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tulations to a real news hawk! _____
Car Sought In
Atlanta Slaying
ATLANTA (UPD—Authorities
hoped today that a nationwide
alert for a stolen car would
produce a clue in the slaying
of a pretty office worker whose
body was found in the trunk of
her automobile in a parking
lot.
Capt. L. M. Banks of subur
ban East Point said there might
be a “possible connection” be
ween the death of Diane Marie
Shields, 22, and a car stolen
within a block of where her
body was found.
The 1963 blue and white
Chevrolet convertible was taken
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5
Monday, May 22, 1967
from in front of an apartment
complex at about the time po
lice, making a routine check of
a parking lot near a coin laun
dry, discovered the girl’s body.
That was around 2:30 a.m. Sat
urday.
Miss Shields, who was to be
buried today in her home town
of Guntersville, Ala. had been
garroted by either a wire or
rope. She was fully clothed and
had not been sexualy molested.
Neither had she been robbed.
Banks said no murder motive
had been established.
The slaying paralleled in
some ways the baffling disap
pearance of Mrs. Mary Shot
well Little, a young bride, from
the parking lot of an Atlanta
shopping center in October
1965. There has been no trace
of Mrs. Little.
Miss Shields had been hired
to fill the bank vacancy created
by Mrs. Little’s disappearance
and she also at one time
roomed with a former room
mate of Mrs. Little’s.
Police said that a bouquet of
roses received by Miss Shields
several months after ths disap
pearance of Mrs. Little had
been sent by friends and had
no connection with the case.
Mrs. Little also was believed to
have received a bouquet of ros
es before her disappearance.
Garrison Says
Oswald Didn’t
Shoot Kennedy
NEW ORLEANS (UPD —lt
was five anti-Castro Cubans
who were angry over handling
of the abortive Bay of Pigs
invasion —not Lee Harvey
Oswald — who assassinated
President Kennedy, Dist. Atty.
Jim Garrison said Sunday night.
Oswald never “touched a
gun” Nov. 22, 1963, Garrison
said.
The Central Intelligence Agen
cy (CIA) knows Oswald did not
kill Kennedy, Garrison said in a
televised interview. He said the
CIA was doing all it could to
stop Garrison’s investigation of
BRUCE BIOSSAT
Doves Hatfield, Percy Pain
The GOP Image-Builders
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
Washington Correspondent
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
WASHINGTON (NEA)
The Republican party’s star roster of Senate Freshmen is
very much in the showcase, as many party people hoped it
would be. But the dovish leanings of two new senators tend
to complicate GOP image-building for 1968.
Nonpolitical sources in Oregon report that Sen. Mark
Hatfield, the-party’s most outspoken dove on the war in
Vietnam, is sagging badly in his home state as result of his
steady pounding on the issue.
One listening-post type, who hears much comment from
Oregon voters, said anti-Hatfield sentiment seems to be
rising in response to what he terms the senator’s “shrill”
antiwar observations.
Hatfield, of course, will not face the electorate for more
than five years. But he won in 1966 by a thin 24,017 votes
over hawkish Robert Duncan, and these new reports can
hardly be a joy either to him or his party.
Sen. Charles Percy of Illinois is less clearly dovish than
Hatfield, but in many of his public utterances on Vietnam
the dovelike elements have drawn crucial attention.
Yet there is no great sign these comments are endearing
him to American voters in the large, nor to some of the
Republicans whose support he might need should he sud
denly be thrust into the 1968 presidential fight.
A conservative Republican of some professional experience
who earlier was strong for Percy—as an attractive figure
who dutifully backed Barry Goldwater in 1964—today is al
most totally disenchanted.
Percy’s most recent Vietnam speech here was coolly re
ceived. Dovish comment drew not a flicker of applause.
Though the much-talked-of Republican Senate staff report
seems to have muddied the party’s Vietnam position badly,
the rather inhospitable public response to Hatfield-Percy
doyishness suggests that the GOP will not come down on
this line in 1968 and is unlikely to nominate any dove or
near-dove for president.
Nevertheless, these two senators, like their fellow fresh
men stars, continue very much in demand on the speech
circuit—and GOP leaders bent on giving the party a new look
want them out front as much as possible.
The real star of the GOP firmament, however, is Sen.
Edward Brooke of Massachusetts, first Negro chosen to the
Senate. He has had more than 1,400 invitations to speak
since his election, and they still pour in at 30 to 35 a day.
A New York source says Brooke has more than 50 bids to
speak in that state alone.
The senator’s office says he accepts only about 2 per cent
of his invitations. But the demand, like his incredible mail,
stays high. His switch from a dovish stance increased the
load.
Young Sen. Howard Baker, first Republican elected to the
Senate from Tennessee in modern times, has made more
than 35 speeches in some 15 states ranging from Texas to
New England.
Key party professionals think this is the best image-build
ing Republicans have had from their congressional wing in
decades. If only the Vietnam issue did not mess things up
some.
the assassination.
He said the CIA is more
powerful than the Gestapo was
in Nazi Germany.
In Detroit, a lawyer for the
late Jack Ruby’s family said
Sunday that Garrison’s investi
gation was “trumped up.”
Alan Adelson said Garrison
told him in New Orleans that
Oswald, Shaw and Ruby were
all employed by the CIA.
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HARE RAISING
SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPI) —
Santa Clara County Sheriff's
Deputy Raoul Niemeyer
squelched a bomb report
Thursday when he carefully
opened a “ticking” cardboard
box which a small boy had
shoved under a bus stop bench
Nelmeyer found a white
rabbit noisily munching crisp
lettuce and a scrawled note
requesting that the animal be
given “a good home.”
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STAY SOUTH, YOUNG MAN!
ON YOUR GRADUATION DAY, will your businessmen invested nearly $9 billion in more
dreams be bold? They should be ... for horizons than 5,600 major industrial developments, pro
are as limitless as the skies today for young men viding more than 326,000 new job opportunities,
of character and ability, vision and faith. Look ahead - stay South, young man. Stay
Hold those dreams high, young man. And stay South and grow with America’s fast-growing
South to see them come true. For the South is a opportunity-land I
great and fast-growing opportunity-land where
your ambitious dreams can become reality. - president
U. S. Government reports show that since
World War 11, the South has outpaced the nation R"I O J* Hmßh
in 34 of 37 economic activities. Along Southern il3liW3V vVS L6ITI
Railway lines alone from 1950. through 1966, washinqtqn, d.g. * *
DOG GONE
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) —Kane
went AWOL for a month from
the St. Louis police depart
ment’s canine school.
The German shepherd dog
was finally caught Thursday by
a suburban farmer who noticed
something had been stealing his
dogs’ food.
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RECEIVES AWARD
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Mrs.
Lyndon B. Johnson receives the
national multiple sclerosis
award today at a White House
ceremony.
Comedian -pianist Victor
Borge, the chairman of Celebri
ties for Multiple Sclerosis was
to present the First Lady the
award for her “humanitarian
efforts in behalf of the afflicted
and the handicapped.”
NO MERCY
LONDON (UPI) —The news
paper Daily Sketch said today
the following sign was spotted
outside a hospital:
“Trespassers will be prosecut
ed to the fullest extent of the
law. (signed) The Sisters of
Mercy.”