Newspaper Page Text
Monday, May 22, 1967 Griffin Daily News
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(Jim and Joe’s Photo)
Graduation exercises for the First Baptist Kindergarten will be held
Tuesday, May 30, at 7:30 in the sanctuary. A reception will follow
in the Cheatham auditorium. Members of the class are: (front, 1-r)
Ken Hollingsworth, Todd McDonald, Melissa Mayfield, Rieke Bell,
Sheri Cain, Clark Stewart, Jim Lowrimore, Tim Edwards, Tony
Banks, Amy Tyler, Michael Wall, Billy Dunn, Dee Forrester, Mark
Byrd, Darnell Evans, Rhonda Huff, (second), Gerry Gibson Donna
Drummond, Ken Corley, Charlotte Gibson, Russell Kennedy, Susan
Caldwell, Kay Johnson, Nancy Norton, Kevin Mitchell Gay Hender
son, Mark Stewart, Denise Hand, Bobby Goolsby, Elaine Brooks,
Theron Cook, Kelly Wise, (third), Allen Byous, Billy Coleman,
Chris Weldon, Teri, Virden, Jane Walker, Tommy Mercer, Mark
Gilreath, Linda Peacock, Kelly Washington, Rhonda Henry, Beth
Vaughn, Jessica Cooper, Mike Conner, Mike Kitchens, Eric Lund
gren, Susan Bass, Ben Leverette, Libby Baker, Kenny Gresham,
Gwen Langford, (fourth), Susan Wilson, Ronald Howard, Kerry
Senator Long Charges ‘Smear Tactics’
Ity MICHAEL MINER
United I’r e ss International
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) —Sen.
Edward V. Long, D-Mo., today
labeled as “smear tactics”
charges that he used his Senate
investigating subcommittee to
try to keep teamsters union
boss Jimmy Hoffa out of prison.
"It’s interesting to note this
whole thing started when I
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s La/— — WFFIIWA.
First Baptist Kindergarten
began Investigating government
snooping,” Long said Sunday.
But he refused to charge
anyone in the federal govern
ment with being responsible for
the “smear tactics.”
Long was charged by Life
Magazine with misusing his
committee as “an Instrument
for trying to keep Jimmy Hoffa
out of prison.” Life and the St.
10
Louis Post-Dispatch both said
Long was paid $48,000 by a
Hoffa attorney. Morris A.
Shenker of St. Louis.
“My committee has never
been used improperly,” Long
said on St. Louis television
station KMOX-TV.
“I’ve never used my office for
any individual. In Hoffa’s case I
guess it wouldn’t have done any
Smith, Victor Chapman, Charles Heaton, Lester Ranew, Lee Smith,
Lisa Turkett, Lu Ann Hardy, Kathy Gray, Linda York, Edith Lind
sey, Bobby Higgins, Ben Stallings, Claire Smith, Alan Pape, Eddie
McGee, Rhonda Butler, Ricky Burnley, (fifth), Phyliss Bearden,
Tony Turner, Wayne Chasteen, Alyce Payne, Jan Colquitt, Randy
Burger, Mike Marable, Wallace Wetherbee, Scott Martin, (sixth),
Debbie Dingier, Wendy Feltman, Sharon Smith, Paula Wade, Mary
Beth Lipscomb, Denise Hudgens, Michelle Crowder, Taina Johnson,
Kathy Lewis, Gregg Irvin, (seventh), Mark Murphy, Henry Walker,
Charles Scott, Lee Huskey, Keith Holloway, Dana Taylor, Ti m
Roberts. Dale Ridgeway is not in the picture. Instructors include:
(1-r), Mrs. Jerrell Bunn, teacher; Mrs. T. S. Boggess, Jr., director
teacher; Mrs. E. K. Domingos, pianist; Mrs. J. W. Joiner, teacher;
and Mrs. D. W. Simonton, teacher. Registration for fall classes is
being taken at the church office.
good. He’s in jail and looks like
he’s going to stay there.”
Long said the money he
received from Shenker was
referral fees in connection with
corporate, estate and personal
damage legal cases, none of
which involved matters pertain
ing to federal or state
governments and agencies
where a conflict of Interest
might arise.
Long told the television
audience he referred much of
his business to Shenker “be
cause Shenker has an aggres
sive staff that represents my j
clients well.”
Life Magazine, in its May 26
issue, charged Long with being
"strongly influenced to take up
the investigations of federal 1
snopping by friends who were
high in the Teamster hie
rarchy,” and with “blunting the
Justice Department’s organized
crime drive by discrediting its
participating agencies, in parti
cular the Internal Revenue
Service.”
linvestigate Post Office
“This checking on federal
wire-tapping, bugging and inva
sion of privacy started in 1963
with the Post Office,” Long
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said. “I thought it could be
checked in a couple of days,
instead it involved a matter of
months.”
He said that when his
subcommittee on administrative
practice and procedure
“stepped on the toes of federal
agencies” he was “warned” his
investigations “would lead to
serious trouble for me.”
Long said when his committee
found in their study of Post
Office practices that "we had
something here, we decided t«
go into other agencies, including
the IRS.”
JOBLESS FIGURE
LONDON (UPI) —There were
540,829 unemployed persons in
Britain at mid-May, the Labor
Ministry said Thursday. It was
the highest May figure since
1963 although 26,587 fewer than
the total jobless in April.