Newspaper Page Text
Page 8
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, November 13,1975
Patrol
wants
more cars
ATLANTA (UPI) — The
State Patrol will ask the
legislature to double the num
ber of patrol cars without
official colors, Col. Herman
Cofer, head of the Georgia
Department of Public Safety
said Wednesday.
Cofer made the comment at a
meeting of the Public Safety
Board after Attorney General
Arthur K. Bolton said he
thought it was impossible to
enforce the state’s 55 miles per
hour speed limit.
Bolton, who said the patrol’s
effectiveness had been hurt by
the increased use of citizen
band radios to warn of speed of
traps, said “there’s not enough
money on earth to hire enough
troopers if you are going to
make all of them have bubbles
on their cars and advertise they
are there.’’
Flea Market
10 to 6 P.M. -
Every Saturday
In Front of Luna
Drug Co.
in Hampton
Some Space Available i
Call George Luna
946-4437
The World’s Greatest
Miracle Healer,
ERNEST ANGLEY
Will Be In Atlanta, Georgia
Dec. 14th At
Atlanta Civic Center Auditorium
395 Piedmont Avenue
2 o’clock P.M.
EVERYONE IS WELCOME!
Rev. Angley Prays For The Sick, Everyone Is
Healed, Delivered, Receives Whatever Help They
Need. Free Prayer Cards Are Given At The Opening
Os The Services. All Seats Are Free.
Come And Bring Someone With You.
"You Will Be Blessed."
The Ernest Angley Hour — Georgia Station
ATLANTA - WHAE CHANNEL 46
Sunday Evening 9:00 - 10:00 p.m.
I PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE I
Lay-A-Way Now For Christmas
Come In And Shop Our Harvest Os Values.
For The Next Three Days We Will Have The Largest
Selection Os Diamonds In Griffin. During Our Sale
Everything Reduced From 10% To 3373%
Check These Examples
One Carat Ladies’
I Diamond Cluster * I
03490°
Diamond Set n ?“ °>™ l «“• 20 % OH
I $40095 Dla WO(J9S S er On All Stone I
UUU 3 Rings
% Carat Diamond
I ’i29« 20% on’/ o« I
I 1/2 Off Select 20 /• I
349 . Indian
3/4 Carat Diamond Frirrlnfl< Sterling Silver Mother’s Ring Jewelry
695°° Earrings sl2-00 Wj|h Jwo
One Carat Diamond Each Additional
*1,495°° Stone *2°°
Sale Ends Saturday — All Sales Final
CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE BANKAMERICARD, ttS. MASTER CHARGE
II THOMASON’S JEWELERS II
SPALDING SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER GRIFFIN, GA
| Open Friday Nites Til 9 P.M. 228 3874 |
■v# ™ ■
■ /f *SHI I ■
. K- /■ n m
s wt MB MR k
SIH ■ S ’ ■
Broadway salute
Kathy Baker with unbrella and other members of the Griffin High School advanced chorus
practice for show to be held Saturday night. The “Salute to Broadway” show will begin at 8
p.m. at the Griffin High auditorium.
Jacqueline wants
daughter to ease up
LONDON (UPI) - Jacque
line Kennedy Onassis is upset
by reports of the partygoing
lifestyle of her 18-year-old
daughter, Caroline, and wants
her to ease up, the Daily
Mirror said today.
Mirror gossip columnist Paul
Callan said Mrs. Onassis “has
burned up the telephone lines
across the Atlantic” telling
Caroline that she “must not
overdo it.”
“Her last two calls particu
larly were lengthy sermons
which can be summed up in
two words, ‘Cool it,”’ he said.
Since Caroline came to
London for a three-month art
course at Sotheby’s, the art
auctioneers, “an evening has
hardly passed without some
party—dancing at clubs, late
dinners in chic restaurants, not
to mention lively country
weekends," Callan said.
She has been late for classes
three times in the past two
weeks, he said.
Mrs. Onassis “is perturbed
about reports reaching her
from friends and relatives who
have seen Caroline and who
have told her that her daughter
has been recruited into the
swingiest set in London since
the sixties.
“What worries Mrs. Onassis
particularly is that these
reports have also reached
Caroline’s grandmother — the
formidable Rose Kennedy—who
is pressing her to bring the girl
home," Callan said.
Callan said Mrs. Onassis’
faced a dilemma since Caroline
was reluctant to leave the
United States in the first place.
“Her mother’s main purpose
in sending her away was to
separate her from some less
than desirable friends,” he
said.
People
By United Press International
fwl
Nguyn Cao Ky Francine Neff Louis Prima
Sen, Dole to get married
SALISBURY, N.C. (UPI) — Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan.,
says he plans to marry Federal Trade Commission
member Mary Elizabeth Hanford sometime in December.
Miss Hanford’s family declined to announce the date or
location.
Miss Hanford, 38, was named to the FTC in late 1973
after serving as an administrative assistant to consumer
affairs director Virginia Knauer. She is a graduate of
Duke University and earned her law degree at Harvard.
Dole, 53, is divorced and has one daughter, Robin, 21.
