Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, January 11, 1977, Image 1
■ j r-^a^w^L v >aH r . ’ 'M • ■ v , BM « ? ' ULfl ML ’ ‘ ** ■ '' , S V HMh&LI . ,' Xi * ft- w^K' ®«Ww ®C WjjHP&J llaU - ** E ft k| Monday night’s freezing weather turned this water fountain of Tommy Penley, West Central avenue, into this beautiful mid-winter scene in Griffin. Picture of thermometer downtown (top) was made at 6:01 today. School board to push study Griffin-Spalding school board officers were reelected to another term last night in a brief and routine meeting at the superintendent’s office. Henry Walker will continue as chairman, Russell Smith as vice chairman and Supt. D. B. Christie as secretary-treasurer. As soon as committee assignments are made this week, committees on the comprehensive study and school sites will begin work and make recom mendations, Walker announced. The comprehensive study, made by state officials, has been approved by Pilot BY MAY WINGFIELD MELTON Airplanes are not usually parked in a garage, but Bill Reynolds’ has been since July. He is “refurbishing” his 1941 Taylorcraft plane at his home on Wesley Drive and tows it to the Griffin Spalding County airport behind his small Volvo car. The wings took up most of the space in the playroom and Bill’s wife Linda stepped over the transmission in the kitchen for months. She found plane parts under the sofas, behind the doors and in every “nook and cranny” in the house. It still surprised her one day when she opened the freezer and found a part stored there for safekeeping. The Reynolds moved to Griffin from Charlotte, N.C., three years ago in February when Bill went to work as an air traffic controller at F.A.A. in Hampton. For awhile he commuted to Hampton from Charlotte in another plane he owned at the time. Flying has been a part of Bill’s life since he was six years old and began assembling model planes at his home in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. He “hung around airports” and realized early in life that “aviation would be my thing.” He was in his third year at Northeastern University in Boston studying electrical engineering when GRIFFIN Daily Since 1872 Griffin, Ga., 30223, Tuesday Afternoon, January IL 1977 the board. It calls for a new high school and new elementary school. A bond referendum to finance the program probably will be held in the spring. Dr. Tom Hunt, chairman, said the committee will meet after appoint ments are made and school administra tors, teachers and the community will be enlisted to help with plans. Mr. Christie plans to talk with U. S. representatives and senators on the school system’s application for Public Works monies to build a new elemen tary school. (Continued on page two) Bill parks his plane in his garage at home he decided to “get back into flying.” He spent eight years in the Navy as a Flight Officer, running the navigation and weapons systems on planes. Bill made the last landing on the U.S.S. Forrestal on July 29,1967 in Southeast Asia before the carrier blew up at 10:45 in the morning. Forty airplanes loaded with weapons and bombs were destroyed and 147 lives were lost. Bill wanted to “stay flying” so when he was assigned to a tour of duty on board ship in 1971, he chose to get out of the Navy and go into private business in Charlotte, N.C. The Reynolds met in Columbia, N.C., in 1965. Bill stopped off to spend the night with his sister who was living there and she “dragged” him to a party. Linda was there because her girlfriend didn’t want to go to the party alone. Bill left for naval training the next day. Several months later he found another excuse to “visit his sister” and Linda and Bill’s romance bloomed. They married in 1966 and now have a son, Ben, a daughter, Jennifer, and a kitten named “Holly” that Bill gave Linda on Christmas Eve. An avid sailor, Bill says that Griffin is the farthest he has ever lived away from the ocean and he is looking for ward to sailing this summer. A talented woodworker, he made much of their More cold due tonight More cold weather was forcast for the Griffin area tonight but it won’t be as bad as it was Monday night. Weather observer Horace West brooks recorded a low of 10 degrees this morning at his home in Sunny Side. The temperature on some downtown 500 expected at Elks meet About 500 Georgia Elks and their wives are expected to attend the statewide midwinter meeting in Griffin this weekend. The convention of the Georgia Elks Association will begin Friday afternoon at Elks Lodge 1207 on Williamson Road and continue through Sunday. Grand Exalted Ruler Doug Whitaker and the Griffin Lodge will host the Gov. Busbee calls for fairness in state’s property tax system ATLANTA (AP) - Gov. George Busbee called today for a hard look at the fairness of the property tax system in Georgia as part of a six-year effort to rewrite the state Constitution. Busbee said that with voter approval last November of “editorial" changes in the Constitution, state officials should start to work immediately on an article-by-article revision of the bulky document. A major question during that effort should be whether “our system of taxation, particularly our methods and concept of ad valorem taxation, is as equitable as any system we can prescribe,” he said. The governor proposed a select The Country Parson by Frank Clark fjji' sjlHßiiiJiiillli 111111 “I guess the best way to get folks to believe a rumor is to issue a denial.” furniture and also the deck at the back of their house on Wesley Drive. While living in Europe Bill and Linda became interested in the wine there and both like trying new kinds. They often “cook together and crack a bottle of wine.” The Taylorcraft plane Bill is working on hasn’t been flown in 12 years. It is a two seated plane with a closed cockpit. It is covered with a fabric similar to dacron which is stitched and fitted over the plane and painted with “dope" to give it weather resistance and strength. Bill has changed the color from “yicky” green to “Taylorcraft cream” or yellow. The wooden propeller has been resanded and refinished and the interior completely replaced. Linda helped some with her sewing machine. The plane cannot be flown until all the parts are in A-l shape. He has had some difficulty obtaining parts for his “an