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Griffin Daily News
GAB Picks Bagby
Man Os The Year
SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) —The
Georgia Association of Broad
casters Monday picked George
I w"y LEASE I
I CAR FOR 24 MONTHS I
I UNTIL YOU'VE TRIED IT I
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Check these low monthly rates:
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GALAXIE $lO9 LTD sll9 ■
TORINO $97 MUSTANG $95 ■
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V 8 engine, auto., transmission, power steering, radio, t
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1,000 MILES PER MONTH FREEI
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plan only through month of June. ■
I GRIFFIN MOTOR COACHES I
I at RANDALL & BLAKELY, INC. I
I 1000 West Taylor Street — Phone 227-7937 I
FrigidaireSide-by-Side .
Sb S 5 Elh^ 11 ’- s “ e *®P-«o- fißfaiacfeaiiHifll FrigiMre Frost-Proof
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Only 32* wldel '
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B Freezer Stores up to 8811 I CD7C B
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■ Slide-Aside basket to organize
I E±rrr GRIFFIN APPLIANCE |
\IS 612 WEST TAYLOR STREET
B CRsal PHONE 227-5122 B
Tuesday, June 17, 1969
5
Bagby, state game and fish
commissioner, as Georgia Man
of the Year and elected new of-
ficers.
J. Don Ferguson, general
manager of WSOK in Savannah,
was elected president, with Don
Elliott Heald, general manager
of WSB-TV in Atlanta voted ex
ecutive vice president for tele
vision, and Bernie Barker elect
ed vice president for radio.
The annual convention reap
pointed John Culver as execu
tive secretary, and reelected
Mrs. Esther Pruett, WTOC - TV
in Savannah, as treasurer.
The awards banquet was post
poned Sunday night when
George Siddall, manager of ra
dio station WRBL in Columbus
died of an apparent heart at
tack. Siddall had just been
awarded the promotion of the
year award when he suffered
the attack.
Other awards, exclusive of
those given Bagby and Siddall
Were:
Broadcasting Citizen of the
year — John Kordecki, presi
dent and general manager of
WKRW in Cartersville.
Television station of the year
—WAGA-TV in Atlanta.
Radio Station of the year—
WGGA, Gainesville.
Mary Betts of WGAU, Athens,
and Charles Doss of WROM
Rome were runners up for the
broadcast citizens of the year.
Runners up for the television
station and radio station of the
year were respectively, WJBS
TV in Augusta, WRBL . TV in
Columbus, WSB - radio in At
lanta, and WGAU in Athens.
For Better Shoes Shop
toyjwnßßw
Agent .or Red Cross - Connies
Natural Poise - Daniel Green
Bedroom Slippers and many
other high grade brands.
THE FEDERAL BUDGET DOLLAR:
THE STORY OF $l9O BILLION*
Where it comes from...
OtMr
I Corporation
if Individual Income / incomeTexee
V. 46 C /sX 23( ? ■ S del IniuriMß
XbSs. Taxes and Contributions
/ Tax es
Where it goes. . .
V.t.r.n,'
EduMionand BOC |., in.ur.nc AZ V !"T X' \
Oth.rM.jor / (13j) X
Social Programs ff _ —-
U NeionelOefenii JJ 51 <J
\ 41Q /jf /
D,b \ f
>"-co S t of
future wars
t Exclude. IntVMt P.id to Trurt Fund.
Fiscal 1070 estimate
* President Nixon’s estimates for fiscal 1970 are:
expenditures, $192.9 billion; revenues, $198.7 billion
Source: Bureau of the Budget
By CARL H. MADDEN, CHIEF ECONOMIST
Chamber of Commerce of the United State*
WHAT YOUR FEDERAL TAX DOLLAR BUYS— Every dollar of
federal taxes buys about 51c of past, present, and future
defense and 49c of everything else. The Vietnam war takes
13c of your tax dollar. Veterans benefits (4c) and interest
on the public debt (6c) stem mainly from past wars. You
buy 22c worth of Social Security, 12c of education and social
programs, 2c of International aid, 2c of debt reduction and
11c of everything else (mainly, running the machinery of
government). Our April 15 headache yields S9O billion —only
46c of the tax dollar. Social Security and corporation taxes
pay most of the rest. If you want lower taxes, government
costs—either defense or domestic—must be cut somewhere.
It’s Official Now,
Massell Will Run
ATLANTA (UPI) — Vice
Maor Sam Massell made it of
ficial Monday saying he would
definitely run this fall to re
place Ivan Allen who chose not
to seek re-election.
