Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News
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NEW YORK—Edward Cox, husband of President Nixon’s
daughter, Tricia, returns to work after several weeks of
honeymooning at Camp David, Md. Cox, a law student at
Harvard, has a S6O-a-week summer job in the office of U.S.
attorney Whitney North Seymour. (UPI)
nnnuHP THE wnni n
I H [ Juli rH
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art W-
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20
Wednesday, July 7,1971
around the world
IN 21 DAYS OR
$2,500 IN CASH
SECOND PRIZE ... A 7 day holiday for two in
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There's nothing to buyl Get complete details and your
entry blank at your nearest Wool worth. Enter as often
ds you like. All entries must be in by July 31, 1971. Prise
trips must be completed by December 18, 1971. Void
where prohibited by law.
Funds
block
asked
ATLANTA (UPI) - A three
judge federal panel has b e e n
asked to order the state to*
withhold funds from local
school districts which permit
students to go elsewhere as a
means of dodging desegregation.
The request came from the
U. S. Justice Department Tues
day at a hearing before District
Judges Newell Edenfield, Albert
Henderson and Sidney 0. Smith.
Government attorneys asked
the judges to modify the state
wide desegregation suit filed
against Georgia’s Department of
Education and 81 school dis
tricts.
That case had been remand
ed to the panel by the U. S. sth
Circuit Court of Appeals for re
consideration under the guide
lines laid down by the Supreme
Court in its Charlotte-Mecklen
burg (N. C.) decision earlier
this year.
During the hearing, assistant
state Atty. Gen. Al Evans ac
cused the government of advo
cating “more and greater bigo
try against the South.” Evans
said the Justice Department
had perverted the Constitution
to create “exactly the opposite
effect” in striving for desegre
gation.
oik
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Self adhesive
photo albums
'2.99
Plastic film holds photos in
place. No pasting. 10 pag.s
with fabric cov.r. From Japan.
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Floral ceramic
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Hand d.corat.d jardini.rs from
Italy. Colorful glazsd plant
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Fuzzy flocked
mini animals
79‘
Lion, mouse, poodle, elephant,
rabbit, all with a "message".
About 6" tall. From Hong Kong.
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Beaded crochet
coin purse
1.00
Holds small change... and keys
on attached ring. Variety of
stvles. colors. From Jaaan.
t iVews i
| highlights |
Steel negotiations
WASHINGTON—Proded by President Nixon to keep
their wage agreement ata level compatible with the world
steel market, labor and management in the steel industry
moved today toward the final stage of negotiations in an
attempt to avoid an Aug. 1 strike.
Matter of time, how
SAN CLEMENTZ—President Nixon, making a careful
review of the Viet Cong’s latest peace proposal, says he is
“actively pursuing” ways to end the Vietnam war by
negotiation.
Briefing newspaper and broadcast executives from 13
Midwestern states Tuesday in Kansas City, Mo., Nixon
said it “is only a matter of time” and “only at matter of
how” American involvement in the war is ended.
Divorce final
SANTA DOMINGO—EIIiot Gould and Barbra Streisand
received a divorce from a Dominican court Tuesday, after
seven years of separation.
The decree becomes final when it is published in a daily
newspaper with a national circulation in the Dominican
Republic, the court said.
Reneges on promise
WASHINGTON—Hinting that the Agriculture
Department has reneged on its promise to feed hungry
children this summer, 40 Senators today urged the Nixon
administration to nearly double the planned spending on
the program.
Fund-raising for Hoffa
MIAMI BEACH-A big fund-raising party for
imprisoned James R. Hoffa Tuesday night at a plush
oceanfront hotel netted more than $130,000 for the former
Teamsters president, according to its sponsors.
The money will be given to Hoffa to help pay part of the
legal costs lie has built up in his long fight, first to stay out
of jail and now to get out of prison.
Democ rats open fire
WASHINGTON—Democrats opened fire today on
President Nixon’s decision to stand pat on the policies he
hopes will restore momentum to the economy by time the
Presidential campaign opens next summer.
To stand alone
Prime Minister Golda Meir says Israel is ready to stand
alone against friends and foes alike to defend its right to
exist Her remarks were a clear warning to the United
States not to pressure Israel to make too many
concessions to the Arabs in seeking an Middle East
agreement.
