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Griffin Tech special section inside today
Forecast
Warm
Map Page 9
Apple blossoms may join peaches in area
In recent years, apple
blossoms have joined peach
blossoms in the springtime
beauty of Middle Georgia’s
rolling farmlands, as increasing
numbers of landowners have
begun to experiment with apple
orchards.
Dr. Stephen S' Miller, newly
appointed assistant professor of
horticulture at the Georgia
Station of the University of
Georgia College of Agriculture
Experiment Stations, says
apples are a fairly new crop in
Middle Georgia, though they’ve
been grown in North Georgia
for many years.
Miller, who received his Ph.-
D. in plant physiology in 1971
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Meet the president
Gordon Junior College President Dr. Jerry Williamson talks with students in his office
during fall quarter orientation and registration. Classes started yesterday at the
Barnesville campus. Some 750 students enrolled on the first day but more than 900 are
expected for the fall quarter. Registration continued today. _____
Practical Nurses
graduate Friday
Twenty-two people who have
completed practical nursing
training at Griffin Tech will
graduate in cermonies Friday
at the First Christian Church
beginning at 8 p.m.
Mrs. Thelma G. Helms, RN,
is coordinator of the training
program. She will handle the
pinning of the graduates.
The Rev. Victor Whited will
be the speaker.
The Rev. Orville Wright will
give the invocation and Bobby
Haralson will sing “He.”
The Gideons Auxiliary will
present Gideon Bibles to the
Carter says dirty movies,
porno help subsidize heroin
ATLANTA (UPI) — People
who go to dirty movies or put
a “victimless” bet on a football
game are subsidizing the heroin
trade that makes addicts of
their children, says Gov. Jimmy
Carter.
‘ ‘The decent citizen of Georgia
has to know that when he places
a bet on a football game or en
ters a house of prostitution, or
buys a pornographic book or
movie, he contributes almost di
rectly to the heroin traffic that
Vol. 102 No. 221
from the University of West
Virginia, will be working with
various types of apple trees to
determine which varieties are
best suited to Middle Georgia’s
relatively mild climate.
Apples characteristically
have been grown in regions with
cooler climates than Middle
Georgia’s, Miller says, because
they require a certain amount
of cold weather to break bud
dormancy.
“We don’t know how much
chilling apples actually require
because they are grown in cold
areas,” Miller says. “But I will
be working to find out the
chilling requirement of apples
graduates’
Mrs. Gladys Shaw, RN, who is
director of nursing services at
the Griffin-Spalding Hospital,
will give the inspirational.
Mrs. Flo Laughren, RN, will
present the diplomas.
Edwin V. Langford, director
of Griffin Tech, will present the
Top Student Award. Bobby
Haralson will conclude with
“The Lord’s Prayer”, and the
graduates will sing “God be
With You.”
Mrs. Peggy Whited will be the
accompanist.
Graduates will be:
can destroy the life of his son
or daughter,” said Carter at his
weekly news conference Tues
day.
The governor called Capitol
newsmen to his office to an
nounce that improved under
cover work has made it easier
for the Georgia Bureau of In
vestigation (GBI) to go after
the “big shots” in the narcotics
business.
Carter was deliberately vague
on details, saying he did not
GRIFFIN
to be grown in the state. I’ll try
to find methods of breaking the
rest period (bud dormancy)
when we have unusually warm
winters,” he says.
Last winter’s effect on the
state’s peach crop is a good
example of what can happen
when there isn’t enough cold
weather, he says. Georgia’s
peaches suffered from delayed
foliation simply because there
weren’t enough hours of cold to
spark the budding process.
Miller says he also will be
working to determine the
nutritional status of orchard
soils in Middle Georgia. This
will help in making fertilizer
recommendations.
Mrs. Shirley Atchison, Mrs.
Sheila T. Burrell, Miss Karen
Calder, Mrs. Janet Cannon,
Miss Linda English, Mrs. Jinny
Everhart, Miss Ruby Kate
Goggins, Miss Bobby Goodman,
Mrs. Marie Hightower, Miss
Reba Hill, Mrs. Hazel Jones.
Mrs. Rabiyah Khaliq, Miss
Debbie Killingsworth, Miss
Cynthia McGuffey, Mrs. Gail
McLaurin, Miss Michelle
Mullen, Miss Mary L. Rasaw,
Mrs. Peggy Rivers, Miss
Barbara Ussery, Miss Rhonda
Vickery, Miss Lisa Young, Mrs.
Rose Marie Young.
want to jeopardize cases now in
progress by citing specific en
forcement techniques, but he
said he has a fulltime assistant
attorney general preparing a re
port for the next governor on
organized crime involvement in
the drug business and “victim
less” vice.
He said that gambling is the
major source of mob revenue,
but that prostitution and por
nography also help organized
crime finance the heroin trade.
Griffin, Ga., 30223, Wednesday Afternoon, September 18,1974
Griffin scientist heads research-
Sheriff talks up
‘watch ’ program
Sheriff Dwayne Gilbert issued
a plea today for residents to
help him cut down crime in
Spalding County by joining the
National Neighborhood Watch
program.
Recent FBI figures show an
overall 15 percent increase in
crime throughout the nation,
much of which, according to
leading law officials, is victim
assisted.
