Newspaper Page Text
Try. * * a. I t a « • ■
1
/ hint hearings end
WaY MISBORO, Ga. (UPI)-
H' • in’s on proposed construc
t he \lvin W. Bogtie nu
t’s er plant were conclud
' • b-. the Atomic En-
efi'.y Commission.
< .‘ 0 of Augusta house
• . o said they were con-
■i t r.: v <’--intsafetyaitdenviron
mental hazards of the plant,
■ y < against the plant, which
v. Id be built on the Savannah
’ i vtr in Burke County. The com
rnmion also heard opposition
taken from prisoner
Tl \ NTA( UPI k An Atlanta
pure officer was held al gun
;»< •'J it <•;•■ <by a federal pris
mr waiting, trial at the Fulton
mrthimse.
' pi oner, Charles W.
. v-rpowered federal
. ' John Berry and took
hi:, i ’ded weapon in a sixth
fiO’: ri. :li oom at the eour
thou .
Bt :ry al Smith entered the
rt ”■ < m alone, witnesses said,
■ i few moment" later two
■ . ill’s deputies heard a strug
gle and summoned other offic-
. midi a no no
iTA(TH I)—-AChicago
co■<■ ” ■■•'■;■• iay told college
using aggressive
j! !h'’ io attract students
a ailment problems
oibip ( productive.”
i. j Johnson told the
; elation of Colleg-
•■■ <(’fosi.i -■■•‘id Admissions
u ■ i th< f. colleges should pro
mpt.■ their ability to meet stu
<!■ :needs through “proses-
■ o, Hir: i>. channels.”
11 «id that if colleges begin
competing “in the same manner
;<•; two large insurance compan
ies c unete, we will surely
have destroyed post Secondary
Os
- -VWI
P/n>ii>}‘enie Puppy
Ii tic v.us so captivated by her
in poppy that she look him to a
■•.hborhood photographer lot a
the pictures were knock
outs In tael, the photographer
I. i<l' <l to sell copies to an adver
agency.
' . arning of his intentions. Irene
<n< <! into court for a stop or-
Mhl the court granted tier
' b. judge said that when
lomei hues a photographer
:•< t.<!<- pictures, the pictures be-
<o !u -i. property of the
. Swjr'
the usual ruin. While the
' 'hei may retain posses
■ negatives, he ordinarily
it to sell copies without
. . aier s consent.
it is a dilfetent story, however,
it the pilot. Hitai'hei. instead of be
in hired Io the iob. takes the
pi< ’ ■•<■ on his own initiative. Con
sidei this ca-<:
\f- i.ni photographer, pul
i .in exhibit of his
v.. ■ 1 . pictures of a prominent
1 Ihe pictures were
hi >v. u idea, and he charged
nothi-i'-’ foi taking them.
Under these circumstances, a
court held that the businessman
- even though he bought several
prints lot himself had no right to
p. ■. them along for use in a maga
zine
\nd a free l,ance photograph of
a street scene would not give
ownership rights to people who
happened to appear in the picture.
\ borderline case arose when
a ..iphe> was asked to take
pictmes of ;I high school giadu
ali e .t.iss \Yas he entitled to the
CO; . : i bt'.’
y.s itcd'y. the initiative for.
the picture had come from the
student' Still, they had not prom
ised bin am payment at all. He
Could <•.<■!: i.r only if the students
■ sh- ' cide. afterward, to or
der prints
A c urt ruled that in alt fair
ness. the copyright did belong to
the photogr pher. Since he was
taking that much risk, reasoned
the court, he was entitled to that
much reward.
An tmerican Bar kssocintion
public service feature by Will
Bernard.
from the Georgia Power Proj
ect, an Atlanta-based group op
posed to nuclea r power construc
tion.
The commission will report its
findings in early May, at which
time another hearing will be
scheduled. The commission is
expected to announce its deci
sion to refuse or grant a con
struction permit to Georgia Pow
er for building the plant at the
next hearing.
ers.
Two Atlanta police officers
forced their way into the rest
room, where the prisoner
grabbed officer Thomas S. Betts
and held the gun at his throat,
Betts said. Betts, who was un
harmed in the incident, said he
pulled Smith to the Floor and
recovered the gun in a struggle.
