Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by the 2016 Spalding County SPLOST via the Flint River Regional Library System.
About Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1977)
Page 6 — Griffin Daily News Tuesday, May 24,1977 111 -fr / y*nin'* > 7?Il! 77-IC7 S _rr ,RftL ' -> F / zjht —* Jr £2[ \\ I jfl ' i Es ” |p m iA ~I ■ if MfMk Ji & m I b-4f w *x I Tj JttfCE B H f 11 . ;T I ■. - Jr ■ Summer jobs available The Piedmont Area Community Action Agency, Inc. will administer the Area CETA Summer Youth Work Experience Program which will provide 1,108 summer jobs for youth in the Mclntosh Trail area. A total of 263 jobs will be available in Spalding County under the program. Youth 14-years-old and over, Last Week of Franciscan's 9 Merry Month of May Sale! 40% Off on 3-Piece Place Settings! i ' J Only one week left to buy dinner cups and saucers at 40% off! Choose from eleven of Franciscan s most popular dinnerware patterns. Desert Rose. Apple. Ivy. And more! 20% OFF ON SELECTED OPEN STOCK! Then add dishes, platters, accessory items, whatever pieces you need, from a large group of selected Open Stock at 20% off. All in the same eleven patterns. "TDRilntvte Company 107 S. Hill St Phone 227-2573 who are economically disadvantaged or unemployed are eligible for the jobs. The majority of the jobs will be for 9 weeks, with a minimum number for 10 and 12 weeks. Employment will begin June 13. Any student may apply at his school, at Piedmont Area’s central office in Jackson, or at the Department of Labor in Griffin. Essay winners Winners of the essay contest sponsored by the United Daughters of the Confederacy are shown in the photos: (below) Jane Raunikar (r) was the first place winner in the seventh grade at Spalding Junior High Unit HI, Susan Lynn Wood (1) won third place, Pattie Presley (not in photo) won second and Tony Stanley (not in photo) won honorable mention; (left photo, front, 1-r) Timmy Peeples won first place in the fifth grade at Orrs Elementary, Scott Weldon won first place in the fifth grade at Atkinson Elementary; (second row, 1-r) Ginger Glass won second place in the sixth grade at West Griffin Elementary, Sharon Jackson won first place In the sixth grade at Orrs, Lynn Bottoms won first place in the sixth grade at West Griffin and Dena Lynn Swindle won third place in the sixth grade at Orrs; (back) Jennifer Wike won second place in sixth grade at Orrs and Chuck Whatley won first place in the ninth grade at Spalding Unit I. The essays of Chuck Whatley, Jane Raunikar, Sharon Jackson, Lynn Bottoms and Timmy Peeples will be judged in the district contest in Columbus. The results will be announced during the summer. Subject of the essays was “Women of the Confederacy: Partners in Rebellion.” All first place winners were awarded |ls, second place—s7.so and third—ls. I vIT TMEWIti Human rights U.S. and Soviet Union preparing for fight By ARTHUR L. GAVSHON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - The Carter administration is gathering evidence designed to show the Russians have violated the Helsinki accord’s human rights provisions, but the Soviets are planning similar charges against the United States and its allies. The rights issue is central to a meeting to be held in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, to examine workings of the 1975 Helsinki accords. The United States and the Soviet Union apparently are building evidence against each other. The Helsinki pact bound 35 countries, including the United States and the Soviet Union, to observe “human rights ... fun damental freedoms and the freer movement” of ideas, people and information. In preparation for the session, the United States and its NATO allies for months have been swapping notes, compiling thick dossiers and preparing case-by case examples of alleged breaches of the Helsinki agreement by the Soviet Union and its allies. The violations range from the jailing of political dissenters to harassment and ill-treatment of Soviet Jews wanting to emi grate and reunite with their families in distant lands, main ly Israel. But the Soviets have not been idle. Moscow appears to be pre paring a massive counter-offen sive. The government news media have publicized U.S. court cases, commenting on the scale of U.S. unemployment to illus trate what has been portrayed as the deprival of human rights IN MEMORY In memory of Onr Daughter Michelle Denise Cartin. Who left this world at birth, two years ago today. May 22, 1975 God took you at birth two years ago, Time heals, but Honey, we still miss you so. We have another little Angel with us now, And she has brought new happin**** into our Home. But our love for you will always be with us, And your memory will continue to linger on. Sadly Missed By: Mr. & Mrs. David L. Cartin. Sister: Deidra to work and the recent U.S. de nial of visas to three Soviet la bor union leaders who wanted to visit the United States. British authorities say five correspondents representing Tass, the official Soviet news agency, arrived unexpectedly in the tom city of Belfast, Northern Ireland. BOUQUET OF BEAUTY From GERMAINE MONTEIL All The Right Makeup