civic minded people in a cooperative spirit
will make the park become a reality.
Cooperation is the key.
It can unlock other doors, too.
Few Secrets
In Modern Life
At least one private citizen thinks Americans are over
reacting to threats of invasion of privacy by governmental
or other agencies.
“Secrets are for sharing,” says Boston University psy
chologist Chester C. Bennett in an article in “Psychology
Today” magazine.
The emergence of privacy as a social and political issue
is a modem phenomenon, claims Bennett —a function of
the population explosion, urbanization and technological
“progress.”
In an earlier, rural and less complex age, there was secu
rity in knowing one’s neighbors and being known by them,
he says. But as life becomes more crowded, privacy be
comes elusive and, therefore, treasured.
We need to share experiences, he feels, to understand
each other’s views and aspirations as groups and institu
tions and individuals. It is the withholding of information,
not its disclosure, that produces tension and misunder
standing.
The right to privacy is not absolute, Bennett points out.
There are many situations in which, by law, the general
welfare demands disclosure of personal information.
He predicts that in the foreseeable future it will be pos
sible to collect biographical information for entire popula
tions in computerized master files, permanently stored and
instantly retrievable.
Our interdependence on each other will force us to be
come ever more sophisticated in the use of this information,
he says. “Our lives will be planfully programmed toward
‘the greatest good for the greatest number.’
“The technology is at hand. Will we be enslaved in fear
and suspicion? Or shall we use our fast communication
skills to foster trust and confidence that secrets can be
shared, that personal information will be treated with re
spect and understanding for the benefit of man?”
That would seem to depend on a number of other ques
tions, such as:
Will government ever be able to reciprocate and begin
sharing its secrets with us? Can bureaucrats shed their
traditional suspicion and condescension toward those they
supposedly serve, not to mention overcoming their talent
for boondoggling that not infrequently results in the least
good for the greatest number?
Until such time as these questions are answered in the
affirmative, most Americans will cling to their belief that
some secrets are definitely not for sharing— at least not
with an all-knowing computer run by “planful program
mers.”
U.S. Immigration
Shows Increase
MINNEAPOLIS STAR
Last year 448,000 immigrants arrived in this country,
the U. S. Census Bureau reports. That number compares
with an average of 290,000 annually from 1961 to 1965,
with 323,000 in 1966 and with 362,000 in 1967.
Why the increase? Immigration laws were liberalized in
1965. The old national origins quota system was ended
and an increase in admissions voted. As a result the pro
portion of arrivals from Europe and Canada has dropped,
those from the West Indies and Asia have jumped sharply.
Under presidential order and aside from any legal restric
tions, the United States flies three to four thousand Cubans
to this country each month.
With domestic population pressures threatening natural
resources and creating preplexing urban problems, an
American might well ask if the time hasn’t come to curtail
immigration drastically instead of increasing it.
M’S MID
“Sometimes I think we
should not only de-Amcri
canize the war — we should
de - SouthVietnamese the
Peace Talks!”
MY A
ANSWER Q
Can’t Agree
I can’t agree on many doctri
nes of the church of wh>ch I am
a member. Would yon suggest
I transfer to another church?
K.M,
You probably will never find
a group of people who hold ev
ery belief that you do. In fact,
we all have points of view that
differ slightly from others. This
does not seem to be sufficient
reason for separation from a
people who are engaged in win
ning people to Christ. If you are
in agreement in essentials, then
have charity in non-essentials.
If the differences are so great
that they hinder a spirit of love
and restrict your service, then
that is another matter.
Paul once said: “As much as
Heth in you, live at peace with
all men.” This does not mean
compromise but rather under
standing. The important thing is
to have the Bible as our author
ity and to glorify Jesus Christ
as our motive.
■/•MRflyffl m
>oi to oat rtOM
Cbe Upper RoomojW
It is a good thing to give
thanks unto the Lord, and to
sing praises unto thy name, O
most High. (Psalm 92:1)
PRAYER: Dear God, we
thank Thee for the joy of the
salvation we have in Christ Jes
us, our Lord — the Joy which
gives birth to singing. With
thanksgiving we pray as our
Lord taught us, “Our Father
who art in heaven. . . Amen.”
Thought For Today
A thought for the day:
Shakespear said, "Love sought
is good, but unsought is better.”
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
The HMS Beagle sailed
from England Dec. 27,1831,
on a five-year surveying ex
pedition which profoundly
changed biology, The World
Almanac says. Before cir
cumnavigating the globe,
the brig spent four years
cruising the coasts of South
America, where the ship’s
naturalist, the unsalaned
22-year-old Charles Darwin,
began collecting evidence
for his theory of evolution.
The voyage was the pivotal
event in his life.
Copyright © 1S«»,
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS
Sobscription Prices
Delivered by carrier: One
year $19.00. six months SIO.OO,
three months $5.00, one
month $1.75, one week M
cents. By mail, except within
30 miles of Griffin, rates 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).
Thursday, Feb. 13, 1969 Griffin Daily News
op
■ om 1 7/w — *
• /7Zsm»by»dA.lst.
Television
Thursday Night
2 5 11
6:00 National Panorama Msrv
:15 News News Griffin
:30 Georgia News ■
:45 News * »
7:00 News I Love News
:15 * Luey ”
•30 Daniel Queen and 1 Flying Nun
:45 Boone " "
8:00 “ Jonathan That Girl
:15 w Winters •
;30 Ironside » Bewitched
:45 ■
9J()0 * Movie: What’s It All
:15 " "Dead About World?
:30 Dragnet Ringer" •
W:OO Dean Martin * Tom Jones
Li i i
U.OO Newsream News News
:15 ”
:30 Johnny Movie: Joey Bishop
:45 Carsea "Strangers *
* When Wo *
1 :15 " Meet" «
Friday Morning
6:00 Sunrise
:15 Christ and the Semester
:30 Meaning Life This to Tsar
:45 Rise a* Shine Towe
7:00 Today News Morning
:15 ” ** Funnies
:30 * Mr. Ptx Clubhouse
:45 ** " Eleven
JOO “ Captain •
:15 • Kangaroo •
:30 - -
•4S " » •
9:00 Today In Linkletter Romper
:15 Georgta Show Room
:30 " Don Barber "
- • -
W.OO Snap Lucille Leave it to
:15 Jud An: sat Ball Beaver
:30 Concern Beverly Movie:
:45 tratioa HlUbiDfes “Elopement"
U:00 Personality Andy •
:15 * Griffith •
; 30 Hollywood Dick Van "
:45 Squares Dyke **
Friday Afternoon
:00 Newo Love Os Bewitched
|"J :15 ” LW®
:30 Movie: Search For Funny You
:45 “Interlude* Tomorrow Should Ask
1:00 * Divorce Dream
•15 * Court House
•30 * As The Make A
■45 " World Turns Deal
JOO Days Os Love la Splew Newlywed
•15 Our Uvea dored Thing Game
•30 Declare Guiding Dating
1 * h * "
3:00 Another Secret General
•15 World Storm Hospital
•30 Yea Don’t Edge Os One Life
•45 Says Night To Live
4:00 Match Mike Dark
•15 Game Douglas Shadows
•30 Truth Or " Movie:
•45 Consequences " “Die, Monster,
5-00 Perry Mason * Die”
:15 ” " *
•30 " Gilligan's •
i 45 • bland
4