Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, October 2, 1975
Page 6
Family faces deportation
MIAMI (UPI) - A U.S.
Immigration Service official
says plans to deport Chilean
anti-Communist Lorenzo Lucar
di and his family Sunday will
go on as scheduled.
Lucardi said Wednesday in
Jacksonville that the Immigra
tion and Naturalization Service
had stayed his scheduled
deportation after he and his
attorney met with immigration
officials in Miami Tuesday.
But James Y. Banks, assist
ant district director for depor
tation for the U.S. Immigration
and Naturalization Service,
OPEN HOUSE
KANDY KANE KASTLE
and KINDERGARTEN
305 North Hill Street
Saturday, 10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
In Celebration Os Our New Kindergarten
We invite all parents of children enrolled at Kandy Kane and friends to attend.
Refreshments Will Be Served.
Mrs. Gloria Russell, Kindergarten Director
Mrs. Sherry Corley, Asso. Dir. Day Care Center
Griffin DISCOUNT
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denied Lucardi’s claim Wednes
day night.
“The (deportation) order was
never cancelled. I made that
very clear to Mr. Lucardi and
his attorney,” Banks said.
Lucardi, 28, who sought
refuge here in 1970 before the
fall of the late Chilean
President Salvador Allende,
had failed in his attempts to
win political asylum from the
United States.
He had argued that because
of his outspoken opposition to
Allende he was a marked man
and that the Communist under-
ground in Chile was sure to kill
him if he returned even though
an anti-Communist regime is
now in power.
Florida Congressmen William
Chappell and Charles Bennett
introduced private legislation to
allow Lucardi and his family to
become residents but those bills
were defeated in committee.
However, he said he filed a
paper certifying the birth of his
youngest child, two-year-old
Enza, which gave him, his wife
and two other children a right
to priority in applying for U.S.
residency.
Higher costs
keep down
earnings
WEST POINT, Ga. (UPI) —
The president of West Point-
Pepperell, Inc., predicts the
textile firm’s earnings for the
first quarter of the new fiscal
year will decline because of
higher manufacturing costs and
recent hikes in the cost of
fibers.
President J. L. Lanier Jr.,
said Wednesday sales were
down 2 per cent in September,
the first month of the new
quarter, but volume was
“particularly strong” in
household goods.
West Point-Pepperell reported
a 41 per cent drop in net
income for the quarter ended
Aug. 30 and a 20 per cent
decline for the past fiscal year.
Earnings for the year were
$19.7 million or $4.15 per share
and for the quarter were $5
million or $1.05 a share. The
year’s sales fell 9 per cent to
$526 million and in the last
quarter, they were $l3B million.
There was also a stronger
demand in September for
knitted apparel fabrics and
industrial fabrics which were
“hardest hit by the recession,”
Lanier said.
ft
■BV ! uj ■
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New officers
Newly elected officers of the Griffin Chapter of
International Childbirth Education Association are (1-r)
Dianne Herbert, president; Brenda Barron, vice
president; Diane Green, secretary; and Nancy Brown,
treasurer.
Blue Cross-Blue
Shield going up
ATLANTA (UPI) - Soaring
health costs have led Blue
Cross and Blue Shield insur
ance companies of Atlanta to
increase hospitalization premi
ums for policyholders served in
28 Georgia counties.
The 19 to 23 per cent
increase, which is to go into
effect Nov. 1, will be the second
this year for some 23,000
individual policyholders in the
counties served in this area.
A spokeswoman for the
insurance companies, who dis
closed the increases Wednes
day, said the rate hikes cover
only policyholders who are not
eligible for medicare benefits.
The companies, which are
presently in the process of
working out a merger, an
nounced the rate increases in
letters mailed Tuesday to
policyholders, the spokeswoman
said.
She said the increases were
necessary to offset soaring
health care costs which have
“increased 40 per cent faster
than the cost of living,” during
the past year.
She said other factors enter
ing into the companies’ decision
to make the increases included
j Grand Opening <
) Friday-Saturday-Sunday <
{ Minit Man Mart
> Highway 41 At School Road 1
\ Sunnyside, Ga., Phone 227-7000 I
C Across From Post Office
■ Colonial
| BREAD 3 89* '
> Sweet C4OQ 6 Oz. Bottles mm I
I MILK ’lsai. COKE 50 c I
< rnrr s ioo™ bill
( lIILL KEG MILLER’S BEER (
C Open 7-11 Everyday • Come See Us
yMOMMOM»-0M»-0MM<>MM»MM0M»-0MM0MW<>WBW
I CATFISH
| ALL TRIMMINGS
j Thurs. f Fri. f Sat. j
(Catfish will be served every weekend.) j
From 4-9:30
I I
Steaks Starting From j
Oysters *2 50
I Shrimp *2 95 =
| All Fried Chicken You Can Eat j
»2 69 °
I Take Out Orders =
| 227-9738 j
j DAIRY BAR & GRILL j
| (Old O’deH’s Case) j
0 O MM < > -MW < > MM <> MM 0 MM' O MM 0 MM 0 MW O 0 MB
additional wage costs for
hospital employes and that
“people are using health care
services more.”
The rate hikes were in eight
catergories of insurance cover
age and exact amounts would
be determined by the type of
coverage each policyholder
maintains, the spokeswoman
said.
She said the lowest family
policy rate presently offered to
policyholders would rise from
$27.58 to $42.28 per month after
Nov. 1. The highest family rate
would increase from $67.90 to
$75.34.
HOLIDAY INN
OF GRIFFIN
Tonight
German Night