Newspaper Page Text
Page 36
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, November 12, 1975
What’s happening with the military
BERNARD FULLER
Marine Sergeant Bernard
Fuller of Route two, Griffin, has
been promoted to his present
rank while serving with the Ist
Marine Brigade, Marine Corps
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I Elect A Man Who Recognizes < I
I That Today's Economy Will „> I
Not Stand Any Tax Increases
I Os Any Kind OR Loss Os I
Income
111
|
I ELECT I
I LOUIS GOLDSTEIN I
I Your City Commissioner I
[ (Paid Political Adv.)l
Air Station, Kaneohe Bay,
Hawaii.
JEROME LEEKS
Army Private First Class
Jerome Leeks, son of Edward !
W. Leeks of Griffin, is par- 1
ticipating in Exercise Reforger
in Germany. PFC. Leeks is
regularly assigned as an or
dance repair specialist with the
218th Ordance Detachment,
Giebelstadt, Germany.
RICKEY A. KENDRICK
Army Private Rickey A.
Kendrick, 22, son of Mrs. Betty
J. Kendrick of Griffin, com
pleted eight weeks of advanced
individual training at the U.S.
Army Armor Center, Fort
Knox, Ky. His wife, Carol, lives
in Griffin.
LORENZA MULLINS
Navy Seaman Lorenza
Mullins, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Mullins of Griffin,
participated in “Deep Ex
press”, an annual NATO
exercise in the Eastern
Mediterranean Sea. He is a
crewmember aboard the am
phibious cargo ship USS El
Paso, which was one of 17 U.S.
Sixth Fleet ships involved in the
multi-nation exercise. Mullins
has returned to Okinawa after a
five and one-half month
Western Pacific deployment.
TERRY J. SPAIN
Army Private First Class
Terry J. Spain, whose wife,
Vickey, lives in Griffin, com
pleted eight weeks of advanced
individual training at the U.S.
Army Armor Center, Fort
Knox, Ky. His parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. A. McKElheney, live in
Experiment.
WILLIAM R. MOORE
William Randy Moore, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William Frank
Moore of Griffin, enlisted in the
U.S. Air Force Delayed
Enlistment Program. He will
not enter active duty status
until March, 1976. At that time
Moore will undergo six weeks of
basic training at Lackland Air
Force Base, Tex. He has
completed a series of tests
qualifying him for training in
the telecommunications
operations career field.
THOMAS L. HARDIN
Army Private Thomas L.
Hardin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. Hardin of Griffin, was
assigned as a tank crewman in
Company B. 2nd Battalion of the
197th Infantry Brigade’s 69th
Armor at Fort Benning.
STEPHEN E. TYLER
Among the recent graduates
from the Marine Corps Recruit
Depot at Parris Island, S.C.,
was Private Stephen E. Tyler,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Daniel
of Griffin.
Husband accused
of burying bride
CALLAHAN, Fla. (UPI) -
Laura Wright, 19 and a bride of
two months, got tired of
fighting with her burly husband
and told him she wished she
was dead, according to state
investigator Roy F. Dorn.
“He said he could oblige her
if she wanted,” and promptly
did so —by hopping aboard the
family bulldozer and burying
her alive, said Dorn. He
charged William Peter Wright
Jr., 26, with first-degree mur
der.
Dorn said Wright, son of a
wealthy dairyman, and his wife
went out to drive across the
pastures of the dairy farm in a
truck shortly before midnight
Monday.
“It’s not uncommon for a
man and his wife to go out for
a late night ride around these
parts,” said Dorn. “They were
fighting and he said she told
HENRY L. DEARING
Technical Sergeant Henry L.
Dearing distinguished himself
by meritorious service as a
crew chief, Transient Alert
Shift Chief and Non
commissioned Officer in charge
of mobility, 77th Tactical
Fighter Squadron, 79th Tactical
Fighter Squadron, 20th
Organizational Maintenance
Squadron, 20th Tactical Fighter
Wing, Royal Air Force Station
Upper Heyford, England, from
July, 1971 to July 1975. Sgt.
Dearing is currently stationed
at Cannon AFB, Clovis N. Mes.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
H.H. Dearing of Griffin. His
wife is the former Miss
Charlotte Madaris of Griffin.
CHARLES A. PASSMORE
Charles A. Passmore, son of
Mrs. Mary E. Jinks of Griffin,
has been promoted to Sgt.
Major. He has served in Korea,
Vietnam and Lebanon and is
presently stationed at Fort
Bliss, El Paso, Tex. He is
married to the former Miss
Betty Copeland of Griffin.
RALPHS. NAIL
Marine Private First Class
Ralph S. Nail, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph G. Nail of Hampton,
has been meritoriously
promoted to his present rank
upon graduation from recruit
training at the Marine Corps
Recruit Depot, Parris Island,
S.C.