Smith had been brought to the
courthouse from the federal pen
itentiary to stand trial on char
ges of drug violations, armed
robbery and carrying a con
cealed weapon.
education as we have known it
and as it probably should be.”
*
ESTEE LAUDER and CROUCH'S CELEBRATE
SPRING WITH A TOUCH OF FRAGRANCE
7m the A; 1 ': os tier symbol Estee' Lauder Wrop:- r ,-r . seen* - ,
garden c' pi.nk turps with green leav s against a rrt. h . .wJ cm •: •
V/nA same in tA ci'r.p look ot green and white dotted w: - w.w I ,>
Xva\ spring .. . bursting with color and olive with ti e pcrlunw 'owers. <_c
Wa\ gather your favorite scent... haunting Youth-Dew, cxcitmg twit •', syai
\y\\ , Azures'c: t,ogling Aliage .
lit
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h? t|fr? = <. Birw-. x ' ■
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ItiPil Rif / j
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Estee' Lauder Spring Boutique • .
Youth-Dew Azuree' 1 Estee' f Aliage
Lj Bath’Crystals sls Parfum Boutique Spray $lO Classics set, Super Cologne Spray Q Sport Fragrance Spray vslo
Dusting Powder. $6.75 Fresh Milk Bath $6.50 and Perfumed Body Powder sls Bath Powder $8.50
Bath Soap $6 50 Silken Dusting Powder $5 Bath. Crystals $ 17.50 Sport Fragrance Pod u Spray $6
BathOil’ ssandsß Sport Fragrance Com pact.. $iC
Boutique Eau de Parfum Spray $5 Sport Fragrance $lO and $: •.
wiretap law upneia
ATLANTA (UPI) - A 1969
state law concerning telephone
eavesdropping and surveillance
was unanimously upheld Tues
day by the Georgia Supreme
Court.
Five men charged with com
municating gambling informa
tiona appealed to the high court
after a F ulton County Superior
Court judge turned down a re
quest to suppress evidence in
their case gathered by police in
Cigarette factory planned
ATLANTA (UPI) — Brown
and Williamson Corp, intends to
begin work in April on a $l5O
million cigarette factory and
storage facility in Macon.
Gov. Jimmy Carter and
Security heavy for OAS
ATItaNTA (UPI) - Authori
ties plan heavy police security
for foreign ministers of 23 na
tions gathering here Thursday
for a meeting of the Organiza
tion of American States (OAS).
Maj. Hugh Hardison, com
manding officer of the state pa
trol, said each minister will
have a police guard and chauf
feur and said the state Capitol
where the group will meet also
will be heavily guarded.
Declining to say exactly how
many security officers would be
used, Hardison said he did not
want to top off groups who
might be planning demonstra
tions or disturbances.
Security is being coordinated
between the state patrol, the
Georgia Bureau of Investiga-
a wiretapping warrant.
The five claimed the law under
which the warrant was issued
violated their constitutional
rights.
The Supreme Court said the
constitutional attack on the law
was without merit and denied
their request to have wiretap
ping information suppressed.
It was the first time the high
court has ruled on the constitu
tionality of the law.
Joseph Edens, president of the
firm, said Tuesday that Brown
and Williamson had purchased
204 acres for the plant, the first
tobacco processing facility in
the state. It is to be finished in
1976.
tion and the Atlanta Police De
partment, he said.
Locust swarm
BANGKOK (UPI) - A
massive swarm of locusts has
descended on central Thailand
and destroyed 12,000 acres of
corn, the Agricultural Depart
ment said today.
The department said the
locusts have appeared because
of the early arrival of the rainy
season. Farmland in six prov
inces has been affected by
them.
The department has request
ed an emergency appreciation
of $1.5 million to buy and spray
insecticide over farmland to
ward off the locusts.
Miller
letter
sought
ATLANTA (UPI)—A subpoena
was served Tuesday ordering
Gov. Jimmy Carter to appear
in federal court Thursday to tes
tify in the ease of Dr. Gary
Miller, who was fired as head
of the state mental health divi
sion.
Carter was directed in the
subpoena to bring to court a
letter which allegedly lists the
reasons Miller was fired.
