Newspaper Page Text
Page 12
Griffin Daily News Thursday, September 19,1974
New Presbyterian group changes name again
MACON, Ga. (UPI)-A newly
formed Presbyterian group
made its third name change in
two days Wednesday by voting
to become the Presbyterian
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Church of America.
The group, which broke off
from the Presbyterian Church
in the U. S. last December, had
voted Tuesday night to change
its name from the National
Presbyterian Church to the Na
tional Reformed Presbyterian
Church.
The word “reformed” had
been added to the original title
because of a threatened lawsuit
from the National Presbyterian
Church in Washington, D. C.,
which said the name similarity
could cause confusion.
But many of the 600 delegates
from 18 states didn’t like the
new name, so the denomina
tions’. second general assembly
voted on another name Wednes
day.
Os the six names considered,
the Presbyterian Church in
America got 302 votes with the
National Reformed Presby- i
terian Church the runnerup j
with 61 votes.
“Reformed is an unknown : :
wordtotheaverageAmerican,” :•
said the Rev. Ben Haden,
-
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ici LJ i
George Allen Hans Apel
People
By United Press International
Won’t bail them out
BONN (UPI) — West German Finance Minister Hans
Apel has warned his European neighbors not to expect his
government to bail them out of their financial difficulties.
Apel noted Wednesday that West Germany holds 60 per
cent of the nine-country European Common Market’s :•:
foreign exchange reserves, and continues to achieve :;j
record trade and payments surpluses while the other eight
battle deficits.
“All this has caused us to be unjustly viewed by some of :•>
our European partners as the rich cousins on the Rhine,”
Apel said. But, he added, “No one is going to be spared the g
difficult course of adjusting national demands to the g
performance ability of one’s own economy.”
Moon delivers fiery sermon
NEW YORK (UPI) — The Rev. Sun Myung Moon •:•
climaxed Wednesday a $300,000 publicity campaign with a
fiery Wi hour sermon in Madison Square Garden in which :<
he exhorted his followers to prepare for the second coming
of the Messiah. <:
Continually shouting, waving his arms, and at times :■;<
grabbing his translator for emphasis, Moon spent much of
the sermon telling his audience that the Jews bore a £
responsibility for the crucifixion of Christ. He insisted, £|
however, that “I love and respect” the Jewish people.
About half the 20,000 persons had left the stadium by the
time Moon concluded. :$
J
Coach Allen calls Nixon
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UPI) -George Allen, coach
of the Washington Redskins professional football team, $:
has called former President Richard Nixon twice to wish •:*:
him well, it was learned Wednesday.
Nixon, while in the White House, was an avid Redskin S
fan and was said to seldom miss a game on television.
While watching one such game, Nixon telephoned Allen gj
and readied him on the sidelines, suggesting a play which g
the Redskins used in the next series of plays. g
State visit in Cuba
MIAMI (UPI) — President Julius Nyerere of the S<
African Republic of Tanzania arrived in Havana g
Wednesday for an official state visit at the invitation of g
Cuban Premier Fidel Castro, the Cuban radio reported. g
Nyerere was greeted at the airport by Castro and other
Cuban Communist party dignitaries, then escorted into
the city in a parade caravan. g
Japanese Red Army
warns of more attacks
DAMASCUS (UPI) — The militant Japanese Red Army
warned today of new “offensive attacks” to follow up a
dramatic five-day embassy siege in Holland that freed a
jailed comrade from a French prison.
The Marxist underground group marked the arrival of
the three embassy raiders and their released comrade in
Damascus by vowing to fight “capitalists of the world”
for “the liberation of all oppressed people.”
“Comrades and friends all over the world, march
onward, carry out more offensive attacks against the
enemy,” the left-wing Japanese organization said in a
statement.
The four Japanese surrendered Wednesday to
Palestinian guerrillas after ending an 18-hour odyssey
across Middle East skies by handing over a pair of pistols
and $300,000 in ransom to the volunteer crew of their
“freedom” jet.
“The Japanese were polite to us,” Dutch pilot Pirn
Sierks said. “They put up their pistols and left their case
with the money they collected in Amsterdam on the
plane.” *
The drama began Friday when three Red Army raiders
seized the French Embassy in the Hague, took 12 persons
hostage and demanded the release of guerrilla Yutaka
Furuya from a French jail.
The guerrillas ended the embassy siege Tuesday night,
flying out of the country in a borrowed Air France jet with
their 25-year-old comrade, who had been seized at Paris’
Orly Airport with kidnap plans.
Diplomatic sources in Damascus predicted the
Palestine Liberation Organzation, which met the gunmen
at the airport, would take the four guerrillas to a country
of their choice.
The Arab group, however, denied any ties with the
embassy takeover. “We absolutely have nothing to do
with this operation,” a spokesman said.
In the Hague, French Ambassador Jaccques Senard,
one of the captives, said the hostages were held at
gunpoint around-the-clock, systematically starved and
prevented from using the toilet.
4
ABC LANGUAGES
WILLEMSTAD, Netherlands
Antilles (UPI) — Inhabitants of
the three southern islands in
the Netherlands Antilles —
Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao —
usually speak at least four
languages: Papiamento, Dutch,
Spanish and English.
Papiamento is the local dialect
which developed when Curacao f
was a major slave market in
the Caribbean. It combines
words from various languages
spoken by the slave traders,*
including Spanish and Por
tuguese.