Newspaper Page Text
Page 2
— Griffin Daily News Monday, April 22, 1974
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FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA — Showers and few
thundershowers likely tonight with lows in lower 50s.
Clearing and little cooler tomorrow with highs in lower
70s.
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Hospital Report
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Showtimes 8:30
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SINGER
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*A Trademark of THE SINGER COMPANY Copyright Q 1974 THE SINGER COMPANY. All Rights Restrsed Throughout lhe World,
Dismissed from the Griffin-
Spalding County Hospital:
g Mrs. Lola Brown, Mrs. Ruby
£ Chalkley, Mrs. Carolyn Rivers
•:•: and baby, J. Robert Gallin,
Mrs. Nettie Moore, Curtis
:•:■ Driver, Mrs. Sadie Dooley, Mrs.
:•:• Peggy Meredith, Mrs. Shirley
g Betz (transferred to Emory),
g Earl Thompson, John
:g Dilleshaw.
Jerry Barron, Mrs. Lizzie
g Dickerson, Edwin D. Head,
g Mrs. Ruby Starr, Mrs. Janet
g Watts, Nellie Putman, Mrs.
:£ Mary Lou Skinner, Robert L.
g Stephens 111, James R. Pep
g pers, Lois Ann Bunn, Mrs. Ellis
g Wright, Christopher Sullivan,
g Mrs. Helen Biles, Virgil
$ Ergle, Garland Bunn, Mrs.
•j Cindy S. Mangham, William
Weldon, Mrs. Florence
g Smallwood, Mrs. Linda Cox,
g Chambley baby, Mrs. Faye
Carter, Mrs. Diane McGhee and
g baby, Mrs. Barbara Chambley.
Mrs. Mary Revere, Mrs. Neel
Richardson, Jimmy Linn Goen,
•' Larry Curry, Mrs. Patricia
Imes, Imes baby, Bobby
I Taylor, Mrs. Janie Pierce, Mrs.
Hattie Beaton, Mrs. Gloria
Dixon, Billy Harrell, Henry
Bankston, Mrs. Marion
McGahee, Mrs. Minitte
I Crowder.
CHIROPRACTIC
BGets Sick
People Well
‘ Without
Drugs
or Surgery
Dr. John S. Arnold
Closed Wednesday and
Saturday afternoons.
Office 227-3343
Residence 227-3654
Dr. John S. Arnold
434 South Bth Street
One of these four students at Griffin Tech will be awarded
the school’s Georgia’s Occupational Award of Leadership,
better known as the GOAL award. It is a program similar
to the STAR student-teacher program in Georgia. The
GOAL winner will be announced at the Exchange Club’s
■ WFI
I a< P
Lisa Young
Lisa Young shares a one
bedroom apartment with her
dog and cat, but still finds room
for all the accessories
necessary for her knitting,
sewing and baking.
Aside from all these ac
tivities, she still has time to
teach 8-year-olds at the
Christian Church and sing in the
choir.
Lisa has been actively in
volved in the work of the
church. Helping found a mission
called Shekinah in the hills of
Tennessee was a great thrill for
her.
She says she “hopes to go
back there some day to minister
to the orphans and alcoholics
who need help; but if I don’t get
to go back, I still had a great
experience being a part of the
founding.”
Education, for Lisa, too, was
a unique experience. Unlike
most students, she completed
five-years of high school in two
years at Everhard School in
Washington, D.C.
“This was an experimental
school at the time with 60
students, and it followed the
progressive method of
education.” One unique feature
she points out is, “there were no
clubs.” Her time was spent
working for her aunt who ran a
county newspaper.
Another experience she
speaks so enthusiastically about
is her work at the Georgia
Mental Health Center in Atlanta
with mentally retarded
children.
Lisa’s whole philosophy is
summarized in her statement,
“I want to help sick people get
well physically, but at the same
time meet their own human
needs if possible.”
To meet these needs Lisa
plans to enroll next year in a
program to become a registered
nurse to better serve children
and old people.
