Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News Thursday, August 25, 1977
Page 22
The People
Page
By the Newspaper Enterprise Association
Finally been included
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Barbara Jordan
The intelligence czar?
President Carter’s plan to
hand CIA Director Stansfield
Turner budget control of two
of the largest defense in
telligence agencies makes
Turner the most powerful
director of central in
telligence in history.
"But the Admiral will not
be an intelligence czar,” in
sists one White House source.
The agencies involved are
the National Reconnaissance
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Stansfield Turner
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Titusville. Satelite Beach.
As far as Texas
Congresswoman Barbara Jor
dan is concerned, the civil
rights of Black Americans
have been a long time in com
ing, but they’ve been worth
waiting for
"My faith in the Constitu
tion is whole, it is complete, it
is total," Ms. Jordan avers in
an interview in Essence
magazine.
"I felt for many years that
somehow George Washington
and Alexander Hamilton just
left me out by mistake. But
through the process of amend
ment, interpretation and
court decision, I have finally
been included in We the Peo
ple' . . .’’
Organization in charge of spy
satellites, and the National
Security Agency, which
among other things handles
electronic eavesdrops.
Together the two agencies
spend about $3 billion a year.
Carter’s decision is a com
promise settlement of a three
month power struggle
between Turner and Defense
Secretary Harold Brown, who
now controls the agencies.
Says one defense official:
"The key is that we in the
Defense Department retain
control of the collection
process so we know what is
being collected and so we can
control the process in war
time.”
Some military officials are
critical of Carter for granting
more power to Turner.
"The abuses of the past and
many of the misjudgments
were caused by too much cen
tral control of intelligence,”
one general says. “The
military commanders in the
field already have been
deprived, through various
budget cuts over the years, of
much of their tactical in
telligence capability.”
Yet another addict
The stereotype of the
woman who watches daytime
television dramas is as
familiar as some of the
characters on the shows
themselves
But sophisticated author-
Broadway critic Jean Kerr
lays the myth about soap
opera addicts to rest in an ar
ticle in the current issue of
McCall’s.
"Until two years ago I had
never seen even one episode of
a soap opera. I had a definite
idea, though, of the kind of
woman who would watch
them: a gin-soaked slattern in
her husband’s old bathrobe,
dirty dishes mounting in the
sink, waxy buildup piling up
on the linoleum. Actually, the
gin-soaked part is patently ab
surd. You have to be alert to
follow those plots.”
Writes the author of hits
like “Please Don’t Eat the
Daisies” and "Mary, Mary”:
“But, in spite of my
highfalutin attitudes, I have
lived. I have learned. It’s not
just pride. EVERYTHING
Next week’s birthdays
AUGUST 28 — Elizabeth Seton (1774-1821). helped
found the first charitable institution in her native New York
City. In 1809. she opened a free elementary school in
Baltimore. Md., the forerunner of parochial schools;
organized the Sisters of Charity, and founded St. Joseph's
College at Emmitsburg, Md. She was beatified in 1963.
AUGUST 29 - Charlie Parker (1920-1955), the "Bird,"
alto sax player who helped start “bop" music with Dizzy
Gillespie. Thelonius Monk, and Kenny Clarke.
AUGUST 30 — Roy Wilkins (1901- ), Black
newspaper editor began his career with the NAACP in
1931, serving in various capacities, including executive
director.
AUGUST 31 - Arthur M. Godfrey (1903- ), the fam-
ed entertainer began on radio as an announcer in
Washington. D C. in 1930 and gained fame with his "Talent
Scouts" and "Arthur Godfrey T-ime."
SEPTEMBER 1— Walter P. Reuther (1907-1970). noted
labor leader was prominent in the United Automobile
Workers and became its president in 1946. Then he
succeeded Philip Murray as CIO president in 1952 and was
instrumental in helping merge it with the AFL in 1955
SEPTEMBER 2 — Jimmy Connors (1952- ). the fiery
champion tennis player, whO learned much of his game
from his mother, a tennis teaching pro
SEPTEMBER 3 — George Hearst (1820-1891) made his
fortune in mining property and acquired the San Francisco
Examiner in 1880. His son. William Randolph Hearst, and
grandsons expanded the news empire. The elder Hearst
served as a U.S. Senator from 1886 to 1891.
goeth before the fall.
“Like most affairs,” she
recalls, “it began so innocent
ly and then I became hooked
on ‘One Life To Live.’ Before
you know it, I was in a coma.
The world was passing me by.
I was giving the most bizarre
explanations for why I could
NEVER go out in the after
noons on weekdays.”
Jean Kerr
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IN THE WORKS: Lily Tomlin’s first production under her two-picture contract with Universal will be “The Incredible
Shrinking Woman,” which she will produce and star in. Project will be a parody of the 1952 science fiction classic "The
Incredible Shrinking Man,” also a Universal film. William Friedkin (center) whose latest film "Sorcerer," has met
with far less success than previous efforts like “The French Connection” and "The Exorcist," will produce and direct
for Warner Bros, an untitled film based on the 1969 murder of United Mine Workers official Joseph Yablonski. Paul
Newman’s production company has entered into an agreement with Columbia Pictures to do “Paradise," a backstage
look at modern Las Vegas. Newman will star as an ambitious casino executive.
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