The 41-year-old Massell said
he was a liberal on the race is-
sue and would continue Allen’s
programs but with some “ac
celleration” In problem areas.
His announcement came at a
board of Aidermen’s meeting In
City Hall, where he has presid
ed for eight years as vice
mayor.
BRUCE BIOSSAT
Thorn in Lindsay's Side—
The GOP Conservatives
By BRUCE BIOSSAT •
NEA Washington Correspondent
NEW YORK (NBA)
Since 1965 most New York City Republicans have been
voting against their own party when given a reasonably
salable Conservative party candidate at state or local level.
Put simply, liberal Republican Mayor John V. Lindsay’s
problem is how to win the 1969 GOP mayoralty nomination
on June 17 in spite of this fact.
His difficulty is immeasurably increased by the fact that
the conservative Republicans have a strong alternative in
State Sen. John J. Marchi. His conservatism is temperate,
and it does not hurt him that nearly half the city’s 629,000
registered Republicans are Italians in the Bronx, Brooklyn
and Queens.
Marchi’s biggest problem in these closing days is money
—to fuel the troops to get out the obviously potent anti-
Lindsay Republican vote. Informed sources say Marchi has
“the shorts’’ on money.
It is not clear, of course, that even with ample funds
Marchi could rustle out the big vote he needs to beat Lind
say. He has many GOP state legislators and other party
regulars with him, but their usefulness has never been
tested in a mayoralty primary. There has been none since
Fiorello LaGuardia’s 1941 race.
Nor is it plain that the anti-Lindsay Republicans are
sufficiently fired by dislike of the mayor to come storming
out on their own.
Lindsay’s polls testing voter attitudes show, according
to his own people, a tremendous store of hatred toward him
among Republicans.
Says one aide:
“His personality tends to de-fang them somewhat . . .
but we don’t feel we can turn these people around on issues
at all.’*
Notwithstanding that judgment, a rather faint-hearted
consensus exists among New York politicans and observers
that Lindsay may just squeak through to victory.
Most of these appraisers seem to feel that GOP voters*
dislike of Lindsay passed its high point weeks, if not
months, ago. It is rooted, of course, in his basic liberalism,
his attention to the city’s blacks and Puerto Ricans, his
alleged “permissiveness’’ toward campus uprisings at Co
lumbia and elsewhere, his confused handling of the garbage
strike, and the teachers’ strike—this last the culmination of
a tangled, divisive dispute over public school control.
There is wide agreement that the mayor was not helped
by Gov. Nelson Rockefeller’s two-phased statement of
“personal preference” which fell short of endorsement and
promised to support Marchi if he won the GOP primary.
The Marchi people know they need a large vote. But even
the heavily dominant Democrats have never flushed more
than 35 per cent of their registered vote in a city primary.
If Marchi, wins, the myth will die that the New York
GOP is built in the liberal image of Lindsay, Rockefeller,
Sen. Jacob Javits and new convert, Sen. Charles Goodell.
Voting history shows it is not.
FOUR DROWNED
PORTREATH, England
(UPI)—A huge wave smashed
Into a jetty where eight persons
were strolling Monday night,
sweeping them Into the sea.
Four of them drowned. Life
boats and Royal Air Force
helicopters recovered the others
at this resort on the coast of
Cornwall.
21...'
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BbbUv. •
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WA. <?!*■*** *r
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ANN ARBOR VICTIM —The
sixth girl-murder victim la
two years in the Ann Arbor,
Mich., area was Alice Kalom
(above) of Kalamazoo, a
University of Michigan senior.
Body of Miss Kalom, 21,
was found nearly nude. She
had been criminally attack
ed, stabbed and shot
Soviet Inactivity
In Space Puzzles
NASA Officials
SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) —As
tronaut Dr. Don Leslie Lind
said Monday the biggest ques
tion mark for the space
program is how much Amerl
cans are willing to spend to ex
plore the heavens.
Lind, speaking to the
Georgia Association of Broad
casters meeting here, also posed
the question of Russia’s recent
inactivity in manned space
flight.
Lind said several officials of
the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration were
puzzled by the Russians, espe
cially since they first explored
space, and obviously hove the
capabilities for more manned
flights.
Lind told the broadcasters he
expects to walk on the moon
himself within the next two
years. The civilian astronaut
was one of 19 picked in 1966 for
the moon program by NASA.
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prints
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6.00
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Reg. to 4.00 Reg. 4.99 to $8
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4.88
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59c 1.30 2.30
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