Agnew in Kuwait
KUWAIT—Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, the highestr
ranking American ever to visit Kuwait, opened four days
of talks with Arab leaders today. He said he would spend
most of his time listening to their viewpoints on the Middle
East situation.
Griffin Hospital
Care Association, Inc.
Sponsored and approved by the Griffin-Spalding County
Hospital
CONTINUES ITS PAYMENTS OF CLAIMS .. IN THE LAST
15 DAYS ONE CLAIM PAID WAS IN EXCESS OF
M,450 00
YOU CAN GET SICK - YOU CAN
HAVE AN ACCIDENT!
SO CALL
GRIFFIN HOSPITAL
CARE
227-2742
or come by the office upstairs over McLellans and JOIN
today.
By paying us direct your group plan will have to pay off in
fulLWe have no Non Co-ordination clause in our contract
F. L. Bartholomew, Jr. Secty.
Garrison
seeks
arrest
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) —
US. Marshals barricaded offi
ces of the U.S. attorney
Tuesday to keep maverick
District Attorney Jim Garrison
from arresting him.
“We are prepared for any
thing Mr. Garrison may do,
however wild and reckless it
may be,” said U.S. Attorney
Gerald Gallinghouse.
Besides the barricade, he was
protected from arrest by a
federal court order restraining
Garrison.
Garrison, who was arrested
June 30 on federal bribery
charges, filed criminal bills of
information charging Galling
house and another Justice
Department official with extor
tion, defamation and other
crimes.
Garrison said his charges
against Gallinghouse and John
Wall, chief of the Justice
Department’s organized crime
strike force here were for their
actions in building what he has
called a fraudulent case against
him based on trumped-up
evidence.
Federal authorities accused
Garrison of taking $1,500 a
month in bribes for nine years
to protect pinball interests.
Gallinghouse and Wall said
they ordered the barricade
because they feared they were
about to be hauled away to jail.
“We have some sheriffs
breathing down our necks, quite
frankly,” said Wall as he and
Gallinghouse filed papers to
block their arrests by Garrison
and to remove the state
charges into federal jurisdic
tion.
Earlier in the day U.S.
District Judge Herbert W.
Christenberry took just 10
minutes to dismiss a suit by
Garrison and eight of the nine
other defendants in the pinball
case. The suit attempted to
block the New Orleans daily
newspapers from publidiing the
contests of a 113-page govern
ment affidavit
Threats reported
ATLANTA (UPI) - The pa
roles Board chairman said
Tuesday he had received re
ports a Negro convicted in the
death of a prominent south
Georgia wiite man might be
slain if permitted to return to
his home.
J. O. Partain, head of the
State Pardons and Paroles
Board, made the comment in
hearing an application for pa
role of Robert Lee Jest, a black
tenant farmer sentenced to
three years for involuntary
manslaughter in the shooting
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Know your lawmen
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Dean Ray
I
$ Dean Ray was born in Cherokee County and came to
:• Griffin with his family when he was three-years-old. He
has been on the police force for about six years and says
g he really enjoys every phase of his work.
g He began working with parking meters and has been in
| the traffic division, riding a motorcycle. He is now a
| patrolman. Like most other officers, he enjoys dealing
with people and the excitment of his job.
Officer Ray is married to the former Patricia Garner of
g Brooks and they have three children. He likes to water ski
g and especially enjoys deer hunting and fishing.
He graduated from the Georgia Police Academy and is
g a member of the Fraternal Order Os Police.
The Rays live on Cherokee avenue.
death of Robert L. Merritt, 20.
Merritt was the grandson of
Miller County Sheriff W. Felix
Tabb and his family is well
known in the area. Jest, 23,
lived near Colquitt in adjoining
Decatur County.
Partain declined to identify
the source of the alleged
threats but said he had been
told Jest would be a “dead
man” if paroled and allowed to
return. “It could be a lot of
wild-eyed talk,” he said, but it
could also be “a tragic end to
an already tragic situation.”
Partain asked Jest’s attorneys
whether the Negro could live “a
normal and productive life
against this kind of hostility?”
Frank Martin replied “nobody
who is black in that county
lives a normal life. He’s got a
right to be free at some point
and there are some things that
will be beyond our control.”
Jest will be eligible for parole
this month. He was sentenced
to three years in prison but had
already served 10 months be
fore his case came to trial ear
lier this year.