tique” plane but determination is paying off. It is not equipped with radios or other electronic devices so the pilot simply “looks before he lands.” He hopes to get his plane in the air in February, and Linda is sure that Bill will succeed. She says “anything he puts his mind to, he can do” and that would include flying a “do it yourself airplane.” bank thermometers registered 10 and 11 before sunup this morning. The forecast for the Griffin area said the low tonight would hoover around 14 degrees. Griffin like the rest of Georgia was in the grip of a cold wave. Atlanta and convention. Sonny Hunt is manager of the local lodge. Doug Whitaker is the new Exalted Ruler of Griffin Lodge 1207 Elks. The lodge elected and installed him last night to complete the unexpired term of John Wiley who resigned because of poor health. Whitaker will serve until April when new officers will committee of top officials from all three branches of government to work on the constitutional revision, and said their proposed changes could be submitted to the voters in the next three general elections, thus substantially completing the work in six years. In the text of his State of the State address, prepared for a joint session of the legislature at noon, Busbee also: —Said he believes this legislature can pass a lobbyists’ disclosure bill striking the proper balance between the right of citizens to express their views on legislation “and the right of the public to know who has a special interest in legislation and how far that interest goes.” —Declared that education is the top priority of his administration and said he is “not going to rest until we are well on our way to having a kindergarten program ... (so that) all the young people in this state can start to school with as good a chance of success as any other boy or girl in America.” —Urged the legislature to adopt a “sunset law” that would make the state’s occupational and licensing boards justify their work or face elimination, and said if that proves successful, he will ask lawmakers to expand the law to other state agencies. Turning to economics, the governor said he believes the nation has begun a recovery from the crises of past years but said that “caution and fiscal responsibility must be the prevailing ’ '• ■- 11 S Is ’■■ "'M Vol. 105 No. 8 Rome both recorded lows of 9 degrees. It was 12 at Athens, 21 at Savannah, 17 at Macon and 16 at Augusta and Columbus. Georgia Power, the state’s major electric utility, called on all customers to conserve electricity. The cold caused peak demand at a be chosen. Whitaker, general manager of Mortell Company in Griffin, served previously as Grand Exalted Ruler, 1971-72. He has continued active in Elk dom and presently is an Aidmore Trustee. Also he is past district deputy grand exalted ruler for Georgia- Northeast, and past State Vice President for Georgia. principles of this session.” Although state funds are not as tight as in 1975, Busbee said, state hiring must be held to the minimum necessary and bureaucrats must be discouraged from “the old attitude that the way to get ahead in government is to play the game called ‘build up your bureau. Busbee’s comments on reviewing the property tax system marked the first time during his administration that he had raised the possibility of a tax revision program sanctioned by the state’s chief executive. Lt. Gov. Zell Miller has frequently called for a thorough study of the state’s tax laws, but has been un successful in his efforts to have a blue ribbon tax study commission appoint ed. People ...and things Man leaving warm bed this a.m. to discover in cold bathroom that water pipes have frozen. Carter supporter with invitation to inauguration trying to get one to one of the parties. Shrubbery in Griffin yard wrapped in shrouds of sheets and plastic to save it from the weather. Bill Reynolds polishes prop on his plane. Weather ESTIMATED HIGH TODAY 35, low today 10, high yesterday 32, low yesterday 21, high tomorrow in upper 30s, low tonight near 14. FORECAST: Fair and cold through Wednesday. EXTENDED FORECAST: Chance of rain statewide, possibly mixed with snow north, beginning Thursday evening and clearing early Saturday. Otherwise, partly cloudy. time when the utility had to pull one of its huge generators at Cartersville out of service because of mechanical problems. “We can make it through the day if people cooperate and we don’t lose any more units,” a spokesman said. A Georgia Power representative telephone the Griffin utilities depart ment this morning and asked for power conservation in Griffin. A spokesman for the utility said that the power supply in Griffin was adequate to meet needs. But Griffin officials were urging customers to cooperate with the Georgia Power conservation plea. Rev. Crawley dies; rites Wednesday The Rev. Frank Crawley of LaGrange died last night at Crawford Long Hospital in Atlanta. He had been a patient there three days. He served as pastor of the First United Methodist Church in Griffin 1952-56 and later returned here to serve as superintendent of the Griffin District of Methodist Churches. The Rev. Crawley was a popular minister in Griffin, taking a special interest in young people. He was active in the Touchdown Club and worked with a group of people here in promoting Little League baseball. He was a member of the Kiwanis Club in Griffin during his pastorate at First Church. He came here from the Elberton Methodist Church and was assigned to the Decatur First church after com pleting four years in Griffin. He was serving as district superin tendent of the LaGrange district at the time of his death. In recent years he had suffered several heart attacks. The funeral will be at 1 p.m. Wed nesday at Spring Hill Chapel of H. M. Patterson and Son Funeral Home in Atlanta. Bishop William Cannon will officiate. Burial will be in Arlington cemetery in Sandy Springs. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Berrien Crawley; three daughters, Mrs. Jane Manderson of Atlanta, Mrs. Patrick Gorman of Rochester, N. Y., and Mrs. Nancy Brinsfield of Atlanta; two sisters, Mrs. J. H. Barrow of West Point and Mrs. J.W.D. Moodie of Atlanta; three brothers, Charlie Crawley of Dalton, Brantley Crawley of Atlanta and Joe Crawley of Miami Beach; two grandchildren.