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A HIT-RUN that leaves no Injuries Is demonstrated by the all-terrain vehicle Attex as it
runs over legs of model Ann Brown in Skokie, 81. Big fat fetation tires are the secret
Board Os Regents
Hikes College Fees
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Custom-brewed coffee at econom ical meats to Juicy
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ICE CUBE TRAYS 2 For $3.49
8 Push Button — Reg. $29.95
WARING BLENDER $24.95
2-Slice —- Reg. $12.95
ELECTRIC TOASTER $9.99
Reg. $11.99 — Electric
CAN OPENER $9.99
WE RENT
RUG SHAMPOOER
Good Stock of Come By and
Corning Wore Re «“ ter for
In Sets -$6.95 up FREE TV
Pyrex Wore To be given away
Rubbermaid
Products Nothing to buy —
Including space maker & Renter each time you’re
shelf & drawer liners. in the store.
FISHER
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120 West College Street
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ATLANTA (UPI) —The State
Board of Regents, reacting to
drastic budget cuts in the 1969
General Assembly, has raised
matriculation fees at all colleges
and universities in the state uni
versity system to increase in
come by $6.6 million.
Chancellor George L. Simpson
hinted in a House Appropriations
Committee hearing that fees
might be raised if the legisla
ture refused to appropriate
needed funds. In fact, the re
gents proposed budget was cut
S2O million by the legislature.
The increases begin with the
summer quarter. Senior units in
the university system will in
crease the cost from SBS to $lO5.
The fee for out-of-state students
will go up from sllO to $135.
The additional money presum
ably will provide pay increases
for professors and other aca
demic personnel.
Matriculation and non-resident
fees at the University of Geo
rgia, Georgia Tech, Georgia
State College, and the Medical
College of Georgia, all of which
are in a category separate from
the senior units, also will go up.
The University of Georgia will
charge S4O more beginning in
the summer quarter, jumping
from $95 to $135. At Tech, the
fee will increase from $lO5 to
$135, at Georgia State from $lO5
to $135, and at the Medical Col
lege in Augusta from $250 to
$275.
Non-residents at the University
of Georgia will pay SIBO rather
than $140; Georgia Tech, $235
rather than $230; Georgia State
SIBO, compared to the previous
$135, and Medical College $275
as opposed to $250.
Matriculation fees at junior
colleges in the university system
also will increase. Schools will
charge S9O a quarter to residents
while non-residents will also pay
S9O at those schools.
QUICK QUIZ
Q —Where :s the "zero
milestone”?
A—lt is a small marker
Just south of the White
louse in Washington, D.C.
It marks the beginning of all
our national highways and
all distances are measured
from this spot.
Q— Has any state in the
Union appointed an ombuds
man?
A—The first state to
establish the office of
ombudsman—an official re-
Sensible for looking into
tizens’ complaints of mis
conduct or inefficiency on
the part of public officials—
was Hawaii.
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Thursday, April 10, 1969 Griffin Daily News
RAY CROMLEY
A Great Christian Leader
Stiffens S. Korea's Spine
By RAY CROMLEY
NEA Washington Correspondent
Era?
SEOUL, Korea (NEA)
Dr. Kyung Chik Han is a wan, slight man who once spent
two years as an invalid recovering from tuberculosis.
About 1945, he fled from Communist-occupied North
Korea with 27 refugee parishioners.
In the 24 years since, he and those 27 and the church they
founded have started 100 new churches, 60 of which are
now self-supporting.
When the North Koreans attacked in 1950, Han escaped,
moved south and kept on organizing churches.
The mother church in Seoul, which Han and the 27 estab
lished, now has 5,693 full and 1,232 preparatory members
and a Sunday morning attendance of somewhat over 6,700.
An additional 2,065 attend Sunday School.
Some 300 deaf attend every Sunday in special classes.
Han is the leader in a handful of Korean high schools,
middle schools and colleges. His church has a missionary
in Bangkok, Thailand, and evangelists in industrial, mili
tary and medical centers in South Korea.
It is rumored that Billy Graham has called him the
world’s greatest preacher. My friends say he is certainly
one of the world’s greatest men.
Han’s activities did not begin suddenly in 1945. As a
young man he was for years pastor of a Korean Presby
terian Church in Sinuiju on the Manchurian border. On the
side he operated a secret way station for Korean national
ist underground leaders moving in and out of Korea by
way of Manchuria and North China.
For his nationalist sentiments, the Japanese finally
barred him from preaching, but let him and his wife man
age a children’s home in the country.
On Japan’s defeat, by popular acclaim he was made
mayor of Sinuiju. When the Communists took over, they
rounded up the nationalist leaders. Han, luckily, was out
of the city. He took the opportunity to escape south.
Han is symbolic of the South Korea that has developed
since gaining its independence in World War 11.
Christianity, with 2.5 million members, is now one of
the two largest active religions. It is growing by 10 per cent
a year, with no letup in sight.
Han mentions one example. In Vietnam recently, visit
ing South Korean units, he was told of “the Jehovah Com
pany,” an infantry unit in which all 200 men were Chris
tians. There were only six Christians in the unit at the
start; they had converted the rest. Before he left Vietnam,
Han discovered two other all-Christian companies. Since
then he has learned of several more guarding the 38th
Parallel in Korea. Each started with six to 10 Christians,
who converted 20 to 30 times their numbers.
A goodly portion of South Korea’s teachers, officials,
politicians, soldiers and businessmen are now Christians.
This reporter is convinced, that this kind of unashamed
enthusiasm, which South Koreans are applying to religion,
industry, exports, education, defense and to advertising
their country is the secret of the speed with which South
Korea has risen from the shambles that followed World
War II and the North. Korean invasion.
(Newspaper Enterprise AsstiJ
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tt Jerry Hollberg — Douglas Hollberg — Walter David
5
FLIGHT FAILS
BERLIN (UPI)-A man tried
to flee into West Berlin i
Wednesday night but fell short
of hla goal under a hail of
gunfire from Communist East '
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German guards.
West Berlin police spokesman
said the man was trying to
work his way through barbed
wire fortifications when the
Communist guards spotted him.
The spokesman said about 50
shots were fired.
Communist guards carried
the man back into East Berlin,
said the spokesman. It was not
known whether he had been
killed.