GEORGE H. AMERINE, JR.
Marine Sergeant George H.
Amerine, Jr., whose wife,
Marcia, is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Milus Duke of Griffin,
has reported for duty with the
Third Marine Division on
Okinawa.
ROBERT E. WHITEHEAD
Navy Seaman Robert E.
Whitehead, whose wife, Sandra
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Johnny W. Ammons of Griffin,
was graduated from basic
Radioman School at the Naval
Training Center, San Diego,
Calif.
PATRICK G. SHEEHAN
Navy Seaman Recruit
Patrick G. Sheehan of Zebulon
was graduated from basic
radioman school at the Naval
Training Center, San Diego,
Calif.
him that she was ready to end
it all, that she wanted to die.”
Their ride ended with Wright,
behind the controls of a
bulldozer, burying his wife
alive in a six-foot deep pasture
grave a mile and a half from
their home.
“We’ve got two theories
we’re looking at,” Dorn said.
“We’re not sure whether he hit
her, making her semiconscious,
and then dumped her body into
the hole, or whether she got
inside the hole voluntarily.”
An unidentified relative told
police he went to the pasture to
investigate when he heard the
bulldozer about 1 a.m. Tuesday.
According to Dorn, the
relative found Wright driving
the bulldozer and when he
asked him what he was doing,
Wright told him he was burying
Laura. After some discussion,
they began to disinter her.
Dorn said sheriff’s deputies
were called when the two found
they couldn’t dislodge the body
from beneath the mound of
earth.
“The hole was too deep,”
Dorn said. “They were only
able to get her head above
ground.”
Flying
(Continued from page one)
likes. Such units are made of
high school and college age
students who are interested in
the Air Force and its careers.
Chambers served as chaplain
to the summer encampment
cadet squadron last August at
Fort Benning. He recently
returned from Southern
Seminary, Louisville, Ky.,
where he shared in the military
chaplain’s conference for all
chaplains endorsed by the
Southern Baptist Convention,
Home Mission Board.
Despite the demands of CAP
work on his time, he manages to
serve full time the Dewey Rose
Baptist Church.
Whether preaching on Sunday
morning at his church, flying to
Griffin to open a meeting with
prayer, or flying somewhere
else in Georgia to make a call on
a CAP family in need, Cham
bers figures it’s all part of his
ministry.
And he loves his work.
iiSRSI
m i j iWiH
I fl IIIBWiIamM
Muffin waits
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.—The cocker spaniel behind the fence at the West Palm City Jail
isn’t stolen property waiting to be identified, it’s the family pet, “Muffin.” She slipped
behind the fence recently when her owners, Don and Bonnie Mertzlufft, stopped by to see if
their stolen bicycle had been recovered. (UPI)
Alcoholic
Husband withdraws from world
By 808 SCOTT
Copley News Service
Dear Bob:
My husband is an alcoholic
and has tried to “cold tur
key” it a couple of times.
However, he withdraws from
the world and because of this
he returns to drinking.
He says he really wants to
quit, but is afraid of with
drawal symptoms as well as
going into a shell. Alcoholics
Anonymous has proved little
benefit to him. Is there any
literature you could provide
on how to relax and how to
overcome withdrawals? I
genuinely believe in him,
but also know that I cannot
help him overcome this prob
lem. I realize he must make
the decision himself.
Wife
Dear Wife:
If literature alone could do
it, we could mass-mail to
every resident and close
down Alcoholics Anonymous,
hospitals, information and
referral centers, stop all re
search and educational ef
forts and, in general, spend
our time on other problems.
Literature is a good
adjunct, but not worth much
when it comes to motivating
the victim to seek help. Sorry,
but historically literature is
one of the worst methods to
motivate people into treat
ment.
Your husband needs to
realize that he is acting just
like an alcoholic is supposed
to act when he tries to do it by
himself. Please encourage
him to seek special treatment
for his special problem.
The problem is not how to
relax! That’s only a part of
the problem.
If we taught him that art
alone, he would be a very re
laxed drunk. The problem is
complex. If he had a heart
condition, would he want to
learn to relax and thereby
treat himself at home, with
his own remedies? Somehow,
we must manage to get him to
seek professional, specialized
help for this problem. Please
read the letter I’ve sent you
under separate mailing.
There are suggested places in
your area with the staff and
procedures that will help
your husband, and in very
short order. But, they can’t
do it if he’s in your living
room.
One last thought: it might
be very dangerous for him to
withdraw without close med
ical supervision. That alone
might help him seek profes
sional help, especially when
he realizes that withdrawal
can be accomplished with
minimum discomfort and
life-threatening danger —
with appropriate help.
GRKNUFE
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