Newspaper Page Text
Wednesday, June 11, 1969 Griffin Daily New*
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» SIGNING YOUR MONEY—Treasury Secretary David M. Ken-
nedy and Treasurer of the U.S. Dorothy Andrews Elston
witness the numbering of the first one dollar bill bearing
their signatures at the Bureau of Engraving in Washing-
• ton. Kennedy is autographing one of the bills.
Young Delegates
Ask Baptist Ban
On Discrimination
« By LAURA FOREMAN
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) _ A
handful of dissident young dele
gates called on the huge South-
* ern Baptist Convention to re
ject representatives from
churches that practice racial dis
crimination.
» The youths, members of the
Baptist Students Concerned, Is
sued a series of statements
Tuesday dealing with discrimin
. aticn, extremism, morality and
church involvement with social
Ills.
The statements were to be put
, In the form of resolutions and
introduced before the full con
vention during business meet
ings this week.
t “We ask that this convention
refuse to seat any church which
discriminates against members
of minority groups as a matter
of policy,” said a statement
* read by David Swink, 21, a stu
dent from Charleston, S.C.
Individual Policy
• Swink said he recognized
each Southern Baptist church is
autonomous and can regulate
its own policy on racial
• equality.
However, he said, the con
vention should not condone ra
cial discrimination on the part
’ of member churches.
The students also asked the
convention to desegregate all
its boards, commissions, agen
» cies and institutions immedi
ately, to do business only with
equal opportunity employers
and to pay more attention to
, poverty and hunger.
The student group has about
SO members among the 15,000
delegates attending the annual
r meeting of the 11.3 - million
member convention.
“I doubt that we represent
the majority of Southern Baptist
youth,” said Stuart Sprague,
k 22, a group spokesman from
Durham, N.C.
However, Tom Graves, 21, of
Nashville, Tenn., said he
‘ thought that while the BSC
members were smaller in num
ber, they were more deter-
Imperial
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mined in purpose.
For Sex Education
The students also called on I
Baptists to push for sex educa
tion in public schools and to
take a stand on changing sex
mores.
Another statement called on
the churches to go “beyond a
technique of soul-winning” and
act as "a corporate body with
potential political and econom
ic power."
The students said while they
deplored the "separatism and
racist overtones” of Negro de
mands for monetary “repara
tions” from churches. Baptists
should consider channeling
some iunds to aid black capi
talism.
Speaking Individually, most of
the BSC spokesmen said they
planned to support Dr. William
Smith of Richmond, Va., in his
“dissent candidacy” against in
cumbent convention president
W. A. Criswill of Dallas.
Smith and the students object
to Criswell’s insistence on a
fundamentalist Interpretation of
the Bible, especially as ex
pressed in his book: “Why I
Preach that the Bible is Liter
ally True.
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- -»
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OFF HIS GUARD—Albert Dela
Hada, 20, looks a bit dis
traught as he is booked in
New York after admitting
setting, then extinguishing,
six fires at City College of
New York. He was a guard
on duty to protect the prop
erty from fires set by dissi
dent students. He said he
wanted to get back at his
bosses for “riding” him. Be
side him is Fire Marshal
Patrick Crowley.
9 YOUTHS ARRESTED
BARCELONA, Spain (UPI)—
Police have arrested nine
Communist youths accused of
toppling a statue of Chief of
State Francisco Franco from a
rector’s window during a raid
at Barcelona University in
January, spokesmen said Tues
day.
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By MICHAEL L. POSNER
WASHINGTON (UPI) — For
the second time In two weeks a
high Nixon administration offi
cial has spoken about wage
price controls as a means of
controlling inflation.
Both officials said, however,
th® administration was opposed
to such controls. Most obser
vers saw the statements as
prodding Congress to extend
the 10 per cent income tax
surcharge, due to expire June
30.
But in Congress, where
extension of the surcharge
appears in serious trouble,
immediate reaction was firmly
opposed to controls.
“Wage and price controls
make about as much sense as
the surtax and it’s no good,’’
said Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind.,
a member of the Senate
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Another Nixon Man Talks About Price - Wage Curbs
Finance Committee.
A week ago an administration
official said at a news
backgrounder a “growing min
ority” of businessmen were so
alarmed over rising inflation
they favored wage-price con
trols as an alternative. The
official said, however, the
administration did not favor
controls.
Tuesday, Treasury Secretary
David M. Kennedy said the
government would consider
imposing wage-price controls to
cool the economy if Congress
fails to extend the surtax.
“The policy of the govern
ment is not to have wage and
price controls. I am against It
personally.”
But, he said, without the
current tax level “the only
alternative is some kind of
controls or relying on monetary
policy alone.”
“We can’t let this escalate
and have runaway inflation,”
, Kennedy said, “and we are
( very close to that now.”
Kennedy said failure to
1 extend the surtax would force
' the administration to run to
look for possible alternatives—
wage and price controls,
’ additional budget cuts, or
! tighter restrictions on money
, supplies.
Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del„
senior Republican on the
Finance Committee, said:
; “We’re not going to have any
wage or price controls.” He
: said the tax “is not the only
alternative—equally important
' is expenditure control.”
Ot /I
ML
MARINE FIREPOWER doesn’t seem to faze a Vietnamese woman who hurries past
without a sideward glance. The vehicle, equipped with six 106 mm recoilless rifles, was
parked near Da Nang while its crew took a breather during Operation Daring RebeL