Newspaper Page Text
Page 14
— Griffin Daily News Tuesday, April 13,1976
About Town
JACKSON ROAD
The Jackson Road PTO will
meet tonight at 7:30 for the final
meeting of the year. The school
band will entertain.
KIWANISCLUB
The Griffin Kiwanis Club will
elect officers for the 1976-77
year tomorrow at its meeting
beginning at 12:15 at the Elks
Club.
■g/ 4RIFFINx4A,
CITY DARKS,
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ry
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Open All day Wednesday.
Use Your Crouch’s Account.
Easter baskets are special at Claxton’s!
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They’re not mass-produced somewhere else.
Each one is put together with thought and care right here.
And if you don’t find just what you want in one
I little boys & little girls, big boys & big girls,
teen-agers & sweethearts all love ’em/
give us time and we’ll make yours just for you. That’s right.
Our Easter baskets are special because our customers are special—
never just another number.
That’s why there are....
Fewer Problems For Claxton’s Customers
11 claxton’s
I PHARMACY ©?'
CAMELLIA CLUB
The Camellia Garden Club
will meet at 3:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Holiday Inn.
TOWN AND COUNTRY
The Town and Country
Garden Club will meet
tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. at the
home of Mrs. William F. Young,
119 Laumae road.
Griffin High honor roll students
Griffin High announced its
honor rolls as follows:
SOPHOMORES
High Honor Roll — AU A’s
Mark Henshaw, Phyllis
Thesing, Helen Thomas.
Honor Roll—A’s and B’s
Lisa Acosta, David Akins,
Debra L. Anderson, Karen
Andrews, Jay Arnold, Anne
Barker, Linda Beckham, Joan
Berry, Gary Betz, Betty Biles,
Faith Chambers, Gary
Eheman, Cindy Duncan.
Timothy Malone Fields, Gail
Christine Fincke, Lisa Floyd,
Pam Fortner, Melissa Jayne
Fulton, Mary Gilchrist, Kim
berly Ann Gillespie, Debra
Glass, Denise Glass, Jo Anne
Hall, Chuck Hammock, Pam
Hammond.
Jeff Harpe, Jimmy Harris,
Jerry Hendrix, Pamela
Holland, Pamela Hollings
worth, Janie Howie, Alice Jett,
Teresa Jones, Cheryl Kilgore,
Brian Krepps, Melissa Landers,
Virginia Langford.
Judy Lynch, Bobby Magner,
J. Keith Mathis, Chris Mat
thews, Melvin McCrary, Laurie
Montgomery, Bonnie Owens,
Traci Pugh, Robin Purser.
Joy Riggins, Becky Riordan,
SaUy Shapard, Tammy Smith,
Sperry May Spradlin, Mark
Stanley, Lona Triplett, Bobby
Vines, Jeanie Weldon, Greg
Ziesenhene.
JUNIORS
High Honor RoU—AU A’s
Cathy Baker, Valinda
Barrett, Rocky Beeland, Julia
Boswell, Marcus Crawley, Cecil
Davis, Marty Evans, Jeff
GiUespie, Lorraine Goodson,
Myra Johnston, Janet Souther
land, Robert Sullins, Lisa Ward,
Lisa Williams.
Honor RoU—A’s and B’s
Mark Andrews, Charles
Alexander Barkley, Vickie
Bunn, DarreU Buntyn, Deborah
Burford, Bobby Joe Butler,
Paula Carley, Tim Carney,
RandaU Coleman, Lyn Dallas,
Lisa Daniel, Larry Evans.
Mark Hardcastle, Carole
Hart, Zan Harvill, Romy
Gunter, Robert Hill, Angie
Horne, Celindy Johnson,
Marsha Kapiloff, Paula
Kapiloff, John King, Karla
Larson, Nancy Leach.
Tferry Lewis, John-Lovelady,
Benita Mangham, Terri
McElroy, Janice McGhee, John
Millican, Shelia Morgan,.
Tammy Morris, Judy Ogletree,
Carol Sue Perryman, Deborah
Polk.
Patty Raybon, Wayne
Rigsby, Janice Roberts, Joe
Robison, Laura Ryan, Donna
SeUers, Mary Jane Shannon,
Stephanie Sidney, Jim Skinner,
Tammy Stahl, Larry Stephens.
Thalia Stubbs, Linda
Thacker, Janet Thomas, Lee
Thomas, Jimmy Turner, Brian
Upson, Steve Wallace, Lynn
Wilson, Loralie Young.
SENIORS
High Honor RoU—AU A’s
Denise Davis, Kathy Fitts,
Beth Grant, Mary Jane Powers,
Patti Searcy, Mary Stephens,
Eric Threatt, Joan Williams,
Kitty Woodward.
Honor RoU—A’s and B’s
Clara Barkley, Bruce
Beckham, Kathy Betz, Susan
Bevil, Suzette Broski, Shelia
Brownlee, Michael Byram,
Rhonda Calhoun, Robin
Young maintains
support for Carter
By ELIZABETH WHARTON
Black Georgia Congressman
Andrew Young today refused to
withdraw his support of Jimmy
Carter for president, saying the
former Georgia governor had
“an outstanding record on open
housing.”
“I’m not going to withdraw,”
said Young, one of Carter’s
most outspoken backers, in a
televised interview.
Young turned down Monday’s
caU by the Rev. Hosea
Williams for Young and other
black leaders to abandon
Carter’s Democratic campaign
foUowing the use of “ethnic
purity” by Carter in discussing
neighborhood housing.