GOAL nominees
B fIE
■RBP 1 |M
Cheryl Pullin
Besides pulling weeds in the
family garden, punching keys in
data processing and ringing
doorbells Cheryl Pullin still
finds the tirjie to sing in the
choir, and make her own
clothes.
About that door bell ringing?
Cheryl is a part-time cosmetics
sales person in Locust Grove.
Being bashful and timid, Cheryl
says the job has helped her to
meet people and develop self
confidence.
However, she can’t boast of
two much timidity, because
she has captured the fancy of an
Army man Jim Mcßryde to
whom she is engaged. They plan
to make their home in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.
Florida is part-time home
ground for Cheryl whose father,
J. M. Pullin, Jr. works for the
Otis Elevator Company which
has moved them to Florida
twice and back to Griffin twice.
Adapting to three different
high schools was, Cheryl says,
“not as difficult as I thought
because I feel that people must
be adaptable to succeed in life.”
This 5 feet 6 inch green-eyed
brunette has very definite
opinions. Concerning women’s
liberation Cheryl states, “If
women want to work, they
should work but not dig ditches,
climb telephone poles or
anything like that, but they
should be paid according to
their ability, not sex.”
As a representative of
vocational education Cheryl
summarizes, “At Griffin Tech I
have learned how to do
something that is useful to me
now and in the future.”
She is an apt representative of
the many fine youth who are
preparing at Griffin Tech to
meet the challenges of the
future. She resides in Locust
Grove with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Jimmy Pullin and brother,
Mitch and sister, Cynthia.
About Town
EXCHANGE CLUB
The Griffin Area Vo-Tech
GOAL awards program will be
the program for the weekly
meeting of the Exchange Club
of Griffin on Tuesday at noon at
the Elks Club. Ed Langford is
program chairman. Clarence
Whatley of Vo-Tech will in
troduce the four finalists. Russ
Spangler of the Chamber of
Commerce will present the
certificates to the finalists and
will name the winner of the
GOAL award. The winner will
be presented a check from the
Club.
Federated
INSURANCE
• Auto • Life
• Home Owners
• Hospitalization
• Group • Fire
• Business
• Mobile Homes
C. RAY BARRON
ITE*" Phone 227-2021
I Griffin, Georgia
noon meeting at the Elks Club. The Griffin Chamber of
Commerce cooperates in supporting the program through
the education committee with Bill Ramsey as chairman.
The local GOAL winner will be eligible for higher levels of
competition leading to the state award.
A*
Rabiyah Khaliq
Rabiyah Khaliq, a 22-year-old
nursing student at Griffin Tech,
has visited 14 countries, worked
as an artist’s model and as a
librarian.
Traveling with her parents,
she saw army life firsthand and
explored fourteen countries
before she was 17 years old.
One of the highlights of her
experiences she feels “was
working as a model for 12
women on the waterfront in
Alexandria, Va.” Added to this
experience is the time she did
volunteer work at The Hopkins
House, a library in a black
neighborhood and frequented
by children who needed an
informal atmosphere.
Khaliq says that the children
could talk in the library and
were on the honor system of
taking care of books and
returning them. “All the books
were donated,” she exclaims,
“so we were all very conscious
of taking good care of them.”
During high school Khaliq was
a member of the German-
American Club, the National
Honor Society and was named
to Who’s Who in American High
Schools.
Concerning her education at
Griffin Tech, she explains that
she and her husband, Rasoul,
who operates a shop on Meri
wether street, were riding
around one day and saw the sign
pointing the way to the school.
She is glad they followed the
arrow because “vocational
education is really what I’ve
been looking for all along. I
know I’ll go out with skills to
practice rather than theories.”
Speaking specifically of
nursing, Khaliq hopes “to be
confident enough not to indulge
in self but to respond to the
needs of others.”
REVIVAL
The Mount Pleasant Baptist
Church youth revival is in
program and will continue
through this week. The Rev. R.
L. Glover of Atlanta is guest
evangelist. Services begin at
7:30 each evening. The Rev.
