Newspaper Page Text
Castro says
he was wrong
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Cuba’s Premier Fidel Castro,
seeking better relations with
the United States, says he was
wrong to have opposed the
U.S.-Soviet deal that ended the
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Church of God
Wed. Night - 7:30 P.M.
Sunday School - 10 A.M.
Morn. Worship - 11:00 A.M.
Evangelistic Svc. - 7:00 P.M.
Voice of Calvary
Mon.-Fri. 9:45
WGRI
M. G. Summers - Pastor
Perry Gambrell - Associate
COME JOIN THE CROWDS
GOING TO
Brßntte Baptist
Experiment Street
Ralph S. Estes, Pastor
9:45 A.MSunday School
11:00 A.M Morning Worship
Sermon by pastor
6:00 P.MChurch Training
7:00 P.MEvening Worship
A GOING CHURCH FOR A COMING LORD
: WORSHIP THIS SUNDAY WITH |
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
1 i 501 West Broad Street ] I
“THE CHURCH ALIVE IN 75 ” |
9:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL
11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP
6:30 P.M. CHURCH TRAINING
7:30 P.M. EVENING WORSHIP
Pastor’s Sermon Subjects
A. M. “YOU SHALL NOT STEAL”
1 [ (Ninth In Series On Ten Commandments) j
I P. M. “JESUS: OUR HIGH PRIEST”
(Fifth in Series on The Tabernacle)
: : GOD’S LOVE SINGERS WILL BE SINGING BOTH MORNING j
AND EVENING SERVICE.
b ; Billy Southerland, Pastor
Charles Jones, Education-Youth Gene Love, Music ! i
j FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH j
a Taylor at Hill |
I Telephone 227-5517 '
| Bruce M. Morgan, Pastor
| Hartwell Kennedy, E. David Lee,
Associate to the Pastor Minister of Education |
Harold Cartee, j U dith Mahle,
| Minister of Music Minister of Children’s Education |
j i
Sunday Services
9:45 Sunday School
| 11:00 Morning Worship |
“The Olive Branch” "
(Seventh in a series on the Beatitudes) |
I By Pastor
| 7:30 “On Facing Our Skeptical Moods”
By Pastor
j I
j Dial-A-Prayer 227-7381 |
1962 Cuban missile crisis.
Castro’s second thoughts on
the crisis agreement between
former Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev and President John
Kennedy were quoted in a
report released Friday by Sen.
George McGovern, D-S.D., who
visited Castro in May.
“I would have taken a harder
line than Khrushchev,” McGov
ern quoted Castro as saying
during their talks in Havana.
“I was furious when he
compromised. But Khrushchev
was older and wiser. I realize
in retrospect that he reached
the proper settlement with
Kennedy.
“If my position had prevai
led, there might have been a
terrible war.”
In his 20-page report to the
Senate Foreign Relations Com
mittee, McGovern said Castro’s
words reflect his “growing
maturity and capacity for
reasoned discourse,” and un
derscore the need for quick
response to his overtures for
improved relations.
The Khrushchev-Kennedy
compromise included a U.S.
pledge not to invade Cuba in
return for Soviet agreement to
dismantle and remove the
nuclear missiles Khrushchev
had installed on the island.
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GREENVILLE, Ala.—A bomb ripped this car, belonging
to Circuit Court Judge Arthur E. Gamble Jr. Gamble
suffered injuries to his legs and hands, but doctors said he
would recover. As district attorney, he was involved in the
Election
measure
upheld
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
federal court, citing the “gross
abuses” of Watergate, has
ruled that a strict law
governing presidential and con
gressional campaign financing
is valid and necessary to fight
“the corruptive influence of
money” in politics.
The eight-judge U.S. Court of
Appeals ruled unanimously
Friday that the new federal
election law, which limits
campaign contributions and
spending and provides federal
financing for presidential elec
tions, is constitutional.
The decision, which will be
appealed to the Supreme Court
by its opponents, will have a
major impact on the 1976
presidential and congressional
elections.