Henry Jackson and Morris
Udall, the other two major
Democratic candidates, cam
paigned in Pennsyllvania today
while Carter set a news
Callahan, Ethel Clark, Tam’ra
Daniel.
Kathy Edwards, Janet
Gaston, Teresa Goss, Ricky
Griffin, Sharon Hall, Wade
Harper, Corine Harris, Melinda
Hattaway, Chris Hill, Phil
Hopkins, Laura Hunter.
Vicki Jackson, Robin Jenkins,
Terry Johnson, Peggy Joiner,
Marianne Looney, Delia
Mangham, Denise Matthews,
Cheryl Mattox, Terri Mays,
Donna Mclntyre, Marc Mit
chell, Robyn Mullins.
Kathy Murphy, Jackie
Peurifoy, Amanda Pounds,
Nancy Preston, Debbie San
ders, Wendy Sauley, Leigh
Anne Slade, Andy Smith, Jim
Smith, Ginger StanseU, Mel
Stewart, Paula Thurston, April
Tingle.
Cheryl Walker, Robert
Walker, Kathy Walton, Frank
Ward, Celia Vaughn, Paula
Westmoreland, Susie Whalen,
John White, Eddie Whitlock,
Betty Wilson, Liz Windom,
Brooks Woodruff, Christie
Woodruff.
conference and rally in down
town Atlanta,
Carter has already apologized
for the ethnic purity phrase
several times, but Williams
Monday attacked what he
called a basic contradiction
between the term and open
housing.
“That’s like being for Jesus
Christ and the Devil at the
same time,” said Williams.
“I’m not going to withdraw,”
Young countered today on the
CBS Morning News. “I think
that Jimmy has already an
swered every question that
Hosea asked. Hosea knows as
well as I do that Jimmy Carter,
as governor of Georgia, had an
outstanding record on open
housing.”
Young called ethnic purity a
“chance phrase,” and said the
incident “has not hurt him
(Carter) as bad among black
voters as it has among the
liberal white voters.”
In political action Monday,
Republican Ronald Reagan said
he had a “cash flow” problem
in his campaign. President
Ford told a White House
reception for his campaign
workers he is certain to win the
nomination in August and feels
he will win the May 1 Texas
primary, in which Reagan is
favored.
Sen. George McGovern, D-
S.D., the Democrats’ unsuccess
ful presidential candidate in
1972, said “ethnic purity” is no
worse than “1,000 per cent
support.”
Quake hits Oregon
THE DALLES, Ore. (UPI) -
A moderate earthquake shook
north-central Oregon Monday
but caused no major damage.
The Oregon State University
seismology station measured
the temblor at 5.1 on the Richter
scale and said its epicenter was
10 miles southeast of The
Dalles.
Officials said there was a
small foreshock at 4:02 p.m.
with the main shake coming at
4:47 p.m. Two small after
shocks also were recorded.
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Dolly: 3-6, Sat. 3-4
Kissinger considered
quitting in early ’73
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger seriously considered
resigning as President Nixon’s
national security affairs adviser
early in 1973, but decided he
could not leave “as the
Watergate scandal developed. ”
Kissinger said Monday he
removed his personal papers
from the White House to a
vault on Vice President Nelson
Rockefeller’s Pocantico, N.Y.,
estate early that year because
he was considering “resigning
from government.”
But he denied charges by
New York Times columnist
William Safire that he removed
official documents, including
memos on conversations with
the President and foreign
officials like Soviet Ambassador
Anatoly Dobrynin, to Rockefel
ler’s vault.
The 1973 events were de
scribed Monday in a statement
approved by Kissinger and
released by the State Depart
ment in response to the
allegations.
“When the secretary was
considering resigning from the
government, he moved his
Harvard files and personal
papers covering the years
before 1969 ... plus some other
personal papers to a vault at
Gov. Rockefeller’s estate,” the
statement said.
“No documents, memoranda
or other records were removed
from the White House” it said.
“When the secretary later in
the year decided he would stay
in the government he moved all
those files back to the White
House. Everything taken up to
great silver sale
of active
sterling flatware
at savings of
40%
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107 SOUTH HILL. STREET
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA
Gov. Rockefeller’s estate was
returned in the spring of 1973.”
Kissinger appeared flustered
when reporters encountered
him in the State Department
lobby later and asked him why
he considered resigning.
“I don’t want to discuss it,”
he said and strode into an
elevator.
Less than half an hour later,
Food poisoning
blamed in death
TUCKER, Ga. (UPI) - A
Tucker man died from food
poisoning and three members
of his family were hospitalized
with the illness Monday night,
police said.
A DeKalb County police
spokeswoman said W. H. Scott,
40, died about 11:30 p.m. in
DeKalb General Hospital.
Scott’s father, C. F. Scott, 68,
Gail Scott, 19, and Mildred
Roebuck, 34, were listed in
stable condition at the hospital,
the spokeswoman said.
The spokeswoman said all
four were related but she did
not know the exact relationship
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however, he issued a statement
saying he had always thought
he would resign after the
Vietnam Warended.
“He had decided to leave as
soon as U.S. troops were
withdrawn from Vietnam and
peace looked well on the way to
being established,” the state
ment said. “However, as
Watergate developed, he decid
ed he could not leave.”
of the women to the two men.
The spokeswoman said the
family became ill about 10 p.m.
Monday after eating supper.
She said authorities had not
determined what caused the
food poisoning.
Friendly CBs
donate SIOO
to center
The Friendly CB Club of
Griffin has donated SIOO to the
Child Development Center on
Jefferson avenue.