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People page
By the Newspaper Enterprise Association
First Lady’s campaign
Rosalynn Carter says her
goal is to “wipe out the
revulsion” against mental ill
ness, and she’s asked her hus
band to spend some money to
do it.
Says the First Lady: "I told
Jimmy that I have pledged an
Rosalynn Carter
Too late for Dino Jr.
Tm going to play on the
circuit for as long as I’m
eager and keep improving,"
says pro-tennis aspirant
Dean Martin Jr. "If I’m still
having to qualify when I’m
28 or 29-well, I’ll reevaluate.
But I believe I can be No. 1.
I’m going to try."
At 25, Martin’s chances of
succeeding on the interna
tional circuit are fading fast.
In 1975, he was strictly a
fringe player on the pro tour.
Last year, he earned a rank
ing of No. 250 on the Associa
tion of Tennis Professionals’
computer. And this year, he
qualified for the Beckenham
Invitational, one of the war
mups for Wimbledon.
"Martin has a good atti
tude and he’s a real fighter,"
says coach Paul Cohen in
Tennis Magazine. "The play
ers seem to have respect for
his tennis ability. But, at 25,
you should be in the top 100 if
you’re going to do anything."
Martin, however, refuses
Army wants more women
If Defense Secretary Harold
Brown has it his way, the U.S.
Army of the near future will
be smaller and have more
women.
As a cost-cutting move for
the fiscal 1979 Defense budget
— which will be presented to
Congress and the public in
January — Brown wants to
trim the Army by 10,000
soldiers. If he sticks by his
decision, he may provoke a
major battle in Congress.
Earlier this year the Senate
Armed Services Committee
voted to reduce Army
strength by about 13,000 by
Sept. 30, 1978. The Army lob
bied hard and the figure ended
up at 3,000.
Army strength now stands
at 783,000. Plans had called for
50,000 women soldiers by the
end of 1983. Brown wants at
least 80,000. The reason? It
What’s up in animal speeds
Intrepid automotive pioneers at the turn of the century may have
thought that twelve miles an hour was breakneck speed. But they
were barely moving compared with these animals, whose maximum
speeds were compiled by the American Museum of Natural History
as reported in The World Almanac:
Animal Spaed (mph)
Cheetah 70
Pronghorn antelope 61
Wildebeest 50
Lion 50
Thomson's gazelle 50
Quarter horse 47.5
Elk 45
Cape hunting dog 45
Coyote 43
Gray fox 42
Hyena 40
Zebra 40
Mongolian wild ass 40
Greyhound 39.35
These speeds were registered over quarter-mile distances, ex
cept for the cheetah, timed over a 100-yard distance, and the lion,
clocked in the act of charging. A charging elephant, at 25 mph. can
not outspring a human, who can reach 28 mph. The hare and the
tortoise? At 35 mph to 0.17 mph, it’s not really a race.
i NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN >
Jackie: now a subject
Some famous women seem to
be dogged by photographers at
every turn. According to Good
Housekeeping magazine, the
world s 10 most photographed
women are (not in any particular
order):
Elizabeth Taylor
all-out, personal drive to help
create a new national
philosophy about mental
health care and to help bring
mental illness out of the
closet.”
Honorary chairperson of the
President’s Commission on
Mental Health, Mrs. Carter
believes there should be a new
federal “interagency” to
coordinate development of
community mental health
programs. She wants a 28 per
cent increase in federal spend
ing on mental illness.
She may run into difficulty
trying to promote more com
munity mental health
facilities. Os the sl7 billion
spent on mental health care,
only about >1.5 billion goes to
community centers. HEW
Secretary Joseph Cahfano has
not included mental health
centers in his proposed
budget.
With a smile, Mrs. Carter
says Califano will soon be
aware of her feelings about
that.
s
Kfli
to be discouraged. "If you
really believe you can do it,"
he says, "you have a
chance." And in the mean
time, he adds, "I’m lucky to
be healthy and out in the
fresh air, running around."
Harold Brown
costs the armed forces less to
recruit women than men.
What’s up in most
photographed
women
Queen Elizabeth II of Great Bri
tain
Princess Anne of Great Britain
Princess Grace of Monaco
Princess Caroline of Monaco
Audrey Hepburn
Sophia Loren
Rose Kennedy
Caroline Kennedy
Jacqueline Kennedy Onaasia
Good Housekeeping ranked
Jackie Onassis THE most
photographed woman in the
world Ironically, the former first
lady worked as "The Inquiring
Camera Girl" for a Washington,
D C newspaper before her
marriage to John F. Kennedy.
What’s up in reading
Based on most requested books from the shelves of libraries in 150
cities around the country, compiled by the American Library
Association. (Distributed by Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
This Fiction Last WMks
Week Week On List
1. THORN BIRDS 11
by Colleen McCullough (Harper & Row, $9.95.)
2. CONDOMINIUM 3 18
by John D. MacDonald (Lippincott, $10.00.)
3. THE RICH ARE DIFFERENT 2 20
by Susan Howatch (Simon & Schuster, $11.50.)
4. A NOVEL, 5 7
by Robin Cook (Little, Brown, $8.95.)
5. THE CRASH OF 78 9 26
by Paul E. Erdman (Simon & Schuster, $8.95.)
6. OLIVER’S STORY 4 22
by Erich Segal (Harper & Row, $7.95)
7. FALCONER 6 22
by John Cheever (Knopf, $7.95.)
8. SHANNA 10 8
by Kathleen Woodiwiss (Avon, $3.95.)
9. FULL DISCLOSURE -1
by William Safire (Doubleday, $10.95)
10. SALAMANCA DRUM -1
by Dorothy Eden (Coward McCann $8.95)
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This INonflCtion Last Weeks
Week Week On List
1. ERRONEOUS ZONES 1 4
by Wayne W. Dyer (Funk & Wagnails, $6.95.)
2. HAYWIRE 2 2
by Brooke Hayward (Knopf, $10.00)
3. VIVIEN LEIQH: A BIOGRAPHY 6 4
by Anne Edwards (Simon & Schuster, $9.95.)
4. THE MEMOIRS OF THE 4 20
CONGRESSIONAL DOORKEEPER
by William “Fishbait" Miller & Frances S.
Leighton (Prentice-Hall, $12.50.)
5. ROOTS 7 47
by Alex Haley (Doubleday, $12.50.)
6. PASSAGES 5 5
by Gail Sheehy (Dutton, $10.95)
7. IT DIDN’T START WITH WATERGATE 8 6
by Victor Lasky (Dial, $10.00.)
8. THE CAMERA NEVER BLINKS 3 6
by Dan Rather with Mickey Herskowitz (Morrow,
$10.00.)
9. GRASS IS ALWAYS GREENER OVER 9 41
THE SEPTIC TANK
by Erma Bombeck (McGraw-Hill, $6.95.)
10. THE DRAGONS OF EDEN 10 2
by Carl Sagan (Random House, $8.95.)
—Griffin Daily News Thursday, October 6, 1977
Page 15
B % <( ts X (If I - r
■* A r
1 II - *
ON THE TOWN in New York to promote his first feature
film in 20 years — “Mackintosh and T.J.” — cowboy star
Roy Rodgers stopped near Central Park to chat with a
friend. Rodgers, 65. starred in his first oater in 1938.
Recently he’s been keeping busy with television specials,
rodeos and his restaurant chain.