For the first time, candidates
will be strictly limited in the
amount they can spend and the
amount they can receive in
individual contributions.
The court dismissed all but
one of the 28 constitutional
challenges to the law made by
a group headed by Sen. James
Buckley, R-N.Y. and former
Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D-
Minn.
The challengers said the law
infringed upon constitutional
rights of free expression. They
said they will appeal the
decision.
The court also ruled constitu
tional the new Federal Elec
tions Commission, which was
created by Congress to police
politics.
“The corruptive influence of
money blights our democratic
process,” the court said. “We
have not been sufficiently
vigilant. We have failed to
remind ourselves ... that
politics is neither an end in
itself nor a means for subvert
ing the will of the people.”
It said unlimited campaign
spending would create a situa
tion where “the wealthy few
could claim a constitutional
guarantee to a stronger politi
cal voice than the unwealthy
many.”
“The act tends to equalize
both the relative ability of all
voters to affect electoral
outcomes and the opportunity
of all interested citizens to
become candidates.”
ev
1 v- Pruett.
Pastor
2288448
FAITH TEMPLE
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
SS 10 A.M.
Worship 11 A.M.
CA’s 6 P.M.
Evangelistic 7 P.M.
Wednesday Prayer 7 P M.
“With message for
body, soul, spirit"
Blast injures judge
g^yici newsj
MARTA five year delay
ATLANTA (UPI) — A report released Friday by the
Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority predicts a
five-year delay in the completion date of the rapid rail
system here.
The report, prepared by MARTA financial experts, says
an 80 per cent federal funding level will be necessary to
get the huge project completed even by then.
Budget director Ken Gregor told the MARTA board of
directors that if the engineers assumptions are correct it
will be 1985 before the project is completed.
The U.S. Urban Mass Transportation Administration
has granted MARTA SBOO million for the project, about
half the federal funds needed for the 53-mile system.
Gregor said the report, which is not in its final form yet,
assumes that MARTA will get even more funds by 1978
and hopes that more money could be expected even before
that.
The report projects that MARTA would be able to sell
about S2OO million worth of bonds for the network over a
30-year period.
The MARTA bonds, according to the report, will cover
the bulk of the local share of the project and will be repaid
from the authority’s one-cent sales tax.
Cycle passenger killed
SAVANNAH, Ga. (UPI) — Steven C. Wilson, 18, a
member of the 84th Transport Co. at Ft. Stewart, was
killed in a motorcycle accident early Friday morning,
police said.
Wilson was a passenger on a motorcycle in Chatham
County which hit a guard rail, then veered across the road
to strike the rail on the opposite side.
Wilson was also run over by a passing car, which
dragged his body 79 feet.
Police said both the driver of the motorcycle, Dale
Galvin of Savannah, and of the automobile, Kenneth Bush
of Savannah, would be charged with vehicle homicide.
Two men drown
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) — Two men apparently drowned
in separate incidents Friday night near here, authorities
said.
Paul Brown, 19, a Ft. Gordon soldier, was pronounced
dead at 10 p.m. after he was found face down in the bottom
of an apartment complex swimming pool just outside of
here.
Authorities said they could not estimate when the actual
drowning occurred.
City police and fire rescue squads were also dragging
Lake Olmstead in the city in search of the body of Jack
Dempsey, 40, of Augusta, who was trying to swim the
width of the lake Friday evening when he went under.
Witnesses told police the man had made it two-thirds of
the way across the lake when he disappeared.
ST. lOHN’S LUTHERAN CHURCH
8:30 A.M. Griffin Academy
Wilson Road
(Nursery Provided)
Contacts
/ JU./A*’, Mr. Smith Hunter
vvCUVv* 228-2565
Mr. J. L. Mouchet
228-4069
prosecution of the men accused of murdering civil rights
marcher Viola Liuzzo in 1965, but there was no indication
that was connected to the bombing. (UPI)
Page 9
Picture
brighter
for jobs
By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Job
prospects are brightening for
laid-off workers at textile mills,
auto and chemical plants and
appliance and furniture fac
tories, a new government
report shows.