Singer in coma
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Band leader and singer Louis
Prima, 62, is in a mild coma at Cedars of Lebanon-Mt.
Sinai Medical Center, where he underwent surgery for a
brain tumor almost four weeks ago.
His wife, the former Gia Miles, who sang with Prima’s
band for 13 years, said Wednesday her husband was
showing signs of improvement since the operation.
“He’s been in a mild coma since the surgery,” said Mrs.
Prima, who is at her husband’s side almost 24 hours a day.
The Primas, married since 1963, have two children,
Louis Jr., 10, and Lena Ann, who will be 12 Friday.
Pointer’s pooped
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — June Pointer, 20, will give up
her live performances with the Pointer Sisters quartet
because of a doctor’s recommendation that she
permanently retire from the stage.
Miss Pointer, the youngest of the four singing sisters
who emphasize the 1940 s style, is suffering from extreme
mental and physical exhaustion, a spokesman said.
The other three sisters — Ruth, 29, Anita, 27, and
Bonnie, 25 — will continue to perform live as a trio, he
said, and June may join them in future recordings.
Ky sees bloodbath
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) — Former South Vietnamese
Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky still thinks a “secret bloodbath” to
eliminate anti-Communist resisters in his homeland is
inevitable.
“We will not see a public execution,” Ky told the
National Association of Independent Insurers convention,
“but I think they will do it quietly.
“It’s Communist rule. It’s a necessity for them. I’m
sure it will happen.”
Neff urges bond buying
GLENDALE, Calif. (UPI) — U.S. Treasurer Francine
Neff says buying U.S. savings bonds is “the bicentennial
thing to do.”
“It’s away to pledge your faith and trust in another
hundred years of the United States of America,” she said
in a speech at a train station launching a new bond sales
campaign.
“As long as we have a country, you will be able to
redeem your United States savings bond,” she said, “so
they’re the safest investment that an American citizen
can make.”
DO NOT BE MISLEAD!
You Cannot Lower "This" yj
Without Raising "That |T
\ THIS THAT JX
IN OTHER WORDS
If You Lose Income In
One Area, You Have To J ™’,, .-" ■
Make It Up Elsewhere!
ELECT
LOUIS GOLDSTEIN
Your City Commissioner
(Paid Political Adv.)
Brunswick teacher
gets 1976 honor
ATLANTA (UPI) — Edith M.
Smoak, a Brunswick High
School social science teacher,
has been named Georgia’s 1976
Teacher of the Year.
Miss Smoak and second place
finisher June Rutledge, a first
grade teacher in Coweta
County, were to receive plaques
from state school Superintend
ent Jack P. Nix today at
College
enrollment
increases
ATLANTA (UPI) — Enroll
ment at state-run institutions of
higher learning in Georgia
reached a new high of 128,994
this year, the state Board of
Regents was told Wednesday.
The increase was 11.4 per
cent over last year and the
biggest jump came at Georgia
State University in Atlanta
where the number of students
rose 11.5 per cent to 21,075,
giving Georgia State the second
largest enrollment of all schools
in the state University System.
The University of Georgia at
Athens had the most students
— 21,442, the regents were told.
The board also heard Dr.
Carl Hodges, executive secre
tary of the Georgia Association
of Educators and a spokesman
for the Georgia Association of
Higher Education, appeal for
across-the-board pay increases
for professors.
Hodges said inflation dictated
pay raises for all instructors
rather than awarding hikes on
the basis of merit.
The board plans to distribute
any money for raises on the
basis of 3 per cent across-the
board and 7.5 per cent on
merit.
Chancellor George L. Simp
son said, however, that the
board “feels very strongly that
it should have a pay increase —
even in the days of inflation —
that deals with the performance
of professors.”
I~ Antique Flea Market g
SvUA, g
LOCUST GROVE I
J GEORGIA I
1 NOV. 15 / 10A.M.-10P.M. I
i NOV. 16 > ’olm.-6p.ii. J
S Inside and Outside
I Lunch and Dinner Buffet g
FREE §
inis eico .5
g ADMISSION MANAGERS V
meeting of the state Board of
Education here.
The state teacher competition
is sponsored annually by the
Georgia Department of Educa
tion and Southern Educator’s
Life Insurance Company. Miss
Smoak will represent Georgia
in the National Teacher of the
Year competition.
Miss Smoak, who teaches
psychology and sociology, said
to be effective a teacher must
be “interested in the student,
reacting to that person as
uniquely as he presents him
self.”
Miss Smoak, who said she
believes “personal experience
limited only to classroom
activity cannot be meaningful
to the student,” began a
volunteer program in 1974 at
Brunswick High School students
in which students worked with
handicapped and emotionally
disturbed area residents.
Miss Smoak is a graduate of
Columbia College in Columbia,
S. C. and has a master’s degree
in education from the Universi
ty of Georgia. She has been a
teacher for 17 years
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koljter & Campbell
PIANOS
For Your Inspection.
Wonderful As Christmas
Gifts.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERIES
GOODE-NICHOLS
FURNITURE
206 South HUI Street
Griffin, Georgia