Horace Fuller, Jr., is the
pastor. The Rev. Earl McCoy,
Jr., brought the message on
Sunday.
BEAVERBROOK PTA
The Beaverbrook Elementary
School PTA will meet Tuesday
night at 7:30 p.m. in the school
auditorium. A general
discussion of the upcoming
school bond issue will be held.
ABC CLUB
The Griffin ABC Club will ..
hold its election of officers for :•:■
1974-75 at the regular meeting <:■
on Tuesday, at 12:15 p.m. at the
Moose Club.
GRIFFIN ARC
The monthly meeting of the £
Griffin Association for
Retarded Children will be held :$
at 8 p.m. tonight in the Parish
Hall of St. George’s Episcopal
Church. Mrs. Siothia R.
Longmire, recreation coor
dinator for Camp Will-A-Way, 5
will present a slide presentation
on the camp’s activities for the
handicapped.
This summer the Youth £
Association for Retarded <
Children of Griffin will send
several local handicapped and <
retarded youngsters to the
camp located at Fort Yargo
State Park, Winder.
The public is invited to attend '
this meeting.
Cynthia McGuffey
Cynthia McGuffey, a Grif
finite in the Practical Nursing
Program, is one of the four
finalists in this year’s GOAL
program. She is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Royce McGuffey
of Vineyard place.
Cynthia feels that nursing is a
matter of “helping people who
can’t help themselves.” She
extends her nursing ex
periences by working weekends
at the Living Center in Griffin.
A 1972 graduate of Griffin
High, she participated in the
choir and the Y Club. Cynthia
feels very strongly about Griffin
as a good place to live and plans
to stay here to serve those who
need her help. She speaks
fondly of her brother, Scott, and
her sister, Wendy. The close
family ties are the major reason
for her choice to remain in her
home town.
All of Cynthia’s time isn’t
occupied with nursing. She still
finds time to sew her own
clothers, read mystery stories
and plan her future. Included in
these plans is marriage “about
next November, I hope!” she
says with excitement.
“Wonderful!” is her synopsis
of vocational education.
“One can get what is needed
out in life for employment right
away. My education at Griffin
Tech has been most worthwhile
and besides — it’s close to
home.”
Stork Club
MASTER BRELAND
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Breland
of Route Six, Box 33, Griffin, an
nounce the birth of a son on
April 20 at the Griffin-Spalding
County Hospital.
LITTLE MISS JOLLY
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jolly of
415 Kincaid avenue, Griffin, an
nounce the birth of a daughter
on April 20 at the Griffin-
Spalding County Hospital.
MASTER CLARK
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Clark
of 1221 North Ninth street,
Griffin, announce the birth of a
son on April 21 at the Griffin-
Spalding County Hospital.
MASTER BROWN
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Wallace
Brown, Jr., of Route Two, Box
620, Griffin, announce the birth
of a son on April 22 at the
Griffin-Spalding County Hospi
tal.
LITTLE MISS WHEELER
Mr. and Mrs. Ike Wheeler of
Route Two, Box 211, Mc-
Donough, announce the birth of
a daughter on April 22 at the
Griffin-Spalding County Hospi
tal.
SPRING
SALE
Nearly all our early spring
™Sts 20% - 40% -
TOPS, BOTTOMS
HATS, BAGS
Between Solomon
And Taylor Griffin, Ga.
| Deaths-Funerals |
Mr. Simonton
Mr. Albert Ray Simonton, a
former resident of Griffin, died
early Sunday in Hope, Ark.,
where he had made his home for
the past 40 years.
A native of Griffin, Mr.
Simonton was the son of the late
William Edward Simonton and
the late Claudette Williams
Simonton. He was a retired
electrician and a veteran of
World War Two.
He is survived by three
sisters, Mrs. E. A. MeHaffey of
Griffin, Mrs. Howard Connell of
Williamson and Mrs. W. L.