Colors For A Bright New Season _ —**•***** / *'* ' & Ji/ > M Zs I W 11 % I in ' i -// M M ill mJ * A K—■'l v & very s P ec ’ a * °ner: j us * 1 w * any purchase from Germaine Monteil. \ In box, Germaine Monteil’s hand-picked color col- lection of makeup...everything you need for a beautiful new look! Fine Acti-Vita, Super-Moist and Suppiegen makeup, in multi ple color choices for face, cheeks, lips, eyes. Soft, sun-warmed shades., .to mix and mingle in great new face-100k5...t0 go with everything in fashion. In its charming, flowerful box, the BOUQUET OF BEAUTY is as perfect to give as to get for yourself! A fabulous offer: yours for just 10.00 with any purchase from Germaine Monteil. And while you’re at the counter, be sure to sign The Beauty Register®, Germaine Monteil’s super-sampling program with special purchase opportunities. y? Wednesday Cosmetics - Street Floor RniimiFT OF BEAUTY includes SUPPLEGEN ALL DAY MOISTURE (Medium). SUPER-MOIST MAKEUP (Bare Tawn) two SUPER-MOIST CHEEK ACCENTS (Clear Coral and Rosy Cheeks), two SUPER-MOIST LIPSTICKS (Spiced Peach and Pink Sienna), two ACTI-VITA CREME EYE SHADOWS—WATERPROOF (Soft Blue and Shellfrost) with two brush applicators,and ACTI-VITA EMOLLIENT MASCARA (Black). Prices will go higher with chemical controls By TIM PETTIT Associated Press Writer HARRISBURG, Pa. - Con sumers will feel the squeeze as the federal government tightens its grip on chemicals allowed for use on crops, according to industry specialists. They predict that vegetable prices will increase, quality will decline, some specialty foods may become scarce and gardeners and specialty crop growers will be hard hit. At issue is an Environmental Protection Agency regulation that requires registration of pesticides and labels that carry a list of specific crops on which a pesticide may be used. Ex tensive testing is a part of the requirement. Companies would rather leave a minor crop off the label than spend thousands of dollars testing the effects of a pesticide that has limited sales. “I’ve talked to some chemical companies that said if it’s not one of the major crops like cotton, com, soybean or small grains, they won’t touch it with a 10-foot pole,” said Dr. Winand Hock, a pesticides specialist at Pennsylvania State University. “The effect will be on the homeowner and the small spe cialty-crop farmer, not the com grower.” He also said mush rooms, strawberries, blue berries and some varieties of apricots and nectarines could become expensive or scarce. “We definitely have fewer choices of pesticides,” said Ed Hopkins, a Pennsylvania vege table grower. “Some companies just discontinued their products altogether. “In the future, certain minor crops, things like basil, herbs, horse radishes, parsnips or leek, won’t be grown. There won’t be a No. 1 (quality) crop. The consumer will either take the cabbage with a hole in the leaf or go without," he said. After EPA banned the use of the pesticide DDT, Boyd Mertz, a greenhouse tomato grower in northcentral Pennsylvania, turned to a more expensive al ternative. “We’re using a gas, an ex tremely dangerous material, on the white fly,” he said. “The fly lays its eggs for 21 New Books The following new books have been added to the collection of the Flint River Regional Library: COMMUNICATION: “The Telephone Book” by Henry Boettinger—The stories of 3 great men and how they made the telephone possible; “Plug in Drug” by Marie Winn—Based on interviews with families, teachers and child specialists, this book presents a frightening picture of a society dominated by television. RELIGION: “Free at Last” by Bill Glass—How a retired professional football player took the gospel to the inmates of federal and state penitentiaries; “Light on the Gospels” by John McKenzie—A guide to the content and meaning of the 4 gospels. FICTION: “Fault Lines” by Kate Wilhelm—The whole life of a strong and appealing woman spins out before her in the wake Attention Working Ladies Trained Student Operators Now Taking Appointments For Evening Classes On Wednesday, Thursday and Friday Evenings. SIO.OO Permanents Nows6 95 Through May Shampoo & Sets Evening Class Only $ -| 50 Call After Work For Aopt. GRIFFIN BEAUTY SCHOOL 435 W. Solomon St 227-0931 days, and DDT had a residual effect of 30 days and took care of the problem,” Mertz said. of a shattering earthquake; “High Places” by Paul Ferris— When Detective Crocker of Scotland Yard uncovers shenanigans of a cabinet minister of noble lineage, the yard takes a dim view of his disclosure; “The Cold Room" by Jeffery Caine—Forced to spend her holidays in Germany with the father she hardly knows, Carla Martins encounters a nightmare of mystery and terror that reaches back to a forgotten past and forward to a deadly act of violence; “Song of the Pearl” by Ruth Nichols- Margaret Redmon’s death begins the story as she journeys into the realms of experience that may lie beyond death; “Falconer” by John Cheever— Convicted and imprisoned for having killed his brother, and exceptional middle-aged man enters into a close relationship with a thief and hustler named Jody, and experiences and unexpected liberation.