Friday’s Federal Reserve
Board report said increased
output in these industries
boosted the nation’s industrial
production in July for the
second consecutive month.
Although the total increase
was a modest 0.5 per cent, it
produced the first back-to-back
monthly gains since the end of
the Arab oil embargo in March,
1974.
In another economic report
Friday, the Commerce Depart
ment said the balance of
payments scored a $1.23 billion
surplus in the second quarter
this year because of less
foreign investment and over
seas travel by Americans and
more exports, primarily food.
The gain followed a record
$2.95 billion surplus in the first
quarter — the first time in 15
years that quarterly surpluses
were posted back-to-back.
The payments report indi
cates Americans will be paying
less for foreign cars, television
sets and other imports. In fact,
with the exception of food and
fuel, inflationary pressures
ought to ease for most
consumers.
Crop failures in the Soviet
Union and other countries have
created intense demand for
American grains. The result is
expected to be higher food
prices in the months ahead.
Increased industrial produc
tion is a precondition for
increased job opportunities for
the nation’s 7.8 million unem
ployed.
Welcome
Revival Services
Oak Hill Baptist Church
August 17-22 7:30 P.M. Nightly
Special Homecoming Service
Sun. Aug. 17-11 A.M.
(We would like to extend a special invitation to all former pastors and members to our
Homecoming service.)
Pat Davis - Evangelist
Everyone Cordially Invited
Warren Bedingfield - Pastor
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, August 16,1975
People
By United Press International
r.
m
R> iU
Susan Ford Sally Struthers Ronald Ziegler
Ziegler has new job
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Ronald Ziegler, former White
House press secretary who stayed with Richard Nixon for
nearly a year after his resignation, has a new job with a
New York engineering consultant firm.
The new edition of Los Angeles Magazine reported
Friday Ziegler has been hired as a public relations and
project development officer with the firm of Syska &
Jennessy, Inc.
A spokesman said Ziegler will search for new clients for
the firm, which helped build the United Nations
headquarters in New York, the Washington D.C. subway
system and the Air Force Academy in Colorado.
Setback for Sally
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Actress Sally Struthers has
received a second setback in efforts to leave the Archie
Bunker television household.
A court-assigned arbitration panel ruled this week the
blonde actress, who portrays daughter Gloria in the “All
in the Family” series, may not perform for any radio or
television shows this year or for two more years if
Tandem Productions picks up her contract option.
The panel also ruled Miss Struthers may appear only in
movies and stage and nightclub performances when
“Family” is not in production.
Summer job ends
TOPEKA, Kan. (UPI) — Susan Ford added a personal
touch to her final assignment for the Topeka Capital-
Journal.
The President’s 18-year-old daughter was assigned
Friday to act as an “inquiring photographer.” She asked
persons she photographed, “How do you like having your
picture taken by Susan Ford?” .
Answers to the question will be revealed next week
when the newspaper runs the feature.
Miss Ford spent a routine last day in the photography
GRIFFIN CHRISTIAN & MISSIONARY
ALLIANCE CHURCH
1356 Maple Drive
AN OPEN WELCOME TO
WORSHIP WITH US
9:45 A.MSunday School
11:00 A.MWorship Service
7:00 P.MWorship Service
WEDNESDAY 7:30 P.MBible Study & Prayer
Pastor: Timothy Steiner
228-2265
GRACEBAPfiSTcHcH
330 North 16th Street
SUNDAY SCHOOL MORNING WORSHIP
10 A.M. 11 A M -
TRAINING UNION EVENING WORSHIP
6 P.M. 7 P.M.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT PRAYER SERVICE 7 P.M.
YOUTH SERVICES MONDAY NIGHT 7 P.M.
Eddy SissonChorister
Mrs. Marsha HuckabyPianist
The public is invited
Rev. Allen Huckaby, Pastor