Powell of Roswell; four
brothers, D. W. Simonton, Sr.,
W. H. Simonton, G. G.
Simonton, all of Griffin and
Ruel Simonton of Daytona
Beach, Fla.
Funeral services will be
conducted Tuesday afternoon at
2 o’clock from the graveside in
the new section of Oak Hill
cemetery. The Rev. Bruce M.
Morgan will officiate. Friends
may visit the family at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. D. W.
Simonton, Sr., 732 Sherwood
drive, Griffin. The body will
remain at Pittman Rawls
Funeral Home.
Mrs. Brooks
Mrs. Maebell Maddux
Brooks, 83, of 87 Atlanta street,
McDonough, formerly of
Flovilla, died early Sunday
morning at the Griffin-Spalding
Hospital after being a patient
for the past week.
Mrs. Brooks was the widow of
Mr. Thomas Grady Brooks. She
was bom in’ Dooley County,
daughter of the late Charles
Maddux and the late Minerva
Lemon Maddux, both of Butts
County. She was a member of
the Flovilla United Methodist
Church.
Survivors include six
daughters, Mrs. Sara Colwell of
Griffin, Mrs. Lucille Johnson of
Indian Springs, Mrs. Grace
Cawthon of Forsyth, Mrs. Doris
Melvin of Knoxville, Tenn.,
Mrs. Jeanette Hutton of Mc-
Donough and Mrs. Barbara
King of Marietta; two sons,
James Brooks of McDonough
and Harold Brooks of Jackson,
18 grandchildren, 24 great
grandchildren; a sister, Mrs.
Lillie Aycock of Clarkston; two
brothers, Roswell Maddux of
Decatur and Bernard Maddux
of Jonesboro; several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services were con
ducted today at 3 o’clock in the
chapel of Haisten Funeral
Home in Jackson. The Rev.
John Huggins and the Rev. Don
Harp officiated and burial was
in the Jackson cemetery.
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Mr. Hardy
Mr. L. B. Hardy, 57, of
Brooks, died at the Griffin-
Spalding Hospital Saturday
night where he was admitted on
Friday. He had been ill for
several weeks.
Mr. Hardy was a lifelong
resident of Fayette County, son
of the late Tince C. Hardy and
the late Ila Bates Hardy. He had
been an employe of the Georgia
Experiment Station here for 25
years.
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Mattie Cavender Hardy; a
daughter, Mrs. Janette Hardy
Wester of Newnan; a sister,
Mrs. R. W. Lynch of Brooks;
and a brother, Ted Hardy of
Brooks.
Funeral services were con
ducted this afternoon at 2:30
o’clock in Haisten’s chapel. The
Rev. Eugene Maddox and the
Rev. Arlin Stitcher officiated
and burial was in the Brooks
Memorial Gardens. Haisten
Funeral Home of Griffin was in
charge of plans.
Mr. Jackson
Mr. Fred Jackson of 121
Georgia avenue died Sunday
night at his residence.
Mr. Jackson was a lifelong
resident of Spalding County and
a member of the New Salem
Baptist Church. He was a
retired employe of Pomona
Products.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Pauline Britt Jackson;
three daughters, Mrs. Ruby
Tumlin, Mrs. Catherine Eller
and Mrs. Mary Ruth Clark; two
sons, Weldon Jackson and
Cleveland Jackson; two step
sons, Marvin Stuart and Harold
Stuart, all of Griffin; 14 grand
children, 23 great
grandchildren, two step
grandchildren, several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be
conducted Tuesday afternoon at
2 o’clock in McDonald Chapel.
The Rev. Charles Hassell will
officiate and burial will be in
Oak Hill cemetery. The body
will remain at the funeral home.
No calls made
The Spalding County Agent’s
office said today it was not
making any telephone survey
about women’s sex habits.
One Griffin woman reported
to County Agent Jack Smith she
had received a call from a man
saying he represented the
Extension office. She said the
caller asked many personal
questions.
Smith said his office was not
making any such survey and
cautioned people getting such
calls not to answer the questions
but to hang up.
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