In a $1.2 million suit filed
against Carter and the state
last week, Miller claimed his
civil rightshad been violated by
his ‘‘unlawful and malicious”
dismissal. He charged he was
dismissed without a valid rea
son and said he was denied ac
cess to written charges against
him.
A spokesman for Carter Tues
day confirmed the subpoena
had been served. He said it had
been turned over to the gover
nor’s legal aides who would ad
vise him how to proceed.
itarry Thomason, Miller’s at
torney, said he had subpoenaed
Carter and the letter, written
by Jack Watson, chairman of
the Board of Human Resources
and allegedly listing the reasons
Miller was fired, because he
had been unable to obtain the
letter through negotiations.
Thomason said Carter had
promised to let Miller read the
letter but had failed to do so.
Carter was directed in the
subpoena to appear in the U.S.
Di st rict Court of J udge Richard
Freeman at 3 p.m. Thursday
with the letter.
License worker fcr-'/
eye on day care ce
Things have changed a lot in
the 10 years Georgia has been
licensing day care centers for
children.
“When the department first
started licensing day care
centers and setting minimum
standards, there was one
woman who didn't even have a
building. She just loaded the
kids in a car and drove around,”
said Ms. Belinda Cohen, district
licensing worker for the
Georgia Department of Human
Resources.
“We don’t find much of that
sort of thing anymore,” she
said, “but what we do find are
safety violations, overcrowding
and lack of program.”
Working out of her office in
Atlanta, she is responsible for
licensing and inspecting day
care centers in the counties of
Butts, Carroll, Coweta, Fayette,
Heard, Henry and Spalding.
As an example of the sort of
thing that can happen, she cited
the owner of one day care
center the department has
taken to court several times.
“She crowded 50 children in a
basement with a furnace.
There's no way they could get
out in case of a fire,” she said.
Ms. Cohen said to get a day
care license a person must meet
state standards in five areas:
1. Meals and snacks;
2. Staff to child ratio;
3. Safety and roominess of the
physical plant;
4. Activity program;
5. Play equipment.
“Those are the things we look
at in spot inspections,” she said
“If they aren’t up to snuff in any
of those areas, we can try to
take their license away.”
According to the state chief ■
licensing, Audrey Lane, then
are more than 100,000 child:-et:
in Georgia attending about 1,
licensed day care centers. Sin
said the largest day care cen
ters keep about 200 children.
About one-third are in the 70 to
100 children size.
Os those day care centers,
about 95 percent are commer
cial, with the others being
church or organization sponsor
ed, Ms. Lane said.
Ms. Lane said the Depart
ment of Human Resources in
1973 denied only six licens
applications because the app’J
cants could not meet .state
standards. However, she said
that is mostly because others
who could not have qualified
were told they could not, and
never made a formal applica
tion.
For those parents looking for
a day care center, Ms. Lane h; •
what appears to be obvious
advice: “Go inside and loo'"
around.”
However, she said many
parents put their children in
day care center without such r
check.
She also suggests parent
keep the following in mind when
checking out a day care '.erir
is there at least one grow a-ir
for every six to 12 children at ■
times?
Do they comfort and hold ;
child when ’ ■ -
troubled:* *
Are the v. ■?;' i:.- di.
pleasant, lov ..r i . r '
C. < x
ifi case of a '
Are the child;-:- . ’•
energetic, nj •; r
If a person ir. re d; ii ’.r
center and .ir u: ' or
substandard ■? ! ; 'i -;r-. jay
care nter *
the county >:e;: <-'n •<:
Family and Ghilcren .
Ms. Lane said she i ,
district licensing wer’
scattered around the smte io
monitor day cere
compliance. •
“We do eve; " hire t:: ■
protect childre.: in ;:,y
centers, but with only 24 neopte,
*
we can i be everywhere '
once,” she :-o'd.
responsibility stil! re-’- -
parents.” «
Dismis.% '■
Spaklm, j.
Dexel . Am.-;n
Laymon <" M:s.-
A-i • ,
Mrs. Alii i'-: :, a? '■ i-.- ■
Brooks, Mt < S'ui ’• y .■
Dougins R ... Ri.. . ' -
r< ■ ■ '
Donnis' ' ■ : i l ' - <
way. Syl