Many times citizens un
wittingly encourage a crook by
leaving an unattended car or
truck unlocked and by not
Sen. Kidd proposes bonus to vote
ATLANTA (UPI) — It would
probably be unconstitutional to
penalize people who don’t vote,
so veteran State Sen. Culver
Kidd proposes giving a $5 to $lO
tax bonus to those who do.
“The penalty is the wrong
way to go,” Kidd said Tuesday.
“We should go from the stand
point of a reward, rather than a
penalty.”
Kidd said he will introduce a
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City turning on electronic brain
Computer operator Larry Brown checks new equipment at city hall
administrative building while Patsy Williams works at key punch station.
The new equipment soon will be telling city customers how much they owe
“Basically,” he says, “my
research will be concerned with
the physiology and nutrition of
apple trees. We’ll be setting up
experimental orchards at
Griffin — there are no apple
trees there now because this
research is so new. We will try
to determine what root stock
varieties and planting of
management systems are best
suited for apple growers in
Middle Georgia.”
According to Dr. Blake B.
Brantley Jr., horticulture
professor and department head
at the Georgia Station here, the
program is being initiated
primarily to serve Middle
checking to make sure all doors
and windows are secured before
leaving homes and businesses.
With children back in school,
the sheriff continued, many
mothers are working and there
are fewer persons in any neigh
borhood who might notice a
thief or burglar at work.
This increases the possibility
of successful daytime in
strusions, and coupled with
longer hours of darkness, in
tensifies the problem of
preventing or controlling crime,
he said.
It is obvious that police alone
bill allowing voters to have their
ballot receipts signed by a poll
worker, then send the receipts
in with their state income tax
forms and claim the $5 tax
write - off for each vote in the
two primaries.
He suggested that the federal
government provide a similar
$5 incentive as a deduction from
federal income taxes, for those
who vote in the November gen-
Georgia’s apple producers, but
support will also be given to the
apple industry in the mountain
region. “We want to solve
problems peculiar to this area
posed by temperature, climate
and altitude,” he says.
“We don’t know much yet
about varieties and fertilizers,”
Brantley says, “because apple
production in Middle Georgia is
so recent. Growers have had to
depend on information based on
work done elsewhere.”
Miller says that apple
research in Georgia has been
very sketchy, and only recently
has the number of trees in
creased. Now, he says, there
are about 500,000 apple trees in
cannot cope with the problem,
he said. They need the help of
citizens, he added.
The National Neighborhood
Watch project, conducted
through Sheriff Gilbert’s office,
is designed to decrease criminal
opportunity by increasing
citizen awareness and involve
ment.
Free materials describing
simple steps citizens may take
to protect their property are
available for the asking at the
Spalding Sheriff’s Department.
The information kits may be
eral elections.
The Milledgeville Democrat
compared his idea to giving
away saving stamps at grocery
stores or plates and glassware
at filling stations.
“I am sure your first reaction
would be, why should we pay
anyone to exercise one of the
main rights of Democracy?”
said Kidd.
“Today, we have been brought
Daily Since 1872
the state. They’re almost
equally divided between Middle
Georgia and North Georgia.
Why grow apples —a cold
dependent crop — in a warm
region?
“We think there’s a good
future for apples in Georgia,”
Miller says, “because the crop
matures well in advance of
apples grown in other commer
cial production areas of the
United States. This early
maturity gives Georgia growers
a good fresh fruit market in the
region and may eventually help
Georgia become an exporter,
too.”
He feels that apples probably
obtained by writing Sheriff
Gilbert in care of the Spalding
Sheriff’s Department, 232 East
Broad street, or by phoning his
office.
If Spalding residents avail
themselves of the free material,
they could do a lot to decrease
the opportunity for neighbor
hood crimes to be committed,
as, “opportunity plus desire
equals crime”, the sheriff
noted.
If you help him to help you,
crime in Spalding County can be
decreased.
up in a society of presumably
being given something for noth
ing—whether it is green stamps,
glassware, or whatever it might
be.”
Kidd also proposed setting
some spending limits on politi
cal’ campaigns, saying can
didates this year are finding it
almost impossible to raise the
large amounts they need to run
on their light, water, sewerage and garbage bills. When the utility billing is
working properly, the city expects to put some other work on the computers.
A Prize-Winning
Newspaper
1974
Better Newspaper
Contests
won’t replace Georgia’s famed
peach crops. Instead, apples
may provide growers with a
dual role in the fruit industry.
Miller feels that sweeter,
better-tasting apples —for
more months of the year — may -
be a benefit for Georgians if the
state’s apple crops continue to
increase.
“Right now,” he says, “ap
ples are picked before they’re
ripe, before they’ve reached
their best flavor, because they
have to be shipped long
distances. It might be possible
to get better quality apples to
the consumer at a better price,”
Miller says.
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“You can’t expect a fellow to
know right from wrong if he
can’t even tell bad from worse.”
Weather
ESTIMATED HIGH TODAY
85, low today 59, high yesterday
86, low yesterday 64, high
tomorrow in mid 80s, low
tonight near 60.
for office.
Kidd proposed a $750,000 limit
on campaigns for governor, split
$350,000 in the first primary,
$150,000 in the second, and $150,-
000 in the general election.
Candidates for lieutenant gov
ernor would be limited to $250,-
000 in the first primary and
$75,000 in each of the two elec
tions after that, in Kidd’s bill.